Overwintering Honey Bee Colonies: Effect of Worker Age and Climate on the Hindgut Microbiota.

Insects

Graduate Interdisciplinary Program in Entomology and Insect Science, University of Arizona, P.O. Box 210036, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.

Published: March 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Overwintering health of honey bees is vital for spring pollination, but increasing winter colony losses have raised concerns about management practices, including indoor climate-controlled environments.
  • Researchers sequenced the hindgut microbiota of honey bee workers in both a warm southern climate and a controlled cold climate, discovering that southern workers had significantly lower longevity compared to their northern counterparts.
  • The study found that while older workers had reduced bacterial and fungal loads, the overall structure of their gut microbiome remained stable; however, fungal abundance increased dramatically in the southern climate, indicating compromised health and potential implications for overwintering strategies.

Article Abstract

Honey bee overwintering health is essential to meet the demands of spring pollination. Managed honey bee colonies are overwintered in a variety of climates, and increasing rates of winter colony loss have prompted investigations into overwintering management, including indoor climate controlled overwintering. Central to colony health, the worker hindgut gut microbiota has been largely ignored in this context. We sequenced the hindgut microbiota of overwintering workers from both a warm southern climate and controlled indoor cold climate. Congruently, we sampled a cohort of known chronological age to estimate worker longevity in southern climates, and assess age-associated changes in the core hindgut microbiota. We found that worker longevity over winter in southern climates was much lower than that recorded for northern climates. Workers showed decreased bacterial and fungal load with age, but the relative structure of the core hindgut microbiome remained stable. Compared to cold indoor wintering, collective microbiota changes in the southern outdoor climate suggest compromised host physiology. Fungal abundance increased by two orders of magnitude in southern climate hindguts and was positively correlated with non-core, likely opportunistic bacteria. Our results contribute to understanding overwintering honey bee biology and microbial ecology and provide insight into overwintering strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8000648PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12030224DOI Listing

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