Abstract

Pollinators are declining worldwide and possible underlying causes include disease, invasive pest species and large scale land use changes resulting in habitat loss and degradation. One particular cause of habitat degradation is the increased inflow of nutrients due to anthropogenic combustion processes and large scale application of agricultural fertilizers. This nutrient pollution has been shown to affect pollinators through the loss of nectar and pollen-providing plant species. However, it may also affect pollinators through altering the nectar and pollen chemical composition of plant species, hence influencing pollinator food quality. Here, we experimentally investigated the effect of nutrient enrichment on amino acid and sugar composition of nectar and pollen in the grassland plant Sucissa pratensis, and the subsequent colony size and larval mortality of the pollinating bumblebee Bombus terrestris. We found less of the essential amino acids glycine and arginine in the pollen of fertilized plants, and more arginine, ornithine and threonine in the pollen of control plants. Nectar glucose and pollen fructose levels were lower in fertilized plants as compared to control plants. Furthermore, bumblebee colonies visiting fertilized plants showed more dead larvae than colonies visiting control plants. Our results suggest that the fitness of bumblebees can be negatively affected by changes in their food quality following nutrient pollution. If similar patterns hold for other plant and pollinator species, this may have far reaching implications for the maintenance of pollination ecosystem services, as nutrient pollution continues to rise worldwide.

Highlights

  • non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) analysis followed by environmental fit of the sugar composition in the nectar revealed marginally significant differences between treatments (R2 = 0.20, P = 0.066) and similar results were obtained through PERMANOVA analysis (F = 2.91, R2 = 0.10, P = 0.064)

  • NMDS analysis followed by environmental fit of the sugar composition in the pollen revealed a significant difference between treatments (R2 = 0.13, P = 0.003)

  • We found that fertilization of S. pratensis was associated with a change in nectar and pollen amino acid and sugar composition

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Summary

Objectives

The specific objectives of this study were to i) investigate the effects of fertilization on nectar and pollen amino acid and sugar composition; and ii) determine the subsequent effect on colony size and larval mortality of bumblebees visiting the flowers of these fertilized plants

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