Sunflower Pollen and Bumble Bee Health: Mechanisms, Modifiers and Trade-Offs.
Odemer R
Urban Ecology
Planting sunflowers in your garden or community green space could directly support the health of wild bumble bees that pollinate your vegetables and flowers.
Scientists are studying why bumble bees that eat sunflower pollen tend to be healthier and better at fighting off a common gut infection. It turns out sunflowers — and other plants in the same family, like daisies — have something special in their pollen that acts almost like medicine for bees. But it's not a simple fix: how much pollen the bees eat, which bee species we're talking about, and what else is going on in their environment all affect whether the benefit actually kicks in.
Key Findings
Sunflower pollen reduces infection levels of the gut parasite Crithidia bombi in bumble bees, making it one of the most consistently medicinal pollens identified in research.
The protective effect is modulated by dose, bee species, and environmental stressors — meaning sunflower pollen is not a universal cure but a conditional benefit.
Agricultural intensification limits bumble bee access to Asteraceae pollen, suggesting that loss of wildflower diversity compounds pathogen pressure on bee populations.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Sunflower pollen has unique health-protective properties for bumble bees, helping them fight off gut parasites — but this benefit comes with trade-offs and is influenced by factors like pollen quantity and bee species.
Abstract Preview
Bumble bees face increasing pressure from interacting stressors, including pathogens, nutritional limitations, and agricultural intensification. Among natural dietary factors that modulate disease,...
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