2020
DOI: 10.1007/s10886-020-01168-4
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Assessing Chemical Mechanisms Underlying the Effects of Sunflower Pollen on a Gut Pathogen in Bumble Bees

Abstract: Author contributions. LSA, REI and PCS conceived of and designed the study. PCS and IWF conducted chemical analysis of pollen and synthesized spermidines. AEF, RLM, PRA, LMC, PMD, and SL carried out bioassay experiments. AEF analyzed data and prepared figures. LSA wrote the manuscript with substantial contributions from PCS. All co-authors read and provided feedback on the manuscript.

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Cited by 28 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(108 reference statements)
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“…Although Crithidia grew in males relative to the initial inoculation dose, they exhibited remarkably low Crithidia counts compared to females regardless of diet, and there was no significant effect of diet on Crithidia counts. In workers and daughter queens, sunflower pollen dramatically reduced infection compared to wildflower pollen, consistent with previous findings (Giacomini et al ., 2018; Adler et al ., 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although Crithidia grew in males relative to the initial inoculation dose, they exhibited remarkably low Crithidia counts compared to females regardless of diet, and there was no significant effect of diet on Crithidia counts. In workers and daughter queens, sunflower pollen dramatically reduced infection compared to wildflower pollen, consistent with previous findings (Giacomini et al ., 2018; Adler et al ., 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mechanism underlying the medicinal effect of sunflower pollen is currently unknown. Chemical extracts from sunflower pollen reduced the growth of bacteria and fungi (Fatrcová‐Šramková et al ., 2016) but increased Crithidia growth in vitro (Palmer‐Young & Thursfield, 2017) and did not reduce Crithidia to the level of pure sunflower pollen in bee assays (Adler et al ., 2020). A compound in heather nectar ( Calluna vulgaris ) reduced Crithidia infection by removing the flagellum and preventing attachment to the gut wall (Koch et al ., 2019); the spiky pollen coat of sunflower could mechanically inhibit attachment via similar mechanisms.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A positive correlation between Lactobacillus and Acinetobacter (and Sphingomonas) with Asteraceae illustrates an interesting bee-flowermicrobe interaction (bumble bee-Lactobacillus/Acinetobacter-Asteraceae) deserving of more research attention and indicative of an emergent and understudied driver of well-known bee-flower mutualisms. Despite some Asteraceae (e.g., dandelion; Taraxacum) being toxic to bumble bees when the sole source of food (Vanderplanck et al, 2020), many Asteraceae provide ample pollen and nectar that are nutritious and attractive to bumble bees (Hicks et al, 2016) and Asteraceae were present in 50% of all pollen samples in our study ( (Adler, Fowler, et al, 2020). In yet another study, Mockler et al (2018) showed that bumble bees having higher levels of Lactobacillus in their gut microbiome led to reduced infection rates of C. bombi.…”
Section: Floral and Bacterial Resources: A Potential Trade-off In Foraging?mentioning
confidence: 54%