Haque Sabrina, Gamage Hasinika K A H, Kardum Hjort Cecilia, Ponton Fleur, Encinas-Viso Francisco, Paulsen Ian T, Dudaniec Rachael Y
School of Natural Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia.
ARC Training Centre for Facilitated Advancement of Australia's Bioactives Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia.
Ecol Evol. 2025 Jul 7;15(7):e71717. doi: 10.1002/ece3.71717. eCollection 2025 Jul.
Gut microbial communities can facilitate traits that are essential for invasive species survival in novel environments. Despite the global plethora of invasive social insect species, the role of the gut microbiome in colonisation success under novel dietary and environmental conditions is little known. The introduction of the European buff-tailed bumblebee, , to the island of Tasmania (Australia) ~30 years ago is of ecological concern due to its negative impacts on native vegetation and endemic bees. Here, we investigate how the gut microbiota of workers is affected by corbicular pollen diversity and environmental variation across diverse landscapes in an invaded island system. female workers were sampled from 19 sites across Tasmania, for which environmental data for seven variables were extracted. Using 16S rRNA and ITS2 metabarcoding on gut samples and foraged pollen, respectively, we examine how the gut microbiota of is influenced by pollen diversity, environmental variables and their interactions. Gut bacterial community composition was significantly predicted by site annual precipitation and the percentage of pasture, which each explained 9% of the variation. Gut bacterial diversity was also explained by precipitation and pasture (40% and 30% of the variation, respectively). Furthermore, a positive interaction between annual precipitation and annual temperature significantly predicted site gut bacterial diversity. The interaction effect of pollen diversity and summer wind velocity was also positively related to gut bacterial diversity. Our findings contribute to understanding how interactions between the local environment and pollen diet affect the bee gut microbiome and thus the health and success of invasive pollinators.
肠道微生物群落可以促进入侵物种在新环境中生存所必需的性状。尽管全球有大量入侵性社会性昆虫物种,但在新的饮食和环境条件下,肠道微生物群在定殖成功中的作用却鲜为人知。大约30年前,欧洲 buff-tailed 大黄蜂被引入澳大利亚塔斯马尼亚岛,由于其对当地植被和特有蜜蜂的负面影响,引起了生态关注。在这里,我们研究了在一个被入侵的岛屿系统中,工蜂的肠道微生物群如何受到不同景观中花粉多样性和环境变化的影响。从塔斯马尼亚岛的19个地点采集了雌性工蜂样本,并提取了七个变量的环境数据。分别对肠道样本和采集的花粉进行16S rRNA和ITS2宏条形码分析,我们研究了花粉多样性、环境变量及其相互作用如何影响工蜂的肠道微生物群。地点的年降水量和牧场百分比显著预测了肠道细菌群落组成,各解释了9%的变异。降水量和牧场也解释了肠道细菌多样性(分别解释了40%和30%的变异)。此外,年降水量和年温度之间的正相互作用显著预测了地点的肠道细菌多样性。花粉多样性和夏季风速的相互作用效应也与肠道细菌多样性呈正相关。我们的研究结果有助于理解当地环境与花粉饮食之间的相互作用如何影响蜜蜂肠道微生物群,进而影响入侵传粉者的健康和定殖成功。