Pollen as Bee Medicine: Is Prevention Better than Cure?

Author:

Vanderplanck Maryse1ORCID,Marin Lucie2,Michez Denis2ORCID,Gekière Antoine2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CEFE, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE, IRD, 34090 Montpellier, France

2. Laboratory of Zoology, Research Institute for Biosciences, University of Mons, 7000 Mons, Belgium

Abstract

To face environmental stressors such as infection, animals may display behavioural plasticity to improve their physiological status through ingestion of specific food. In bees, the significance of medicating pollen may be limited by their ability to exploit it. Until now, studies have focused on the medicinal effects of pollen and nectar after forced-feeding experiments, overlooking spontaneous intake. Here, we explored the medicinal effects of different pollen on Bombus terrestris workers infected by the gut parasite Crithidia bombi. First, we used a forced-feeding experimental design allowing for the distinction between prophylactic and therapeutic effects of pollen, considering host tolerance and resistance. Then, we assessed whether bumble bees favoured medicating resources when infected to demonstrate potential self-medicative behaviour. We found that infected bumble bees had a lower fitness but higher resistance when forced to consume sunflower or heather pollen, and that infection dynamics was more gradual in therapeutic treatments. When given the choice between resources, infected workers did not target medicating pollen, nor did they consume more medicating pollen than uninfected ones. These results emphasize that the access to medicating resources could impede parasite dynamics, but that the cost–benefit trade-off could be detrimental when fitness is highly reduced.

Funder

ARC ‘Actions de Recherche Concertées’ project

F.R.S.-FNRS PhD grant ‘Aspirant’

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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