Jinatchaya Butdee’s research while affiliated with King Mongkut's University of Technology North Bangkok and other places

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Publications (2)


Tetragonula pagdeni adult bees, colony and hypopharyngeal glands (HPGs)
A) Adult workers guarding the nest entrance, removing waste from as well as forages leaving the hive. B) Colony under red light at night to enable the sampling of nurse bees (blue arrow indicating honey pots; yellow arrow indicating brood; white arrow indicating pollen pots). C) Hypopharyngeal gland acini under a light microscope (mc: main canal; cc: canal cells; ac: acini).
Tetragonula pagdeni adult worker cumulative survival curves (Kaplan-Meier)
A comparison of survival between pollen-fed workers (N = 180) and controls (N = 180) revealed a significant difference between treatment groups (Logrank, P < 0.05), which is indicated by the letters A and B. The solid black dots indicate points of censorship (i.e., days 3, 10 and 17), where a subsample of individuals were removed from cages to assess either hypopharyngeal gland acini size or protein content. Shaded areas surrounding the survival curves represent the 95% confidence intervals.
Tetragonula pagdeni hypopharyngeal gland (HPG) acini width in adult workers
A) Comparison of the acini width in workers at three different time points (i.e., days 3, 10 and 17). With age the acini width significantly increased (glm; P < 0.05), wherein pollen consumption had a significant positive effect on acini size (glm; P’s < 0.05). B) A comparison of the acini width in pollen-fed laboratory kept workers aged 3, 10 or 17 days (i.e., ‘Laboratory) and workers taken directly from field kept hives found on brood (i.e., ‘Nurse’) or when returning from foraging with pollen (i.e., ‘Forager’). Acini width in worker bees from hives were significantly larger when compared to the acini in laboratory kept pollen-fed bees (bmct; P < 0.05), wherein the nurses had the largest acini (bmct; P < 0.05). All box plots show the interquartile range (box), the median (black line within box), the data range (horizontal black lines from box) and outliers (coloured dots). A significant difference between treatment groups is indicated by alphabetical letters.
Tetragonula pagdeni hypopharyngeal gland (HPG) protein content in adult workers
For each treatment (control = black; pollen-fed = yellow), HPG protein content across time is displayed. A significant positive correlation was observed for protein content and age and a significant difference between treatment groups was observed (both P ‘s ≤ 0.025). The coloured dots represent the data points and the shaded areas surrounding the linear regression lines represent the 95% confidence intervals. Data distribution curves for both treatments is visualized on the right-hand side.
Age-dependent hypopharyngeal gland size and protein content of stingless bee workers, Tetragonula pagdeni
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2024

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111 Reads

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Tanatip Sittisorn

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Jinatchaya Butdee

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Eusocial insects, such as stingless bees (Meliponini), depend on division of labour, overlapping generations, and collaborative brood care to ensure the functionality and success of their colony. Female workers transition through a range of age-specific tasks during their lifespan (i.e., age-polyethism) and play a central role in the success of a colony. These age-specific tasks (e.g., brood care or foraging) often closely coincide with key physiological changes necessary to ensure optimal performance. However, our understanding of how nutrition, age, and polyethism may affect the development of such physiological traits in stingless bees remains limited. Here we show that pollen consumption and age-polyethism govern hypopharyngeal gland (HPG) acini size and protein content in Tetragonula pagdeni. By conducting a controlled laboratory experiment we monitored the effect of pollen consumption on worker bee survival as well as assessed how a pollen diet and age affected their HPG acini width and protein content. Further, we sampled nurses and foragers from field colonies to measure the effect of age-polyethism on HPG acini width. We found that pollen consumption enhanced survival and led to increased HPG acini width and protein content and that HPG acini were as expected largest in nurse bees. Our findings highlight the beneficial effects of an adequate diet for physiological development and health in stingless bees and reveal that age-polyethism is the key factor governing HPG size in worker bees. As HPGs are imperative for collaborative brood care—an essential component of eusociality—the data provide a foundation for future studies to investigate the impact of potential environmental stressors on a critical physiological trait in stingless bees which may serve as a proxy to understand the effects at the colony level.

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