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Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter?

Honey bee colonies are highly dependent upon the availability of floral resources from which they get the nutrients (notably pollen) necessary to their development and survival. However, foraging areas are currently affected by the intensification of agriculture and landscape alteration. Bees are th...

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Autores principales: Di Pasquale, Garance, Salignon, Marion, Le Conte, Yves, Belzunces, Luc P., Decourtye, Axel, Kretzschmar, André, Suchail, Séverine, Brunet, Jean-Luc, Alaux, Cédric
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23940803
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072016
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author Di Pasquale, Garance
Salignon, Marion
Le Conte, Yves
Belzunces, Luc P.
Decourtye, Axel
Kretzschmar, André
Suchail, Séverine
Brunet, Jean-Luc
Alaux, Cédric
author_facet Di Pasquale, Garance
Salignon, Marion
Le Conte, Yves
Belzunces, Luc P.
Decourtye, Axel
Kretzschmar, André
Suchail, Séverine
Brunet, Jean-Luc
Alaux, Cédric
author_sort Di Pasquale, Garance
collection PubMed
description Honey bee colonies are highly dependent upon the availability of floral resources from which they get the nutrients (notably pollen) necessary to their development and survival. However, foraging areas are currently affected by the intensification of agriculture and landscape alteration. Bees are therefore confronted to disparities in time and space of floral resource abundance, type and diversity, which might provide inadequate nutrition and endanger colonies. The beneficial influence of pollen availability on bee health is well-established but whether quality and diversity of pollen diets can modify bee health remains largely unknown. We therefore tested the influence of pollen diet quality (different monofloral pollens) and diversity (polyfloral pollen diet) on the physiology of young nurse bees, which have a distinct nutritional physiology (e.g. hypopharyngeal gland development and vitellogenin level), and on the tolerance to the microsporidian parasite Nosema ceranae by measuring bee survival and the activity of different enzymes potentially involved in bee health and defense response (glutathione-S-transferase (detoxification), phenoloxidase (immunity) and alkaline phosphatase (metabolism)). We found that both nurse bee physiology and the tolerance to the parasite were affected by pollen quality. Pollen diet diversity had no effect on the nurse bee physiology and the survival of healthy bees. However, when parasitized, bees fed with the polyfloral blend lived longer than bees fed with monofloral pollens, excepted for the protein-richest monofloral pollen. Furthermore, the survival was positively correlated to alkaline phosphatase activity in healthy bees and to phenoloxydase activities in infected bees. Our results support the idea that both the quality and diversity (in a specific context) of pollen can shape bee physiology and might help to better understand the influence of agriculture and land-use intensification on bee nutrition and health.
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spelling pubmed-37338432013-08-12 Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter? Di Pasquale, Garance Salignon, Marion Le Conte, Yves Belzunces, Luc P. Decourtye, Axel Kretzschmar, André Suchail, Séverine Brunet, Jean-Luc Alaux, Cédric PLoS One Research Article Honey bee colonies are highly dependent upon the availability of floral resources from which they get the nutrients (notably pollen) necessary to their development and survival. However, foraging areas are currently affected by the intensification of agriculture and landscape alteration. Bees are therefore confronted to disparities in time and space of floral resource abundance, type and diversity, which might provide inadequate nutrition and endanger colonies. The beneficial influence of pollen availability on bee health is well-established but whether quality and diversity of pollen diets can modify bee health remains largely unknown. We therefore tested the influence of pollen diet quality (different monofloral pollens) and diversity (polyfloral pollen diet) on the physiology of young nurse bees, which have a distinct nutritional physiology (e.g. hypopharyngeal gland development and vitellogenin level), and on the tolerance to the microsporidian parasite Nosema ceranae by measuring bee survival and the activity of different enzymes potentially involved in bee health and defense response (glutathione-S-transferase (detoxification), phenoloxidase (immunity) and alkaline phosphatase (metabolism)). We found that both nurse bee physiology and the tolerance to the parasite were affected by pollen quality. Pollen diet diversity had no effect on the nurse bee physiology and the survival of healthy bees. However, when parasitized, bees fed with the polyfloral blend lived longer than bees fed with monofloral pollens, excepted for the protein-richest monofloral pollen. Furthermore, the survival was positively correlated to alkaline phosphatase activity in healthy bees and to phenoloxydase activities in infected bees. Our results support the idea that both the quality and diversity (in a specific context) of pollen can shape bee physiology and might help to better understand the influence of agriculture and land-use intensification on bee nutrition and health. Public Library of Science 2013-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3733843/ /pubmed/23940803 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072016 Text en © 2013 Di Pasquale et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Di Pasquale, Garance
Salignon, Marion
Le Conte, Yves
Belzunces, Luc P.
Decourtye, Axel
Kretzschmar, André
Suchail, Séverine
Brunet, Jean-Luc
Alaux, Cédric
Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter?
title Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter?
title_full Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter?
title_fullStr Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter?
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter?
title_short Influence of Pollen Nutrition on Honey Bee Health: Do Pollen Quality and Diversity Matter?
title_sort influence of pollen nutrition on honey bee health: do pollen quality and diversity matter?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733843/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23940803
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072016
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