Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
1] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA [2] Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas, Austin, TX, USA.
ISME J. 2014 Dec;8(12):2369-79. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2014.68. Epub 2014 Apr 24.
Bacterial gut symbiont communities are critical for the health of many insect species. However, little is known about how microbial communities vary among host species or how they respond to anthropogenic disturbances. Bacterial communities that differ in richness or composition may vary in their ability to provide nutrients or defenses. We used deep sequencing to investigate gut microbiota of three species in the genus Bombus (bumble bees). Bombus are among the most economically and ecologically important non-managed pollinators. Some species have experienced dramatic declines, probably due to pathogens and land-use change. We examined variation within and across bee species and between semi-natural and conventional agricultural habitats. We categorized as 'core bacteria' any operational taxonomic units (OTUs) with closest hits to sequences previously found exclusively or primarily in the guts of honey bees and bumble bees (genera Apis and Bombus). Microbial community composition differed among bee species. Richness, defined as number of bacterial OTUs, was highest for B. bimaculatus and B. impatiens. For B. bimaculatus, this was due to high richness of non-core bacteria. We found little effect of habitat on microbial communities. Richness of non-core bacteria was negatively associated with bacterial abundance in individual bees, possibly due to deeper sampling of non-core bacteria in bees with low populations of core bacteria. Infection by the gut parasite Crithidia was negatively associated with abundance of the core bacterium Gilliamella and positively associated with richness of non-core bacteria. Our results indicate that Bombus species have distinctive gut communities, and community-level variation is associated with pathogen infection.
细菌肠道共生体对许多昆虫物种的健康至关重要。然而,人们对微生物群落如何在宿主物种之间变化以及它们如何对人为干扰做出反应知之甚少。在提供营养或防御方面,丰富度或组成不同的细菌群落可能会有所不同。我们使用深度测序技术研究了三种熊蜂属(大黄蜂)物种的肠道微生物群。熊蜂是最重要的非管理传粉媒介之一,在经济和生态方面都具有重要意义。一些物种经历了急剧下降,可能是由于病原体和土地利用变化所致。我们研究了物种内和物种间以及半自然和传统农业栖息地之间的变异。我们将与以前仅在蜜蜂和大黄蜂(属 Apis 和 Bombus)肠道中发现的序列具有最接近亲缘关系的操作分类单位(OTUs)归类为“核心细菌”。微生物群落组成在不同的蜜蜂物种之间存在差异。丰富度,定义为细菌 OTUs 的数量,在 B. bimaculatus 和 B. impatiens 中最高。对于 B. bimaculatus,这是由于非核心细菌的丰富度很高。我们发现栖息地对微生物群落的影响很小。非核心细菌的丰富度与个体蜜蜂中的细菌丰度呈负相关,这可能是由于在核心细菌数量较少的蜜蜂中,对非核心细菌进行了更深层次的采样。肠道寄生虫 Crithidia 的感染与核心细菌 Gilliamella 的丰度呈负相关,与非核心细菌的丰富度呈正相关。我们的结果表明,熊蜂物种具有独特的肠道群落,群落水平的变化与病原体感染有关。