A non-invasive method for profiling the gut microbiome and virome of honey bee queens

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Abstract

High honey bee colony mortality worldwide has underscored the critical role of queen bee health in colony survival, with poor queen quality frequently linked to colony losses. The gut microbiome plays fundamental roles in immunity, nutrition, and reproduction, making its characterization essential for understanding stressors that impact queen health, longevity, and fecundity, yet its role in mediating stress responses remains poorly understood. Here, we present a novel, non-invasive method for collecting feces from queen honey bees and demonstrate its potential as a powerful tool for profiling the gut microbiome, detecting stressor exposure, and screening for viral infections. This approach permits repeated, longitudinal assessments of individual queens, providing unprecedented insights into how environmental and pathogenic pressures influence queen health, longevity, and reproductive capacity. Beyond research applications, benefits include evaluating queens before colony introduction and mitigating disease transmission risks in international trade, where pathogen spread remains a major regulatory challenge. By enabling non-destructive monitoring of queen health, this method provides a transformative tool for improving colony resilience and advancing sustainable honey bee management in the face of global challenges.

IMPORTANCE

The global apiculture industry is facing a crisis, with honey bee colony mortality reaching alarming rates. A critical factor in colony survival is the health of the queen honey bee, with poor queen health being a leading cause of colony failure. The gut microbiome plays a fundamental role in immunity, nutrition, and reproduction, making its characterization crucial for understanding the stressors affecting queen health, longevity, and fecundity. Until now, studying the gut microbiome of queen honey bees has been destructive, as queens must be killed to allow for microbiome analysis, thus preventing their subsequent use to head colonies. A non-invasive method to study the gut bacteria and viruses of queen honey bees throughout their adult lifespan enables researchers to advance our understanding of host-microbe interactions, microbial ecology, and the physiological impacts of environmental stressors on a key pollinator species.

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