Chemical Diversity in a Stingless Bee-Plant Symbiosis

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Abstract

Bees are essential pollinators on earth, supporting forest equilibrium and human agriculture. The chemistry of the stingless bee-plant symbiosis is a complex and not completely understood phenomenon. Here, we combined untargeted tandem mass spectrometry, molecular networking, and multivariate statistical analysis to investigate the chemical diversity in colonies of the stingless bee Scaptotrigona depilis. Flavonoids were the most representative and diverse group of plant metabolites detected, indicating the importance of these biologically active natural products to the bees. We unveiled the metabolome, mapped the distribution of plant metabolites in stingless bee colonies, and digitized the chemical data into a public database.

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Silva-Junior, E. A., Paludo, C. R., Amaral, J. G., Gallon, M. E., Gobbo-Neto, L., Nascimento, F. S., & Lopes, N. P. (2019). Chemical Diversity in a Stingless Bee-Plant Symbiosis. ACS Omega, 4(12), 15208–15214. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b02096

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