© Nikola
Solic / Reuters
|
Bumblebees sickened by an
intestinal parasite are apt to visit flowers containing nectar and pollen that
have a medicinal effect, a new study reports, indicating the current decline in
the bee population could be abated through beneficial plants.
Iridoid
glycosides, or secondary metabloites found in floral nectar, reduce common
parasites in bees, previous research has found. In this case, scientists from the University of
Vermont, Dartmouth College, and the University of Colorado-Boulder increased
concentrations of two iridoid glycosides – aucubin and catalpol – in
turtlehead, a wetland plant frequented by bees in eastern North America. Some
plants were given high volumes of iridoid glycosides, while the other half's
iridoid glycosides were diluted with sugar water.
Parasitized
bees -- afflicted with reproduction and foraging complications -- preferred the
flower with the highest iridoid glycoside concentrations, the researchers
found. Theirresults are being published in the journal Ecology.
Rt.com report continues:
"We
show that bees might be able to self-medicate, altering their foraging behavior
when parasitized so as to maximize their consumption of beneficial plant
secondary metabolite compounds," said senior author of the study, Rebecca
Irwin, a faculty member at North Carolina State University who was formerly
with Dartmouth, according
to phys.org.
The
research team also found that bees would carry more pollen to other flowers
from plants with the highest concentrations of nectar iridoid glycosides.
"Secondary
metabolites are commonly present in floral nectar and pollen, yet their
functions are not well understood," said the study's lead author Leif
Richardson, a former Dartmouth student now with the University of Vermont. "In
this study, we show that these compounds could influence plant reproduction via
complex suites of interactions involving not only pollinators but also their
natural enemies."
The
numbers of bees, vital to the pollination process, are dwindling across the
world thanks to habitat destruction, pesticide use,
and disease. In May,
the US Environmental Protection Agency announced
new regulations on pesticide use that seek to protect managed bee populations
during certain periods of the year.
The
proposal is part of the Obama administration's National Strategy to Promote the
Health of Honey Bees and Other Pollinators. The administration wants to spend
upwards of US$82.5 million on honeybee research in the upcoming budget year,
more than double the current allocation of US$34 million.
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