Wagoner Kaira M, Spivak Marla, Rueppell Olav
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Eberhart Building, Greensboro, NC.
Department of Entomology, University of Minnesota, Hodson Hall, St. Paul, MN.
J Econ Entomol. 2018 Dec 14;111(6):2520-2530. doi: 10.1093/jee/toy266.
Despite receiving much attention, the ectoparasitic mite Varroa destructor (Anderson and Trueman) and the pathogens it vectors remain critical threats to the health of the honey bee Apis mellifera (Linnaeus) (Hymenoptera: Apidae). One promising intervention approach is the breeding of hygienic honey bees, which have an improved ability to detect and remove unhealthy brood from the colony, and are thus more resistant to Varroa. While much hygienic behavior-related research has focused on enhanced adult honey bee olfaction, less attention has been paid to the olfactory signals that originate inside the brood cell, triggering hygienic removal. Here, we hypothesized that selection for hygienic behavior in honey bees has influenced brood signaling, predicting that: 1) in a common social environment, removal rates differ among brood with different selective breeding histories, and 2) the removal rates of brood positively correlate to the hygiene level of the brood's colony of origin. To test these predictions, we cross-fostered brood subjected to control, wound, or Varroa treatment in unselected (UNS), Minnesota Hygienic (HYG), and Varroa-Sensitive Hygienic (VSH) colonies, and monitored individual brood cells for hygienic removal. Results confirmed both predictions, as brood from hygienic colonies was more likely to be removed than brood from UNS colonies, regardless of where the brood was fostered. These findings suggest that hygiene-related brood signals complement previously identified characteristics of hygienic adults, constituting an important mechanism of social immunity in honey bees. Thus, selective breeding for honey bee hygienic behavior may be improved through the utilization of field assays containing compounds related to larval signaling.
尽管受到了广泛关注,但外寄生螨瓦螨(Varroa destructor)(安德森和特鲁曼)及其传播的病原体仍然是西方蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)(林奈)(膜翅目:蜜蜂科)健康的重大威胁。一种有前景的干预方法是培育具有卫生行为的蜜蜂,这些蜜蜂检测和清除蜂群中不健康幼虫的能力有所提高,因此对瓦螨更具抵抗力。虽然许多与卫生行为相关的研究都集中在增强成年蜜蜂的嗅觉上,但对源自幼虫巢房内部、触发卫生清除行为的嗅觉信号关注较少。在这里,我们假设对蜜蜂卫生行为的选择影响了幼虫信号,预测如下:1)在共同的社会环境中,具有不同选择育种历史的幼虫的清除率不同;2)幼虫的清除率与幼虫来源蜂群的卫生水平呈正相关。为了验证这些预测,我们将经过对照、伤口或瓦螨处理的幼虫在未选择(UNS)、明尼苏达卫生(HYG)和瓦螨敏感卫生(VSH)蜂群中进行交叉寄养,并监测各个幼虫巢房的卫生清除情况。结果证实了这两个预测,因为无论幼虫寄养在哪里,来自卫生蜂群的幼虫比来自UNS蜂群的幼虫更有可能被清除。这些发现表明,与卫生相关的幼虫信号补充了先前确定的卫生成年蜜蜂的特征,构成了蜜蜂社会免疫的重要机制。因此,通过利用包含与幼虫信号相关化合物的田间试验,可能会改进对蜜蜂卫生行为的选择性育种。