In addition to fuel, nectar from various plant species contains chemical compounds that reduce the numbers of a common gut parasite in bumblebees. Christopher Intagliata reports.
February 20, 2015 | |
Home-based bird watchers might have mixed up a batch of to attract the feathered objects of their affection. It's pretty easy—just mix sugar and water. But the real stuff is a lot more complex—nearly all nectars are laced with amino acids, and some contain alkaloids, like nicotine and .
But Richardson and his colleagues have come up with yet another function for nectar's chemicals: as medicine for . They found compounds in the nectar of wild tobacco, linden, and white turtlehead flowers that cut the numbers of a common gut parasite in bumblebees by as much as 80 percent. The results are in the journal . [Leif L. Richardson et al.: ]
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