2016
DOI: 10.1007/s13592-016-0487-x
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Influence of different pollen diets on the development of hypopharyngeal glands and size of acid gland sacs in caged honey bees (Apis mellifera)

Abstract: -We examined the consumption rate of protein diets in caged and free-flying honey bees, amino acid composition of diets, and diet effects on gland development. The effect of seven different diets (sugar solution only, Feedbee®, Helianthus pollen, Sinapis pollen, Asparagus pollen, Castanea pollen, and mixed pollen diet) on the development of the hypopharyngeal (HPG) and acid glands (AG) was tested in caged honey bees. Caged bees consumed the protein diet mainly at the age of 1-8 days, with the highest consumpti… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…Pollen intake peaked early, then consumption of the two stored pollens was very low during the second week. A similar pattern has been found for consumption of bee-collected Castanea sativa pollen and other pollen diets (Omar et al, 2016). In all treatments, sucrose consumption peaked during the first week, dropped, then increased again during the second week.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Pollen intake peaked early, then consumption of the two stored pollens was very low during the second week. A similar pattern has been found for consumption of bee-collected Castanea sativa pollen and other pollen diets (Omar et al, 2016). In all treatments, sucrose consumption peaked during the first week, dropped, then increased again during the second week.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Apis mellifera nurse bees consume pollen collected by foragers to develop their hypopharyngeal glands (HPG) to produce royal jelly, which is then progressively fed to larvae. The increased diversity and protein content of pollen diets increase HPG development [70,71], but not royal jelly protein quality [72]. As foragers and nurses occupy different tasks, perhaps the low average P:L values described for honey bees above are offset by generalist foraging strategies and nurse bees' ability to process food quality through royal jelly toward intake targets for larvae.…”
Section: P:l Trends In Bee-flower Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bees fed with polyfloral pollen diets had higher glucose oxidase activity than those fed with monofloral diets (Alaux et al, 2010). Different pollen, sugar or commodity diets affected the development of both venom glands and hypopharyngeal glands (Omar et al, 2016). size of hypopharyngeal glands are shown to have a strong positive correlation with oocyte length (Wegener et al, 2009) in caged honey bees.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%