4.5 Article

Linking pollen foraging of megachilid bees to their nest bacterial microbiota

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 9, Issue 18, Pages 10788-10800

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.5599

Keywords

foraging patterns; nest microbiota; plant-microbe-pollinator triangle; pollination network; solitary bees; wild bees

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG KE1743/4-1]
  2. University of Wuerzburg

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Solitary bees build their nests by modifying the interior of natural cavities, and they provision them with food by importing collected pollen. As a result, the microbiota of the solitary bee nests may be highly dependent on introduced materials. In order to investigate how the collected pollen is associated with the nest microbiota, we used metabarcoding of the ITS2 rDNA and the 16S rDNA to simultaneously characterize the pollen composition and the bacterial communities of 100 solitary bee nest chambers belonging to seven megachilid species. We found a weak correlation between bacterial and pollen alpha diversity and significant associations between the composition of pollen and that of the nest microbiota, contributing to the understanding of the link between foraging and bacteria acquisition for solitary bees. Since solitary bees cannot establish bacterial transmission routes through eusociality, this link could be essential for obtaining bacterial symbionts for this group of valuable pollinators. Open Research Badges This article has earned an Open Data Badge for making publicly available the digitally-shareable data necessary to reproduce the reported results. The data is available at , , and

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