2019
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13383
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Key pollen host plants provide balanced diets for wild bee larvae: A lesson for planting flower strips and hedgerows

Abstract: 1. Bee-friendly plants are defined by the quantity of food they produce and the visitation rates of adult insects foraging for nectar. However, it is pollen nutritional quality that enables proper larval development of bees, affecting their populations. Not all plants produce pollen that satisfies the nutritional requirements of bee larvae, and we lack an understanding of how different plant pollens impact bee nutritional demands. This study examined whether nutritionally desirable key plant species may promot… Show more

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Cited by 75 publications
(84 citation statements)
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“…These P‐hungry symbionts exist on a diet rich in carbohydrates and poor in everything else (e.g. Filipiak 2019). So when phosphates enter a termite gut, there are still two challenges to moving them inside the cells of symbionts.…”
Section: Sodium and Herbivore Fitnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These P‐hungry symbionts exist on a diet rich in carbohydrates and poor in everything else (e.g. Filipiak 2019). So when phosphates enter a termite gut, there are still two challenges to moving them inside the cells of symbionts.…”
Section: Sodium and Herbivore Fitnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, an increased focus on the nutritional quality of such resources should be used to inform the inclusion of particular flowers into such seed mixes. The importance of quality nutrition to bee health is becoming more and more apparent (Fowler et al 2016; Nicholls & Hempel de Ibarra 2016), with pollen in particular being a highly variable (Roulston & Cane 2000) yet critical resource for bee development (Donkersley et al 2017; Filipiak 2019). Improvements to these schemes, coupled with targeted management, could not only allow for conventional farms to plug the gap in floral and bee abundances seen in comparison to organic farms, but also lead to improvements in the diversity of bee (and wider pollinator) communities across all farm practices.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is particularly true for the larval nutritional requirements, which are different from adults [149]. Higher plant species richness as well as the occurrence of plant species with high nutritional values (e.g., Brassica napus for Osmia bicornis) can in turn positively influence population growth rate [151][152][153]. Indeed, the diversity of proteins and essential amino acids needed is crucial for colony growth and development.…”
Section: Conservation Measures In Anthropogenic Habitats: the Examplementioning
confidence: 99%