Imperial Valley Press

Study of honey bee’s gut may lead to healthier colonies

- BY KIM KAPLAN

TUCSON, Ariz. — Learning the details of the microbial species living in a honey bee’s gut is offering potential for a whole new set of tools for managing honey bee colonies.

Research by scientists with the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Agricultur­al Research Service shows the makeup of microbial species — the microbiome — in a honey bee queen’s gut changes slowly as she ages, while a worker bee’s microbiome changes much more rapidly.

“We establishe­d the close connection of the makeup of the honey bee microbiome with the physiology of aging and stress,” said ARS microbial ecologist Kirk E. Anderson at the Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson. “Our results provide a roadmap to improving colony health through improving queen rearing, nutrition and other management practices.”

Honey bee queens, which lay all of the eggs in a hive, commonly last about three years in managed colonies before beekeepers replace them as reproducti­on slows.

But in recent years, queens have been failing more quickly. This is a factor in higher colony losses reported during the past 12 years and has increased beekeepers’ costs and labor. Queens currently cost about $25 each.

The honey bee gut microbiome plays a significan­t role in metabolism, developmen­t and growth, and immune system function and protection against pathogens. Five to seven bacterial species groups usually make up the vast majority of a honey bee’s core microbiome from among a common list of 10 to 12 species groups. The exact mix depends on a honey bee’s age and function in the hive.

Anderson and ARS molecular biologist Vincent Ricigliano found that as a queen ages, in her gut microbiome, the levels of two bacterial species groups slowly increase: Lactobacil­lus and Bifidobact­erium, both known for providing probiotic benefits in mammals, including humans.

At the same time, her microbiome has decreased levels of Proteobact­eria species, which are often associated with unhealthy microbial imbalances.

The rate of this shift is associated more with a queen’s biological age than her chronologi­cal age.

Queens age biological­ly at different rates depending on their colony’s exposure to a variety of environmen­tal stresses, which can include available nutrition and exposure to temperatur­e extremes.

Interestin­gly, during this study, the researcher­s discovered a new potentiall­y queen-specific pathogen not detected in any adult worker bees — Delftia bacteria. The occurrence of Delftia in the queen’s mouth and gut rose or fell opposite to the levels of bacteria considered beneficial. This suggests Delftia may play a part in early queen mortality, according to Anderson.

In comparison, Lactobacil­lus and Bifidobact­erium levels dropped, and the number of Proteobact­eria went up as worker bees aged. Workers’ microbiome­s appear to change in a highly predictabl­e fashion, especially with age.

This may mean early shifts in worker microbiota could be used as a warning indicator for colony dwindling and/ or failure.

Applying this new informatio­n to enhancing honey bees’ microbiome may represent a new strategy to slow their aging or to combat physiologi­cal stress.

In addition, as understand­ing of the honey bee’s relatively straightfo­rward microbiome increases, the ARS researcher­s are hopeful that bees may offer an excellent model in which to study the much more complex microbiome of other species including humans.

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