BECAS
LAJAD Rocio
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Change in foraging preferences after experiencing adulterated pollens inside beehives
Autor/es:
LAJAD, ROCÍO; ARENAS, ANDRÉS
Lugar:
La Plata
Reunión:
Congreso; XI CONGRESO ARGENTINO Y XII CONGRESO LATINOAMERICANO DE ENTOMOLOGÍA; 2022
Institución organizadora:
Sociedad Entomológica Argentina (SEA)
Resumen:
Pollen is the main protein resource for honeybees Apis mellifera L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae). Itscomposition differs among plant species, so pollen selection affects colony development and productivity. Fresh pollen is not consumed by bees at the food source, therefore, foragers’ decisions on pollen might not rely on components such as proteins, lipids and/or some toxic compounds, as they can only be evaluated after resource ingestion. On the contrary, pollen is mainly consumed by young workers inside the hive, who also process and partially digest pollen for their nestmates. We hypothesized that adjustment of pollen foraging preferences requires the resource to be experienced within the nest after being processed. To study whether foraging preferences change after in-hive experiences with pollen, we performed dual-choice experiments with hives confned in flying cages (9x3x2m). There, we compared preferences of bees that had been trained to visit a station with two feeders, each offering a different monofloral pollen (Brassica napus or Diplotaxis tenuifolia), 2 days after one of these pollens was offered adulterated inside the nest. One at a time, pollens were adulterated with amygdalin (0.1 M), a deterrent naturally found in almond pollen that causes post-ingestion malaise in bees, thereby reducing pollen suitability. In addition, we conducted a second experiment in the feld, in which we compared colony foraging preferences by means of the composition of pollen samples trapped at the entrance of the hives. Samples were taken after the offering of amygdalin-adulterated pollen from one of the dominant flowering plants in the feld (D. tenuifolia). In both experiments we included control colonies in which pollen was offered in the same way as in the treated colonies but with no added amygdalin. Results from dual-choice experiment indicated that foragers in the treated colonies avoided those pollens that had been experienced as unsuitable within the nest. In feld experiment, pollen samples from treated colonies were more diverse than in the controls (estimated by Shannon’s H-index), suggesting that experiences with an unsuitable highly available pollen biased foraging towards pollens from rare or less represented plants. Altogether, our fndings suggest that assessment of pollen composition requires the resource to be experienced inside the nest.