Wednesday, September 10, 2025
News Health
  • Health News
  • Hair Products
  • Nutrition
    • Weight Loss
  • Sexual Health
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
    • Men’s Health
No Result
View All Result
  • Health News
  • Hair Products
  • Nutrition
    • Weight Loss
  • Sexual Health
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
    • Men’s Health
No Result
View All Result
HealthNews
No Result
View All Result
Home Health News

Artificial superfood for bees boosts colony reproduction

August 20, 2025
in Health News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Bees often struggle to get the nutrients they need from flowers

Ran Zisovitch/Shutterstock

An artificial “superfood” that provides essential nutrients for bees results in colonies producing much more larvae, suggesting it could help tackle the global decline in honeybees.

Bees need to eat pollen from a range of flowers to get the nutrients they need, including essential lipids called sterols. But due to climate change and industrial agriculture, the environments they live in often lack the floral diversity they need to survive. “We need more bees to do pollination for crops, and there is less food for them,” says Geraldine Wright at the University of Oxford.

To address this, beekeepers are increasingly feeding bees artificial pollen substitutes. But commercial supplements – usually made of protein flour, sugars and oils – lack the right sterol compounds, making them nutritionally incomplete.

Using CRISPR gene editing, Wright and her colleagues engineered the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica to produce a precise mix of six key sterols that bees need. The yeast was incorporated into diets fed to bee colonies during three-month feeding trials in enclosed glasshouses.

By the end of the study, colonies fed with sterol-enriched yeast had reared up to 15 times more larvae to the stage of viable pupae, compared with colonies that received a typical commercial bee feed.

Colonies fed the sterol-enriched diet were able to keep producing eggs and larvae right up to the end of the 90-day period, while colonies on sterol-deficient diets had largely stopped brood production before the end of the study.

“Our technology allows beekeepers to feed bees in the absence of pollen,” says Wright. “When incorporated into a pollen substitute that’s been optimised for all other nutrients, the bees will be healthier and produce stronger, longer-lasting colonies.”

The yeast could also be used to engineer essential nutrients for other farmed insects, which are increasingly important food sources for humans and livestock, says Wright.

Topics:



Source link : https://www.newscientist.com/article/2493193-artificial-superfood-for-bees-boosts-colony-reproduction/?utm_campaign=RSS%7CNSNS&utm_source=NSNS&utm_medium=RSS&utm_content=home

Author :

Publish date : 2025-08-20 16:00:00

Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.

Previous Post

Infection Risks Differ in Two Patient Groups on Adalimumab

Next Post

PHQ-9 Liability Concerns; AI-Induced Psychosis; Personality Disorder Coding Updates

Related Posts

Health News

Despite Threats, Mail-Order Abortions Aren’t Slowing Down

September 10, 2025
Health News

UK Ad Ban for Junk Food: Will 2026 Be Too Late?

September 10, 2025
Health News

Rise in number of people in the UK facing hunger says charity

September 10, 2025
Health News

Healthy Habits Cut Functional Constipation Risk by 40%

September 10, 2025
Health News

Exercise Training Tops Standard Care in MASH Resolution

September 10, 2025
Health News

Dermatologist: Urticaria Management Not Just for Allergists

September 10, 2025
Load More

Despite Threats, Mail-Order Abortions Aren’t Slowing Down

September 10, 2025

UK Ad Ban for Junk Food: Will 2026 Be Too Late?

September 10, 2025

Rise in number of people in the UK facing hunger says charity

September 10, 2025

Healthy Habits Cut Functional Constipation Risk by 40%

September 10, 2025

Exercise Training Tops Standard Care in MASH Resolution

September 10, 2025

Dermatologist: Urticaria Management Not Just for Allergists

September 10, 2025

More children are obese than underweight, Unicef warns

September 10, 2025

Alzheimer’s blood test could ‘revolutionise’ diagnosis

September 10, 2025
Load More

Categories

Archives

September 2025
MTWTFSS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930 
« Aug    

© 2022 NewsHealth.

No Result
View All Result
  • Health News
  • Hair Products
  • Nutrition
    • Weight Loss
  • Sexual Health
  • Skin Care
  • Women’s Health
    • Men’s Health

© 2022 NewsHealth.

Go to mobile version