2020
DOI: 10.1017/s0031182020001018
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Cross-infectivity of honey and bumble bee-associated parasites across three bee families

Abstract: Abstract Recent declines of wild pollinators and infections in honey, bumble and other bee species have raised concerns about pathogen spillover from managed honey and bumble bees to other pollinators. Parasites of honey and bumble bees include trypanosomatids and microsporidia that often exhibit low host specificity, suggesting potential for spillover to co-occurring bees via shared floral resources. However, experimental tests of trypanosomatid a… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(39 citation statements)
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References 146 publications
(270 reference statements)
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“…Crithidia spp. can infect bumblebees, honeybees and several solitary bee species 74 82 . The neogregarines are an understudied group, with one described bee parasite, Apicystis bombi .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Crithidia spp. can infect bumblebees, honeybees and several solitary bee species 74 82 . The neogregarines are an understudied group, with one described bee parasite, Apicystis bombi .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While phylogenetic distance often predicts the ability of hosts to be infected by a given pathogen (Gilbert and Webb, 2007; Streicker et al ., 2010), this may not be the case with C. bombi and its known hosts. Specifically, one recent study (Ngor et al ., 2020) has found that C. bombi does not replicate in honey bees ( Apis mellifera ), but this pathogen does replicate in bumble bees ( Bombus spp.). Both honey bees and bumble bees are in the Apidae family, while the two evaluated solitary bees evaluated in the present study are in the Megachilidae family.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…frequently harbour pollen in their digestive tract (Urban-Mead et al ., unpublished results). The importance of males in dispersing pathogens in plant–pollinator networks is not well established, despite male and female solitary bees having comparable infection rates (Müller et al ., 2019; Strobl et al ., 2019; Ngor et al ., 2020) and marked differences in floral preference (Roswell et al ., 2019). Moreover, natural rates of pathogen acquisition or deposition by solitary bees while foraging is not known (Figueroa et al ., 2019), including the threshold of pathogen cells necessary for solitary bees to develop active infections, all of which could strengthen disease spread models.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While pathogen research in pollinators is heavily biased towards honey bees and bumble bees, recent studies point to broader pathogen host ranges, such as Crithidia bombi infections in multiple bee families [30]. Pathogen strains or taxa can behave as specialists or generalists in terms of host range, virulence, and infectivity, affecting their fitness and ability to cross species boundaries [28].…”
Section: Host-pathogen Interactions and Other Biota Affecting Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%