More than mesolectic: Characterizing the nutritional niche of Osmia cornifrons

Author:

Crone Makaylee K.12ORCID,Boyle Natalie K.1,Bresnahan Sean T.13,Biddinger David J.14,Richardson Rodney T.5,Grozinger Christina M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Entomology, Center for Pollinator Research, Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

2. Intercollege Graduate Program in Ecology, Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

3. Intercollege Graduate Degree Program in Molecular, Cellular, and Integrative Biosciences, Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

4. Penn State Fruit Research and Extension Center Biglerville Pennsylvania USA

5. University of Maryland Center for Environmental Sciences College Park Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractCharacterizing the nutritional needs of wild bee species is an essential step to better understanding bee biology and providing suitable supplemental forage for at‐risk species. Here, we aim to characterize the nutritional needs of a model solitary bee species, Osmia cornifrons (Radoszkowski), by using dietary protein‐to‐lipid ratio (P:L ratio) as a proxy for nutritional niche and niche breadth. We first identified the mean target P:L ratio (~3.02:1) and P:L collection range (0.75–6.26:1) from pollen provisions collected across a variety of sites and time points. We then investigated the P:L tolerance range of larvae by rearing bees in vitro on a variety of diets. Multifloral and single‐source pollen diets with P:L ratios within the range of surveyed provisions did not always support larval development, indicating that other dietary components such as plant secondary compounds and micronutrients must also be considered in bee nutritional experiments. Finally, we used pollen metabarcoding to identify pollen from whole larval provisions to understand how much pollen bees used from plants outside of their host plant families to meet their nutritional needs, as well as pollen from individual forager bouts, to observe if bees maintained strict floral constancy or visited multiple plant genera per foraging bout. Whole larval provision surveys revealed a surprising range of host plant pollen use, ranging from ~5% to 70% of host plant pollen per provision. Samples from individual foraging trips contained pollen from multiple genera, suggesting that bees are using some form of foraging decision making. Overall, these results suggest that O. cornifrons have a wide nutritional niche breadth, but while pollen P:L ratio tolerance is broad, a tolerable P:L ratio alone is not enough to create a quality diet for O. cornifrons, and the plant species that make up these diets must also be carefully considered.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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