Schwarz Ryan S, Huang Qiang, Evans Jay D
Department of Entomology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA; Bee Research Laboratory, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center - East, Bldg. 306, US Department of Agriculture, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705, USA.
Bee Research Laboratory, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center - East, Bldg. 306, US Department of Agriculture, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705, USA.
Curr Opin Insect Sci. 2015 Aug;10:1-7. doi: 10.1016/j.cois.2015.04.006. Epub 2015 Apr 22.
Recent research has provided improved genome-level views of diversity across global honey bee populations, the gut microbiota residing within them, and the expanding pathosphere challenging honey bees. Different combinations of bee/microbiota/pathosphere genome complexes may explain regional variation in apiculture productivity and mortality. To understand this, we must consider management and research approaches in light of a hologenome paradigm: that honey bee fitness is determined by the composite bee and microbiota genomes. Only by considering the hologenome can we truly interpret and address impacts from the pathosphere, pesticides, toxins, nutrition, climate and other stressors affecting bee health.
最近的研究提供了关于全球蜜蜂种群多样性、蜜蜂体内肠道微生物群以及对蜜蜂构成挑战的不断扩大的致病圈的更完善的基因组层面的见解。蜜蜂/微生物群/致病圈基因组复合体的不同组合可能解释养蜂业生产力和死亡率的区域差异。为了理解这一点,我们必须根据全基因组范式来考虑管理和研究方法:即蜜蜂的健康状况由蜜蜂和微生物群的复合基因组决定。只有考虑到全基因组,我们才能真正解读和应对来自致病圈、杀虫剂、毒素、营养、气候及其他影响蜜蜂健康的压力源的影响。