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Disease associations between honeybees and bumblebees as a threat to wild pollinators
- Source :
- Nature
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) pose a risk to human welfare, both directly1 and indirectly, by affecting managed livestock and wildlife that provide valuable resources and ecosystem services, such as the pollination of crops2. Honey bees (Apis mellifera), the prevailing managed insect crop pollinator, suffer from a range of emerging and exotic high impact pathogens3,4 and population maintenance requires active management by beekeepers to control them. Wild pollinators such as bumble bees (Bombus spp.) are in global decline5,6, one cause of which may be pathogen spillover from managed pollinators like honey bees7,8 or commercial colonies of bumble bees9. In our study, a combination of infection experiments with landscape scale field data indicates that honey bee EIDs are indeed widespread infectious agents within the pollinator assemblage. The prevalence of deformed wing virus (DWV) and the exotic Nosema ceranae is linked between honey bees and bumble bees, with honey bees having higher DWV prevalence, and sympatric bumble bees and honey bees sharing DWV strains; Apis is therefore the likely source of at least one major EID in wild pollinators. Lessons learned from vertebrates10,11 highlight the need for increased pathogen control in managed bee species to maintain wild pollinators, as declines in native pollinators may be caused by interspecies pathogen transmission originating from managed pollinators.
- Subjects :
- Risk
0106 biological sciences
Beekeeping
Pollination
Molecular Sequence Data
ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species
Population
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Article
03 medical and health sciences
Pollinator
Deformed wing virus
Animals
RNA Viruses
Parasites
education
030304 developmental biology
Nosema bombi
2. Zero hunger
0303 health sciences
education.field_of_study
Multidisciplinary
biology
ved/biology
Ecology
Bees
15. Life on land
biology.organism_classification
Nosema ceranae
United Kingdom
Apicystis bombi
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14764687 and 00280836
- Volume :
- 506
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5fe9f2df579d6ec34701bc85fd44f27a
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12977