Abstract

Western honey bee (Apis mellifera Linnaeus) populations recently have been in decline worldwide owing not only to colony collapse disorder but also other infectious diseases. The problem is neither decreasing nor has it been resolved. Chalkbrood (Ascosphaera apis, Maassen ex Claussen) is a well-known fungal brood disease that is now found throughout the world, and there are indications that the incidence of chalkbrood may be on the rise. Here, we conducted comparative studies to analyze infection rates of pathogenic RNA viruses and gut microbiota of young worker honey bees in two colonies: a healthy control colony raised in an open field and a test colony showing the chalkbrood symptom after a 2-month pollination task in a strawberry greenhouse. We found that the number of young worker bees with deformed wing virus (DWV) RNA was significantly elevated in the chalkbrood-infected colony, and two kinds of gut γ-proteobacteria, Frischellaperrara gen. nov. and Pasteurellaceae bacterium Trm1, were especially increased in DWV-infected animals. These results showed that the DWV infection rates of worker honey bees were enhanced when their brood was infected with chalkbrood disease and that the gut microbiota in worker bees was significantly affected by the virus infection.

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