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Marla Spivak

· Professor EmeritusVerified

University of Minnesota · Entomology

Active 1969–2024

h-index59
Citations10.8k
Papers15623 last 5y
Funding$1.6M
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Research topics

  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Ecology

Selected publications

  • Do honey bee (Apis mellifera) foragers recruit their nestmates to native forbs in reconstructed prairie habitats?

    PLoS ONE · 2020 · 39 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Biology
    • Ecology
    • Geography

    Honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies are valued for the pollination services that they provide. However, colony mortality has increased to unsustainable levels in some countries, including the United States. Landscape conversion to monocrop agriculture likely plays a role in this increased mortality by decreasing the food sources available to honey bees. Many land owners and organizations in the Upper Midwest region of the United States would like to restore/reconstruct native prairie habitats. With increasing public awareness of high bee mortality, many landowners and beekeepers have wondered whether these restored prairies could significantly improve honey bee colony nutrition. Conveniently, honey bees have a unique communication signal called a waggle dance, which indicates the locations of the flower patches that foragers perceive as highly profitable food sources. We used these communication signals to answer two main questions: First, is there any part of the season in which the foraging force of a honey bee colony will devote a large proportion of its recruitment efforts (waggle dances) to flower patches within prairies? Second, will honey bee foragers advertise specific taxa of native prairie flowers as profitable pollen sources? We decoded 1528 waggle dances in colonies located near two large, reconstructed prairies. We also collected pollen loads from a subset of waggle-dancing bees, which we then analyzed to determine the flower taxon advertised. Most dances advertised flower patches outside of reconstructed prairies, but the proportion of dances advertising nectar sources within prairies increased significantly in the late summer/fall at one site. Honey bees advertised seven native prairie taxa as profitable pollen sources, although the three most commonly advertised pollen taxa were non-native. Our results suggest that including certain native prairie flower taxa in reconstructed prairies may increase the chances that colonies will use those prairies as major food sources during the period of greatest colony growth and honey production.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Michael Simone-Finstrom

    Honey Bee Breeding, Genetics, and Physiology Laboratory

    16 shared
  • Suzanne W. T. Batra

    16 shared
  • André Luís de Castro

    Universidade Estadual do Paraná

    16 shared
  • W. Ramírez

    16 shared
  • F. Segreda

    Carl Hayden Bee Research Center

    16 shared
  • Gary S. Reuter

    University of Minnesota System

    14 shared
  • Renata S. Borba

    University of British Columbia

    11 shared
  • Jay D. Evans

    Agricultural Research Service

    8 shared

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