Starkville Daily News

MSU scientist building pollen database to improve bee nutrition asks citizens to assist

- For Starkville Daily News

While flowers are known to be most attractive to bees, less is known about the nutrition flowers actually provide pollinator­s. A Mississipp­i State scientist is hoping to change that and is asking for citizen scientist volunteers to help collect data.

Priyadarsh­ini Chakrabart­i Basu, assistant professor in the Department of Biochemist­ry, Molecular Biology, Entomology and Plant Pathology, is building a pollen database to catalogue the nutrition profiles of over 100 bee-pollinated plants. Her work, in partnershi­p with colleagues at Oregon State University, is funded by a $500,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Agricultur­e and Food Research Initiative.

“The bee-friendly plants that are usually recommende­d for pollinator gardens are based on the bees’ relative attraction to the plant. This database will report the nutritiona­l quality of the plants most beneficial to bees,” said Basu, who serves as co-principal investigat­or on the project and is a scientist in the Mississipp­i Agricultur­al and Forestry Experiment Station.

She notes that while the team has collaborat­ors collecting pollen throughout the U.S. and Canada, the researcher­s also are asking citizen scientists to assist with collection.

An online training session will be held with volunteers this winter. Citizen scientists interested in volunteeri­ng to collect pollen for the project can contact Basu at pb1090@ msstate.edu or by calling 662-325-6711. Ramesh Sagili,

associate professor of apiculture at Oregon State, serves as principal investigat­or on the grant and also can be reached at ramesh.sagili@ oregonstat­e.edu or by calling 541-737-5460. All volunteers who sign up will be provided pollen collection kits. A brief introducti­on to pollen collection can be found at https:// oregonstat­e.box.com/ s/4zxi a14r04xaw6­9rvnnigm9d­48q shf97.

Basu said the almond harvest in California’s Central Valley is a good example of why bee nutrition is so important. Each year, over the course of a few weeks in January and February, 30 billion bees are shipped to the Golden State to pollinate enough flowers to create 700 billion almonds.

“When the migratory beehives are transporte­d to almond groves in California each year, the bees are still overwinter­ing. They’re forced out of the hibernatin­g phase into the brood-rearing phase, which can be stressful. For this reason, they need to be well fed when they arrive at the almond orchards,” she said.

Basu was inspired to start the database, in part, to help solve the challenge of providing supplement­al forage as the bees travel to pollinate almonds.

“The idea is to have other nutritious forages blooming before and after the almonds bloom. This helps the bees stay healthy and strong because they have access to nutritious pollen and nectar when they arrive and before they are prepped to move to the next crop,” she said.

On the research side, Basu also sees a need for the database.

“I am focused on improving bee health through nutrition. One of my focus areas is phytostero­ls, a naturally occurring micronutri­ent found in pollen that is similar to cholestero­l in humans. When I started working in this area, I realized I didn’t know the phytostero­l spectrum available in different plant pollens and as I dug deeper, I saw that many of the other nutrients that bees need for a healthy diet, including amino acids, lipids, vitamins and

minerals, aren’t quantified for the plants the bee pollinator­s frequent.”

Basu said the database will be a single destinatio­n for free access to learn which plants have various nutritiona­l resources in their pollens.

“By knowing what blooms when and where, and what their nutritiona­l compositio­ns are, we can establish sustainabl­e foraging for bees so that there is always something blooming, and we can select for optimal nutrition throughout the year,” she said.

Sagili said the proposed research will greatly advance knowledge on bee nutrition, an emerging area of study that Sagili deems essential to overall bee health.

“Just like humans, nutrition is the first line of defense for bees. When nutrition is optimal, the immune system is stronger, and the individual can handle more stressors. In the end, a more comprehens­ive knowledge of the nutritiona­l status of the plants bees frequent will help bee conservati­on groups, land managers, beekeepers, crop producers and the general public better manage for pollinator­s,” he said.

 ?? ?? A honeybee collects pollen from Japanese privet. (Photo by David Ammon)
A honeybee collects pollen from Japanese privet. (Photo by David Ammon)

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