Landscape context alters cost of living in honeybee metabolism and feeding

Author:

Tomlinson Sean12ORCID,Dixon Kingsley W.23,Didham Raphael K.14,Bradshaw S. Donald1

Affiliation:

1. School of Animal Biology, The University of Western Australia, Perth, WA 6009, Australia

2. Kings Park and Botanic Gardens, Perth, WA 6005, Australia

3. Department of Environment and Agriculture, Curtin University, Bentley, WA 6102, Australia

4. CSIRO Land and Water, Centre for Environment and Life Sciences, Floreat, WA 6014, Australia

Abstract

Field metabolic rate (FMR) links the energy budget of an animal with the constraints of its ecosystem, but is particularly difficult to measure for small organisms. Landscape degradation exacerbates environmental adversity and reduces resource availability, imposing higher costs of living for many organisms. Here, we report a significant effect of landscape degradation on the FMR of free-flying Apis mellifera , estimated using 86 Rb radio-isotopic turnover. We validated the relationship between 86 Rb k b and metabolic rate for worker bees in the laboratory using flow-through respirometry. We then released radioisotopically enriched individuals into a natural woodland and a heavily degraded and deforested plantation. FMRs of worker bees in natural woodland vegetation were significantly higher than in a deforested landscape. Nectar consumption, estimated using 22 Na radio-isotopic turnover, also differed significantly between natural and degraded landscapes. In the deforested landscape, we infer that the costs of foraging exceeded energetic availability, and honeybees instead foraged less and depended more on stored resources in the hive. If this is generally the case with increasing landscape degradation, this will have important implications for the provision of pollination services and the effectiveness and resilience of ecological restoration practice.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

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

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