Centro Apícola Regional (CAR), Dirección General de la Producción Agropecuaria, Consejería de Agricultura, Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha, 19180 Marchamalo, Spain.
Res Vet Sci. 2012 Aug;93(1):150-5. doi: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2011.08.002. Epub 2011 Sep 8.
Microsporidiosis caused by infection with Nosema apis or Nosema ceranae has become one of the most widespread diseases of honey bees and can cause important economic losses for beekeepers. Honey can be contaminated by spores of both species and it has been reported as a suitable matrix to study the field prevalence of other honey bee sporulated pathogens. Historical honey sample collections from the CAR laboratory (Centro Apícola Regional) were analyzed by PCR to identify the earliest instance of emergence, and to determine whether the presence of Nosema spp. in honey was linked to the spread of these microsporidia in honey bee apiaries. A total of 240 frozen honey samples were analyzed by PCR and the results compared with rates of Nosema spp. infection in worker bee samples from different years and geographical areas. The presence of Nosema spp. in hive-stored honey from naturally infected honey bee colonies (from an experimental apiary) was also monitored, and although collected honey bees resulted in a more suitable sample to study the presence of microsporidian parasites in the colonies, a high probability of finding Nosema spp. in their hive-stored honey was observed. The first honey sample in which N. ceranae was detected dates back to the year 2000. In subsequent years, the number of samples containing N. ceranae tended to increase, as did the detection of Nosema spp. in adult worker bees. The presence of N. ceranae as early as 2000, long before generalized bee depopulation and colony losses in 2004 may be consistent with a long incubation period for nosemosis type C or related with other unknown factors. The current prevalence of nosemosis, primarily due to N. ceranae, has reached epidemic levels in Spain as confirmed by the analysis of worker honey bees and commercial honey.
由蜜蜂微孢子虫感染引起的微孢子虫病已成为蜜蜂最广泛的疾病之一,可能给养蜂人造成重大的经济损失。蜂蜜可能被这两个物种的孢子污染,并且已经有报道称它是研究其他蜜蜂有孢子病原体田间流行率的合适基质。通过 PCR 分析了来自 CAR 实验室(Centro Apícola Regional)的历史蜂蜜样本,以确定最早出现的情况,并确定蜂蜜中是否存在 Nosema spp.与这些微孢子虫在蜜蜂蜂箱中的传播有关。总共分析了 240 个冷冻蜂蜜样本,并将结果与不同年份和地理区域的工蜂样本中 Nosema spp.的感染率进行了比较。还监测了来自自然感染的蜜蜂群(来自一个实验蜂场)的蜂巢储存蜂蜜中 Nosema spp.的存在,尽管收集的蜜蜂样本更适合研究群体中微孢子寄生虫的存在,但在其蜂巢储存的蜂蜜中发现 Nosema spp.的可能性很高。首次检测到 N. ceranae 的蜂蜜样本可以追溯到 2000 年。在随后的几年中,含有 N. ceranae 的样本数量趋于增加,成年工蜂中检测到 Nosema spp.的数量也在增加。早在 2000 年就已经存在 N. ceranae,远早于 2004 年普遍的蜂群减少和蜂群损失,这可能与 C 型 Nosema 或与其他未知因素有关的长潜伏期一致。目前,Nosema 病的流行率主要由 N. ceranae 引起,通过对工蜂和商业蜂蜜的分析,已经在西班牙达到了流行水平。