Abstract

ABSTRACTIn holometabolous insects, larval nutrition affects adult body size, a life history trait with a profound influence on performance and fitness. Individual nutritional components of larval diets are often complex and may interact with one another, necessitating the use of a geometric framework for elucidating nutritional effects. In the honey bee, Apis mellifera, nurse bees provision food to developing larvae, directly moderating growth rates and caste development. However, the eusocial nature of honey bees makes nutritional studies challenging, because diet components cannot be systematically manipulated in the hive. Using in vitro rearing, we investigated the roles and interactions between carbohydrate and protein content on larval survival, growth, and development in A. mellifera. We applied a geometric framework to determine how these two nutritional components interact across nine artificial diets. Honey bees successfully completed larval development under a wide range of protein and carbohydrate contents, with the medium protein (∼5%) diet having the highest survival. Protein and carbohydrate both had significant and non-linear effects on growth rate, with the highest growth rates observed on a medium-protein, low-carbohydrate diet. Diet composition did not have a statistically significant effect on development time. These results confirm previous findings that protein and carbohydrate content affect the growth of A. mellifera larvae. However, this study identified an interaction between carbohydrate and protein content that indicates a low-protein, high-carb diet has a negative effect on larval growth and survival. These results imply that worker recruitment in the hive would decline under low protein conditions, even when nectar abundance or honey stores are sufficient.

Highlights

  • Nutrition is one of the most important environmental factors that determines both the growth and development of organisms

  • The effects of nutrition on larval survival The results demonstrate that both protein and carbohydrate concentrations have strong effects on the proportion of individuals that survive the larval growth period

  • Effects of nutrition on growth rate The results show that protein and carbohydrate concentrations play an important role in determining the growth rate of larval A. mellifera

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Summary

Introduction

Nutrition is one of the most important environmental factors that determines both the growth and development of organisms. The roles particular nutritional components play in overall growth and development are not well characterized in many organisms, and non-linear interactions among specific diet components make nutrition difficult to study (Raubenheimer et al, 2009). The geometric framework for nutrition provides a standardized approach for studying effects of nutrition, and a robust conceptual framework for exploring the effects of nutritional complexity on performance and fitness (Behmer, 2009a,b; Harrison et al, 2014; Raubenheimer and Simpson, 1994, 1999; Simpson and Raubenheimer, 1995, 2001, 2011) This framework allows researchers the ability to disentangle the effects of major macronutrients, such as protein and carbohydrate, and robustly captures the complexity of nutritional effects on growth

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