Honey bee protein and lipid nutrition in avocado and blueberry agroecosystems with conventional and organic management | IIES

Honey bee protein and lipid nutrition in avocado and blueberry agroecosystems with conventional and organic management

Honey bee protein and lipid nutrition in avocado and blueberry agroecosystems with conventional and organic management

Arthropod-Plant Interactions 2024 

Diaz, T., del-Val, E., Vega, E., Contreras-Garduño, J., Larsen, J.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11829-024-10078-1

Abstract

Honey bees play a crucial role in agricultural production. Farmers rely on commercial bee pollination to obtain optimal yields, and beekeepers on the income from pollination fees. However, commercial pollination confronts honey bees with pests and pathogens, pesticides, and low-quality food, which in many cases do not fulfill the minimal nutritional requirements of honey bees. In this work, we evaluated honey bee nutrition in avocado and blueberry plantations under organic and conventional management, by assessing the nutritional quality of pollen and bee bread based on their protein, fatty acid, and microbial content, and by analyzing honey bee health through the examination of abdominal fatty acid profiles and head protein content. Low protein content in honey bee hemolymph was evident under conventional management. Regardless of management, avocado pollen showed higher protein levels, which were translated into higher honey bee head protein levels being 60% higher in avocado under conventional management when compared to blueberry under the same management. However, higher protein levels in avocado pollen were also translated into lower amounts of fatty acids in bee bread and in honey bee fat. In particular, the total amount of fatty acids in bee bread from conventional management was 50% lower than that from organic management. Additionally, the saturated fatty acids in conventional blueberries were lower compared to that of organic blueberries. Crop system and bee bread microbial composition altered the plant-honey bee nutrition cascades transforming pollen to bee bread with increased amount of saturated, unsaturated, and total fatty acids. In conclusion, both crop species and crop systems determine honey bee nutrition through alterations in the pollen transformation, affecting protein and fatty acid assimilation. © The Author(s) 2024.


Ver todas las publicaciones del IIES

Temas relacionados

Publicaciones IIES

95 registros « 4 de 19 »

2024

Plancarte, Alejandro Soto; Larsen, John; Gavito, Mayra E; Pavía, Sylvia Patricia Fernández; Tena, Alfredo Reyes

Crop System and Fertilization Management Determine Onion Downy Mildew Severity Artículo de revista

Journal of Crop Health, 76 (6), pp. 1373 – 1382, 2024, (Cited by: 0).

Enlaces

Ojeda-Linares, César; Casas, Alejandro; González-Rivadeneira, Tania; Nabhan, Gary P

The dawn of ethnomicrobiology: an interdisciplinary research field on interactions between humans and microorganisms Artículo de revista

Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 20 (1), 2024, (Cited by: 0; All Open Access, Gold Open Access, Green Open Access).

Enlaces

Miranda-Gamboa, Myriam A; Martínez-Ballesté, Andrea; Ricker, Martin; Casas, Alejandro; Blancas, José

Does commercialization lead to more intensive management strategies? Decision-making for the utilization of non-timber forest products in a Nahua area of the Sierra Negra, Mexico Artículo de revista

Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 20 (1), 2024, (Cited by: 2; All Open Access, Gold Open Access).

Enlaces

de Oliveira, Rodrigo Silva; Souza, André Dos Santos; de Lucena, Camilla Marques; Casas, Alejandro; de Lucena, Reinaldo Farias Paiva

Knowledge, use, and management of pequi (Caryocar coriaceum Wittm.) in the region of the Sete Cidades National Park (Piauí, Brazil) Artículo de revista

Ethnobotany Research and Applications, 29 , 2024, (Cited by: 0).

Enlaces

Castro-Cárdenas, Nadia; Navarrete-Segueda, Armando; Ibarra-Manríquez, Guillermo

How relevant is the relationship between ostiole size and wasp head shape in the Ficus-Agaonidae mutualistic interaction?; [¿Qué tan relevante es la relación entre el tamaño del ostíolo y la forma de la cabeza de las avispas en la interacción mutualista Ficus-Agaonidae?] Artículo de revista

Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad, 95 , 2024, (Cited by: 0).

Enlaces

95 registros « 4 de 19 »