As one of the possible causes of honey bee losses, the gut pathogen Nosema ceranae
has proved controversial. It seems accountable for colony losses in
Spain, yet elsewhere it seems not to cause obvious problems despite
being widespread. Two papers published in the Journal of Apicultural Research help to shed some light on the problem, with close studies of this organism and its relationship with its host.
Nosema ceranae,
a microsporidian fungus, is a relatively new pathogen of honey bees,
having only been discovered in 1994 on the Asian honey bee Apis cerana.
It was found on the western honey bee Apis mellifera in 2005. It seems
to have spread rapidly around the world and apparently displaced
the similar species Nosema apis. This second parasite is a minor chronic
infection of the western honey bee, known for more than one hundred
years. However no-one is absolutely certain of the history of these two
species because their spores are indistinguishable under an ordinary
light microscope. So far, few laboratories throughout the world are able
to perform the costly molecular techniques necessary to reliably
determine between the two Nosema species.
In a new paper, Dr Aneta Ptaszyńska and
colleagues from the Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Lublin, and the
University of Life Sciences in Lublin, Poland have demonstrated that
Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) provides a solution. Close
examination of the cell walls of Nosema spores revealed that they differ
between the two species, with Nosema ceranae having a
characteristic sculpted cell wall. The authors also studied the damage
caused by the parasite to the intestines of infected bees. They found
that the midgut of affected bees is completely covered with Nosema
spores. This sporemade layer may be the cause of bee malnutrition and higher mortality of foragers.
In the second paper, Dr Predrag
Simeunovic and colleagues from the University of Belgrade,
Serbia, carried out a three year study on the laying capacity of queen
bees as affected by age and infestation by Nosema ceranae. The results clearly demonstrated not only that as queen bees age so colony productivity declines, but that interactions with Nosema ceranae
infestation also occur. Curiously, although queen bees decline in all
other respects during their third year, their egg laying capacity
was found to increase. This may be an influence of Nosema infection
which was greatest in the oldest queens. The authors suggest that the
infected queens may significantly increase their rate of egg laying to
compensate for the losses of heavily infected workers due to Nosema.
IBRA Science Director Norman Carreck says:
“These two new papers add to our knowledge of this problematic pathogen and how it adversely affects honey bees.”
Source: The International Bee Research Association (“IBRA”)
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