Fatty acid homeostasis in honey bees (Apis mellifera) fed commercial diet supplements

Archive ouverte

Corby-Harris, Vanessa | Bennett, Meghan M. | Deeter, Megan E. | Snyder, Lucy | Meador, Charlotte | Welchert, Ashley C. | Hoffman, Amelia | Obernesser, Bethany T. | Carroll, Mark J.

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. AbstractHoney bees obtain lipids from pollen or commercial supplements. These supplements do not fully support colony health. We tested the hypothesis that supplements are deficient because they lack essential fatty acids (EFAs). The five supplements we tested had low linolenic (⍵3) acid and were unbalanced (⍵6:⍵3 > 6) compared to natural pollen. We selected two of these supplements for further study because they had different levels of individual EFAs and different ⍵6:⍵3 ratios. Bees from hives fed these different supplements had equivalent tissue EFA levels. In choice assays, hives fed these different supplements were presented with flours with various absolute and relative levels of EFAs. We saw no difference in foraging preference. Rather, all hives preferred flours with small grain size and high protein to lipid ratios. We conclude that bees balance their internal EFAs and that differential colony nutrition does not affect foraging preference. The data also argue for more linolenic (⍵3) acid in commercial supplements.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Methoxyfenozide has minimal effects on replacement queens but may negatively affect sperm storage

Archive ouverte | Carroll, Mark J. | CCSD

International audience. AbstractHoney bees are incidentally exposed to pesticides such as the insect growth regulator methoxyfenozide (MEOF) during crop pollination, exposures that extend into the hive via contamina...

Pre-almond supplemental forage improves colony survival and alters queen pheromone signaling in overwintering honey bee colonies

Archive ouverte | Carroll, Mark J. | CCSD

International audience. AbstractSupplemental forage can be used to provide nutrition to bees during winter dearth. We examined the effects of supplemental forage on colony performance, colony survival, worker qualit...

Honey bee gut microbial communities are robust to the fungicide Pristine® consumed in pollen

Archive ouverte | Degrandi-Hoffman, Gloria | CCSD

International audience. AbstractHoney bees that consume pollen with sublethal levels of the fungicide Pristine® can have reduced pollen digestion, lower ATP synthesis, and in many ways resemble malnourished bees. Re...

Chargement des enrichissements...