Abstract

Pollen substitute diets have become increasingly important for maintaining strong and healthy honey bee colonies. Palatability and nutritional value are key attributes of a good diet. Since beebread, which is pollen fermented by the bees, is the main food of the worker-nurse bees that feed and care for the bee larvae, pollen substitutes should have similar attributes. In an attempt to simulate this natural food source, an inoculum prepared from beebread was used to ferment a pollen substitute diet. In this study, it was determined the differences in the wax building by caged workers fed with different diets (sucrose syrup only, bee bread, unfermented pollen substitute diet and fermented pollen substitute diet). Comb building in honeybees was analyzed with respect to the type of food. The effects on wax combs building were assessed of the presence of beeswax foundation, and of feeding honey bees in cages. Workers fed on unfermented diets produced significantly less wax than did those fed on the fermented diets; although variation in wax production among the treatments was not significant. We conclude that fermentation by beebread-derived microorganisms could improve the palatability, consumption and nutritional value of the dies and the behavioral activities such as wax building by honey bee workers.

Highlights

  • In order to develop artificial protein diets that are nutritious and attractive to bees, it would make sense to make them as similar as possible to their natural proteinaceous food in the hive, bee bread

  • We provide a description of the types of wax comb constructions and their growth pattern, cell properties that are affected by the fermented substitute diet that we prepared

  • The experiment was conducted with the first hybrid of Carniolan honey bee, Apis mellifera carnica Pollmann workers in October 2019, after the samples collection, all the available types of bee bread from hives that placed in different regions in Assiut Governorate at the successive seasons

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Summary

Entomology

A fermented Pollen Substitute Diet Affects Wax Construction by Honey Bee Workers, (Apies mellifera L.). Mohamed1*, Mostafa, Adahm, Abdel-Rahman, Mohamed, and Sayed, Rania-Qurash. 1-Zoology Department, Faculty of Science, New Valley University 2-Plant Protection Research Institute, Agriculture Research Center-Dokki -Giza. Article History Received:2/3/2021 Accepted:23/4/2021 Keywords: Pollen substitute diet, bee bread, fermentation, wax building, comb construction

INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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