Abstract
Gathering information on the bee foraging plants in a given area is of primary importance in the development of any apiculture industry. Analysis of the honey produced in hives as well as the stored pollen loads help to evaluate the sources of nectar and pollen used by honey bees and their behavioural pattern in the selection of preferences for certain plants as food. Our previous melissopalynology study focused on the analysis of the Omani honey from hives in 14 locations of Muscat and the Al Batinah regions. Our current study examines the pollen pellets collected from those same areas. A total of 249 pollen pellets from 22 honeycombs that were collected by Apis florea and Apis mellifera honeybees were processed and the pollen types were identified using light and scanning electron microscopy. Each pollen load was designated as a unifloral, bifloral or multifloral type. Each plant taxon identified was categorized as being utilized by honeybees for pollen only, nectar only or for both pollen and nectar. A pollen reference collection of 105 local flowering plants was prepared that enabled us to identify most of the pollen types. The quantification of 94 pollen types revealed that 67 of them belonged to 39 plant families, all of which are represented in both the pollen loads and the honey samples. Seven pollen genera were found in the pollen loads only and suggest that those plants were visited by bees just for pollen. Twenty pollen types appear only in the honey samples and suggest that bees visited them only for nectar. Major bee foraging plant species include: Ziziphus spina-christi, Acacia tortilis, Prosopis cineraria, Prosopis juliflora, Maerua crassifolia, Citrus spp., Zygophyllum spp. and Fagonia spp. These data provide a guide to the optimal utilization of floral resources by honeybees in these regions.
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Notes on contributors
Alia Sajwani
ALIA MOHAMMED ALI SAJWANI received a bachelors degree in biology from Bahrain University in 1988 and an masters from Sultan Qaboos University, Oman in 2003. She is currently working as a senior biologist for the Ministry of Education in Oman, whilst studying for her PhD at Sultan Qaboos University. Her PhD research involves investigating the pollen and biochemical characteristics of Omani honey. Alia received awards for her evaluation of Omani honey at the London International Honey Show in 2012.
Sardar A. Farooq
Vaughn M. Bryant
VAUGHN M. BRYANT received bachelors, masters and PhD degrees from the University of Texas at Austin, and is currently a Professor of Anthropology and the Director of the Texas A&M University Palynology Laboratory. He is also an adjunct Professor of Forensic Sciences at the University of Nebraska. Vaughn has served as Managing Editor and President of AASP - The Palynological Society; he also received the Distinguished Service and Honorary Membership Awards from this organisation. Since 1990, he has been a Trustee and Secretary of the American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists Foundation.