Abstract

House flies (Musca domestica) are widespread, synanthropic filth flies commonly found on decaying matter, garbage, and feces as well as human food. They have been shown to vector microbes, including clinically relevant pathogens. Previous studies have demonstrated that house flies carry a complex and variable prokaryotic microbiota, but the main drivers underlying this variability and the influence of habitat on the microbiota remain understudied. Moreover, the differences between the external and internal microbiota and the eukaryotic components have not been examined. To obtain a comprehensive view of the fly microbiota and its environmental drivers, we sampled over 400 flies from two geographically distinct countries (Belgium and Rwanda) and three different environments—farms, homes, and hospitals. Both the internal as well as external microbiota of the house flies were studied, using amplicon sequencing targeting both bacteria and fungi. Results show that the house fly’s internal bacterial community is very diverse yet relatively consistent across geographic location and habitat, dominated by genera Staphylococcus and Weissella. The external bacterial community, however, varies with geographic location and habitat. The fly fungal microbiota carries a distinct signature correlating with the country of sampling, with order Capnodiales and genus Wallemia dominating Belgian flies and genus Cladosporium dominating Rwandan fly samples. Together, our results reveal an intricate country-specific pattern for fungal communities, a relatively stable internal bacterial microbiota and a variable external bacterial microbiota that depends on geographical location and habitat. These findings suggest that vectoring of a wide spectrum of environmental microbes occurs principally through the external fly body surface, while the internal microbiome is likely more limited by fly physiology.

Highlights

  • The common house fly, Musca domestica L. (Diptera: Muscidae), is a robust commensal organism, capable of surviving in a broad spectrum of environments

  • Our analysis demonstrated that the internal bacterial community largely overlaps regardless of location, while the external bacterial and fungal communities vary considerably with the sampling location, with flies from farms carrying the most distinct set of bacterial taxa regardless of country of origin

  • The internal and external microbiota of the flies was investigated via high-throughput amplicon sequencing of the V4 region of the bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene and the fungal internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) region

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Summary

Introduction

The common house fly, Musca domestica L. (Diptera: Muscidae), is a robust commensal organism, capable of surviving in a broad spectrum of environments. Musca domestica lives in close proximity to humans and domesticated animals, commonly found in homes, food markets, farms, and ranches, hovering around decaying matter, garbage, feces, and human food [1]. They prefer warmer (optimal 30 °C) and drier conditions but are able to breed at a reduced rate throughout colder seasons, typically in During each developmental stage (larvae, pupae, adults), house flies are tightly associated with microorganisms [6]. Flies can spread microbes through excretion, contact with contaminated legs or mouthparts, and by regurgitation while feeding [10, 11].

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