Cameron Sydney A, Lim Haw Chuan, Lozier Jeffrey D, Duennes Michelle A, Thorp Robbin
Department of Entomology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801;
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Apr 19;113(16):4386-91. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1525266113. Epub 2016 Apr 4.
Emergent fungal diseases are critical factors in global biodiversity declines. The fungal pathogenNosema bombiwas recently found to be widespread in declining species of North American bumble bees (Bombus), with circumstantial evidence suggesting an exotic introduction from Europe. This interpretation has been hampered by a lack of knowledge of global genetic variation, geographic origin, and changing prevalence patterns ofN. bombiin declining North American populations. Thus, the temporal and spatial emergence ofN. bombiand its potential role in bumble bee decline remain speculative. We analyzeNosemaprevalence and genetic variation in the United States and Europe from 1980, before an alleged introduction in the early 1990s, to 2011, extractingNosemaDNA fromBombusnatural history collection specimens from across this time period.Nosema bombiprevalence increased significantly from low detectable frequency in the 1980s to significantly higher frequency in the mid- to late-1990s, corresponding to a period of reported massive infectious outbreak ofN. bombiin commercial bumble bee rearing stocks in North America. Despite the increased frequency, we find no conclusive evidence of an exoticN. bombiorigin based on genetic analysis of globalNosemapopulations; the widespreadNosemastrain found currently in declining United States bumble bees was present in the United States before commercial colony trade. Notably, the USN. bombiis not detectably different from that found predominantly throughout Western Europe, with both regions characterized by low genetic diversity compared with high levels of diversity found in Asia, where commercial bee breeding activities are low or nonexistent.
新发真菌疾病是全球生物多样性下降的关键因素。真菌病原体熊蜂微孢子虫最近被发现广泛存在于北美正在减少的熊蜂(Bombus)物种中,有间接证据表明其是从欧洲引入的外来物种。由于缺乏对全球遗传变异、地理起源以及北美熊蜂种群中熊蜂微孢子虫流行模式变化的了解,这一解释受到了阻碍。因此,熊蜂微孢子虫的时空出现及其在熊蜂数量减少中可能扮演的角色仍具有推测性。我们分析了1980年(据称是20世纪90年代初引入之前)至2011年美国和欧洲的微孢子虫流行情况和遗传变异,从这一时期的熊蜂自然历史收藏标本中提取微孢子虫DNA。熊蜂微孢子虫的流行率从20世纪80年代的低可检测频率显著增加到20世纪90年代中后期的显著更高频率,这与北美商业熊蜂养殖种群中报告的大规模感染爆发时期相对应。尽管频率增加,但基于对全球微孢子虫种群的遗传分析,我们没有找到熊蜂微孢子虫外来起源的确凿证据;目前在美国数量减少的熊蜂中发现的广泛存在的微孢子虫菌株在商业蜂群贸易之前就已在美国存在。值得注意的是,美国的熊蜂微孢子虫与主要在西欧发现的微孢子虫没有可检测到的差异,与亚洲发现高遗传多样性(那里商业蜜蜂养殖活动很少或不存在)相比,这两个地区的遗传多样性都较低。