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Nutritional benefit of fungal spores for honey bee workers.


ABSTRACT: The collection of fungal spores by honey bees, Apis mellifera, can be classified as active or passive, the latter when spores are associated with pollen, nectar or honey dew. While low quality and shortage of pollen have been raised as hypotheses for fungal spore collection, the nutritional value of fungal spores for honey bees is poorly understood. Here we investigated the effect of consumption of fungal spores on survival, ovarian activation and the development of the hypopharyngeal glands (HPGs) in honey bee workers. Two pollen diets (Eucalyptus sp. pollen and a multifloral pollen) supplemented or not with spores of Botrytis cinerea, Cladosporium sp. or Colletotrichum acutatum were used. Consumption of diets that contained fungal spores increased the longevity of honey bee workers but had no significant effect on the development of their HPGs and ovaries. This demonstrates that fungal spores may have nutritional value for honey bees and that the consumption of fungal spores may compensate for nutritional imbalances of poor-quality pollen diets.

SUBMITTER: Parish JB 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7519121 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Nutritional benefit of fungal spores for honey bee workers.

Parish Jorgiane B JB   Scott Eileen S ES   Hogendoorn Katja K  

Scientific reports 20200924 1


The collection of fungal spores by honey bees, Apis mellifera, can be classified as active or passive, the latter when spores are associated with pollen, nectar or honey dew. While low quality and shortage of pollen have been raised as hypotheses for fungal spore collection, the nutritional value of fungal spores for honey bees is poorly understood. Here we investigated the effect of consumption of fungal spores on survival, ovarian activation and the development of the hypopharyngeal glands (HP  ...[more]

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