Global insect decline and, in particular, honey bee colony losses are related to multiple stress factors, including landscape deterioration, pollution, parasites and climate change. However, the implications of the interaction among different stress factors for insect health are still poorly understood; in particular, little is known on how challenging environmental conditions can influence the impact of parasites. Here we exploited the honey bee as a model system to approach this problem and carried out extensive lab and field work aiming at assessing how suboptimal temperatures and parasitic challenges can alter the homeostatic balance of individual bees and the whole colony, leading to individual death and colony collapse. We found that mite infestation further than increasing the mortality of bees, induces an anorexia that in turn reduces the capacity of bees to thermoregulate, thus exposing them to the detrimental effect of lower temperatures. This, in turn, has dramatic implications for the colony as a whole. The results highlight the important role that abiotic factors can have in shaping the effect of parasitic challenges on honey bees. Furthermore, the multilevel and holistic approach adopted here can represent a useful template for similar studies on other insect species, which are particularly urgent in view of climate change and the continuous pressure of natural and exotic parasites on insect populations.
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