Published on 08 December 2020

Floral tea polyphenols can improve honey bee memory retention and olfactory sensitivity

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Zhiwen Gong;Gaoying Gu;Wang, Yuan;Shihao Dong;Tan, Ken;Nieh, James C.

Description

Animal-pollinated plants face a common problem, how their defensive anti-herbivore compounds may impair or alter pollinator behavior. Evolution has tailored multiple solutions, which largely involve pollinator tolerance or manipulation, to the benefit of the plant, not the removal of these compounds from pollen or nectar. The tea plant, Camilla sinensis, is famous for the caffeine and tea polyphenols (TP) that it produces in its leaves. However, these compounds are also produced in its nectar, which honey bees readily collect. We examined the effects of these compounds on bee foraging choices, learning, memory, and olfactory sensitivity. Foragers preferred a sucrose feeder with 100 µg or 10 µg TP/ml over a control feeder. Caffeine, but not TP, weakly increased honey bee learning. Both caffeine and TP significantly increased memory retention, even when tested 7 d after the last learning trial. In addition, TP generally elevated EAG responsiveness to alarm pheromone odors. These results demonstrate that not only caffeine, but other secondary plant compounds, can attract pollinators and influence their learning and memory.

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Metrics

Dataset Index

1.0

FAIR Score

77%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

Zenodo

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Insect Science

Field

Agricultural and Biological Sciences

Domain

Life Sciences

Confidence Score

100%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

caffeine, Camilla sinensis, Apis mellifera, learning and memory, plant defensive compounds

Normalization Factors

FT

26.92

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00