Maggie M. Mayberry, Jacob S. Francis, Jenny K. Burrow, Faith E. Dall, Michelle Bowe, Anne S. Leonard, Parker M. Campbell, Avery L. Russell
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Bees are the primary consumers of pollen in many ecosystems, but pollen consumption by adult bees while foraging is rarely studied, leaving a gap in our understanding of the nutritional ecology of collective foraging and pollination biology more generally. For example, while eusocial bees feed upon pollen from colony stores, whether they also consume pollen directly from flowers to meet their own needs or to assess its quality for the broader collective is unknown. We therefore captured wild bumble bee colonies (Bombus bimaculatus and Bombus griseocollis) and tested whether individual workers consumed pollen directly from flowers in a lab-based foraging assay. After confirming the presence of floral pollen in worker crops (i.e., consumption at flowers), in a field setting, we tested alternative hypotheses for the function of this behavior using information about the composition, abundance, and diversity of pollen found in the crops vs. pollen baskets of three species of pollen- and nectar-foraging bumble bees (Bombus bimaculatus, B. griseocollis, and B. impatiens). Consistent with the hypothesis that consuming pollen at flowers reflects sampling, total pollen quantity in crops was consistently smaller than in pollen baskets, and basket pollen tended to be a subset of that found in crops. Further, pollen foragers consumed more and different kinds of pollen than nectar foragers. Pollen consumption at flowers is thus unlikely to be purely incidental or to substantially benefit workers nutritionally. Instead, consuming pollen directly from flowers likely allows foragers to quickly assess pollen quality before collecting it to feed the colony as a whole.
期刊介绍:
Apidologie is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the biology of insects belonging to the superfamily Apoidea.
Its range of coverage includes behavior, ecology, pollination, genetics, physiology, systematics, toxicology and pathology. Also accepted are papers on the rearing, exploitation and practical use of Apoidea and their products, as far as they make a clear contribution to the understanding of bee biology.
Apidologie is an official publication of the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) and Deutscher Imkerbund E.V. (D.I.B.)