Abstract
Bacteria within the digestive tract of adult honey bees are likely to play a key role in the digestion of sugar-rich foods. However, the influence of diet on honey bee gut bacteria is not well understood. During periods of low floral abundance, beekeepers often supplement the natural sources of carbohydrate that honey bees collect, such as nectar, with various forms of carbohydrates such as sucrose (a disaccharide) and invert sugar (a mixture of the monosaccharides glucose and fructose). We compared the effect of these sugar supplements on the relative abundance of bacteria in the gut of bees by feeding bees from a single colony, two natural diets: mānuka honey, a monofloral honey with known antibacterial properties, and a hive diet; and artificial diets of invert sugar, sucrose solution, and sucrose solutions containing synthesised compounds associated with the antibacterial properties of mānuka honey. 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA)-based sequencing showed that dietary regimes containing mānuka honey, sucrose and invert sugar did not alter the relative abundance of dominant core bacteria after 6 days of being fed these diets. However, sucrose-rich diets increased the relative abundances of three sub-dominant core bacteria, Rhizobiaceae, Acetobacteraceae, and Lactobacillus kunkeei, and decreased the relative abundance of Frischella perrara, all which significantly altered the bacterial composition. Acetogenic bacteria from the Rhizobiaceae and Acetobacteraceae families increased two- to five-fold when bees were fed sucrose. These results suggest that sucrose fuels the proliferation of specific low abundance primary sucrose-feeders, which metabolise sugars into monosaccharides, and then to acetate.
Highlights
European honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) are the primary pollinators of numerous nut, fruit, and vegetable crops, so they play an integral part in global food production [1,2,3,4]
The α-diversity analysis indicated that none of the treatments caused a significant influence on the richness (Chao1, Observed OTUS), and this did not change after accounting for evenness (Shannon and Simpson Indices) (P > 0.05) (S2 Table)
The25 Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) associated with Lactobacillus sp. suggests the phylotype contains a lot of genetic diversity (Table 3)
Summary
European honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) are the primary pollinators of numerous nut, fruit, and vegetable crops, so they play an integral part in global food production [1,2,3,4]. All three products are utilised both as food and by the medicinal and dietary-supplement industries. This global utilisation of honey bees has made it important to understand the factors that influence honey bee health. The health and production of a colony is dependent on the location that beekeepers place their hives to forage, the supplementary carbohydrate and protein sources they feed their bees, and when they do this [6,7,8]
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