College of Animal Science and Technology, Shandong Agricultural University, Tai'an, 271018, Shandong, China.
BMC Microbiol. 2020 Mar 17;20(1):61. doi: 10.1186/s12866-020-01726-6.
The health of honeybee colonies is critical for bee products and agricultural production, and colony health is closely associated with the bacteria in the guts of honeybees. Although colony loss in winter is now the primary restriction in beekeeping, the effects of different sugars as winter food on the health of honeybee colonies are not well understood. Therefore, in this study, the influence of different sugar diets on honeybee gut bacteria during overwintering was examined.
The bacterial communities in honeybee midguts and hindguts before winter and after bees were fed honey, sucrose, and high-fructose syrup as winter-food were determined by targeting the V3-V4 region of 16S rDNA using the Illumina MiSeq platform. The dominant microbiota in honeybee guts were the phyla Proteobacteria (63.17%), Firmicutes (17.61%; Lactobacillus, 15.91%), Actinobacteria (4.06%; Bifidobacterium, 3.34%), and Bacteroidetes (1.72%). The dominant taxa were conserved and not affected by season, type of overwintering sugar, or spatial position in the gut. However, the relative abundance of the dominant taxa was affected by those factors. In the midgut, microbial diversity of the sucrose group was higher than that of the honey and high-fructose syrup groups, but in the hindgut, microbial diversity of the honey and high-fructose groups was higher than that in the sucrose group. Sucrose increased the relative abundance of Actinobacteria (Bifidobacteriales Bifidobacteriaceae) and Alphaproteobacteria (Rhizobiales and Mitochondria) of honeybee midgut, and honey enriched the Bacteroidetes and Gammaproteobacteria (Pasteurellales) in honeybee hindgut. High-fructose syrup increased the relative abundance of Betaproteobacteria (Neisseriales: Neisseriaceae) of the midgut.
The type of sugar used as winter food affected the relative abundance of the dominant bacterial communities in honeybee guts, not the taxa, which could affect the health and safety of honeybee colonies during overwintering. The presence of the supernal Alphaproteobacteria, Bifidobacteriales, and Lactobacillaceae in the gut of honeybees fed sucrose and cheaper than honey both indicate that sucrose is very suitable as the overwintering food for honeybees.
蜜蜂种群的健康状况对蜂产品和农业生产至关重要,而种群健康状况与蜜蜂肠道内的细菌密切相关。尽管冬季蜂群损失现在是养蜂业的主要限制因素,但不同糖作为冬季食物对蜜蜂种群健康的影响还不是很清楚。因此,在这项研究中,研究了不同糖饮食对越冬期间蜜蜂肠道细菌的影响。
通过靶向 Illumina MiSeq 平台上的 16S rDNA V3-V4 区域,确定了冬季前和蜜蜂以蜂蜜、蔗糖和高果糖糖浆作为冬季食物后蜜蜂中肠和后肠中的细菌群落。蜜蜂肠道中的主要微生物群是变形菌门(63.17%)、厚壁菌门(Firmicutes;17.61%,其中乳酸菌占 15.91%)、放线菌门(Actinobacteria;4.06%,双歧杆菌占 3.34%)和拟杆菌门(Bacteroidetes;1.72%)。优势类群不受季节、越冬糖类型或肠道内空间位置的影响,但这些因素会影响优势类群的相对丰度。在中肠,蔗糖组的微生物多样性高于蜂蜜和高果糖糖浆组,但在后肠,蜂蜜和高果糖组的微生物多样性高于蔗糖组。蔗糖增加了蜜蜂中肠放线菌门(双歧杆菌目双歧杆菌科)和α变形菌门(根瘤菌目和线粒体)的相对丰度,而蜂蜜则富集了蜜蜂后肠的拟杆菌门和γ变形菌门(巴氏杆菌目)。高果糖糖浆增加了中肠β变形菌门(奈瑟菌目:奈瑟氏菌科)的相对丰度。
作为冬季食物的糖的类型影响了蜜蜂肠道中主要细菌群落的相对丰度,而不是类群,这可能会影响越冬期间蜂群的健康和安全。蔗糖和比蜂蜜便宜的糖喂养的蜜蜂肠道中存在超级α变形菌、双歧杆菌目和乳杆菌科,这表明蔗糖非常适合作为蜜蜂的越冬食物。