Too Low to Kill: Concentration of the Secondary Metabolite Ranunculin in Buttercup Pollen does not Affect Bee Larval Survival
Growing evidence suggests that the freely accessible pollen of some plants is chemically protected against pollen-feeding flower visitors. For example, a diet of pollen from buttercup plants ( Ranunculus ) recently was shown to have a deleterious effect on developing larvae of several bee species no...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of chemical ecology 2012-08, Vol.38 (8), p.996-1002 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Growing evidence suggests that the freely accessible pollen of some plants is chemically protected against pollen-feeding flower visitors. For example, a diet of pollen from buttercup plants (
Ranunculus
) recently was shown to have a deleterious effect on developing larvae of several bee species not specialized on
Ranunculus
. Numerous
Ranunculus
species contain ranunculin, the glucosyl hydrate form of the highly reactive and toxic lactone protoanemonin, that causes the toxicity of these plants. We tested whether the presence of ranunculin is responsible for the lethal effects of
R. acris
pollen on the larvae of two bee species that are not
Ranunculus
specialists. To investigate the effect on bee larval development, we added ranunculin to the pollen provisions of the
Campanula
specialist bee
Chelostoma rapunculi
and the Asteraceae specialist bee
Heriades truncorum,
and allowed the larvae to feed on these provisions
.
We quantified ranunculin in pollen of
R. acris
and in brood cell provisions collected by the
Ranunculus
specialist bee
Chelostoma florisomne
. We demonstrated that although ranunculin was lethal to both tested bee species in high concentrations, the concentration in the pollen of
R. acris
was at least fourfold lower than that tolerated by the larvae of
C. rapunculi
and
H. truncorum
in the feeding experiments. Ranunculin concentration in the brood cells of
C. florisomne
was on average even twentyfold lower than that in
Ranunculus
pollen, suggesting that a mechanism different from ranunculin intoxication accounts for the larval mortality reported for bees not specialized on
Ranunculus
pollen. |
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ISSN: | 0098-0331 1573-1561 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10886-012-0153-3 |