How Population Structure and Nest Membership Shape Pathogen Patterns in Bumble Bees
Jana Dobelmann, Lena Wilfert

TL;DR
This study explores how population structure and nest membership influence pathogen patterns in bumble bees across islands and mainland sites.
Contribution
The study reveals that nest membership and host density, rather than genetic diversity, influence pathogen prevalence in wild bumble bee populations.
Findings
B. pascuorum populations on islands showed distinct genetic clusters with varying heterozygosity.
B. terrestris populations on the Isle of Man and Scilly Isles were genetically separated and had low heterozygosity.
Nestmates within B. terrestris showed more similar pathogen profiles than unrelated individuals.
Abstract
Host density, genetic diversity and social groups are key factors influencing pathogen transmission in wildlife populations, but their interactions remain poorly understood in insects. Islands can provide natural laboratories with distinct populations that vary in density and genetic diversity, whereby dense, genetically homogeneous populations are expected to facilitate pathogen transmission. We used bumble bees to test these predictions, assessing the population structure of the two common species Bombus pascuorum and B. terrestris across island and mainland sites in the British Isles and France and testing bees for five micro‐parasitic and four viral pathogens. B. pascuorum formed distinct genetic clusters on islands, with varying levels of heterozygosity and only the Isle of Arran clustered with mainland populations. B. terrestris populations were less structured, but…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and animal studies · Insect and Pesticide Research · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
