Habitat-specific variation in gut microbial communities and pathogen prevalence in bumblebee queens (Bombus terrestris)
Authors
Bosmans, LienPozo, María I.
Verreth, Christel
Crauwels, Sam
Wilberts, Liesbet
Sobhy, Islam S.
Wäckers, Felix
Jacquemyn, Hans
Lievens, Bart
Editors
Nieh, James CAffiliation
KU Leuven; Suez Canal University; Lancaster UniversityPublication Date
2018-10-25
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Gut microbial communities are critical for the health of many insect species. However, little is known about how gut microbial communities respond to anthropogenic changes and how such changes affect host-pathogen interactions. In this study, we used deep sequencing to investigate and compare the composition of gut microbial communities within the midgut and ileum (both bacteria and fungi) in Bombus terrestris queens collected from natural (forest) and urbanized habitats. Additionally, we investigated whether the variation in gut microbial communities under each habitat affected the prevalence of two important bumblebee pathogens that have recently been associated with Bombus declines (Crithidia bombi and Nosema bombi). Microbial community composition differed strongly among habitat types, both for fungi and bacteria. Fungi were almost exclusively associated with bumblebee queens from the forest habitats, and were not commonly detected in bumblebee queens from the urban sites. Further, gut bacterial communities of urban B. terrestris specimens were strongly dominated by bee-specific core bacteria like Snodgrassella (Betaproteobacteria) and Gilliamella (Gammaproteobacteria), whereas specimens from the forest sites contained a huge fraction of environmental bacteria. Pathogen infection was very low in urban populations and infection by Nosema was only observed in specimens collected from forest habitats. No significant relationship was found between pathogen prevalence and microbial gut diversity. However, there was a significant and negative relationship between prevalence of Nosema and relative abundance of the core resident Snodgrassella, supporting its role in pathogen defense. Overall, our results indicate that land-use change may lead to different microbial gut communities in bumblebees, which may have implications for bumblebee health, survival and overall fitness.Citation
Bosmans, L., Pozo, M. I., Verreth, C., Crauwels, S., Wilberts, L., Sobhy, I. S., Wäckers, F., Jacquemyn, H., & Lievens, B. (2018). Habitat-specific variation in gut microbial communities and pathogen prevalence in bumblebee queens (Bombus terrestris). PLoS ONE, 13(10), article-number e0204612. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204612Publisher
Public Library of ScienceJournal
PLoS ONEType
ArticleLanguage
enDescription
© 2018 Bosmans et al.EISSN
1932-6203Sponsors
This study was supported by KU Leuven (Postdoctoral Mandate, grant to L.B. (PDM/17/132)) and the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) (grant to M.I.P. (12A0716N)).ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1371/journal.pone.0204612
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


