Microbial Succession on Honey Bee Body Surfaces Reflects Behavioral Maturation
Wenbo Wang, Chonghui Zhao, Yane Zhou, Chunling Yi, Mengfan Zhou, Yi Zhang, Shaokang Huang, Wenfeng Li

TL;DR
This study shows that the microbial communities on honey bee body surfaces change as the bees mature behaviorally, with distinct patterns observed across different life stages.
Contribution
The study reveals a novel link between behavioral maturation and shifts in surface microbiota in both Eastern and Western honey bees.
Findings
Forager bees had the highest microbial diversity, while nurse bees had the lowest.
Microbial communities varied significantly across behavioral stages and between the two honey bee species.
Foragers showed higher abundance of Gilliamella, while nurses had more Lactobacillus.
Abstract
Behavioral maturation is essential for the proper functioning of honey bee societies and is regulated by multiple factors such as juvenile hormone (JH) and nutritional deficiency. Although recent studies have shown that surface-associated microbiota in insects can modulate host behavior, the relationship between body surface microbiota and behavioral maturation in honey bees remains largely unexplored. This study aimed to determine whether the surface microbial communities of honey bees shift with behavioral maturation. By using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, we analyzed the surface microbiota of worker bees at different behavioral stages (newly emerged bees, nurses, and foragers) in both Eastern honey bee Apis cerana and Western honey bee Apis mellifera. The results showed that in both honey bee species, nurse bees exhibited the lowest microbial diversity, while forager bees showed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect and Pesticide Research · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior · Insect symbiosis and bacterial influences
