“…While several studies have reported that the microbiome within the guts of adult social bees plays a significant role in maintaining bee fitness (Kwong et al, 2017 ; Kwong & Moran, 2016 ; Raymann & Moran, 2018 ), others suggest that the function of the gut microbiome alone is not sufficiently predictive of brood outcome (Gilliam et al, 1990 ; Martinson et al, 2012 ). In fact, mounting evidence across diverse bee species suggests that microbes occurring outside the bee gut, especially those within pollen/nectar provisions, harbor bacteria and fungi (Gilliam, 1997 ; McFrederick et al, 2013 ; Pimentel et al, 2005 ; Rosa et al, 2003 ; Yoder et al, 2017 ) that may be vital to larval nutrition (Steffan et al, 2019 ; Vannette et al, 2012 ), immune function (Kaltenpoth & Engl, 2014 ; McFrederick et al, 2014 ), and overall fitness (Cohen et al, 2020 ; Dharampal et al, 2019 ; Dharampal, Diaz‐Garcia, et al, 2020 ; Rothman et al, 2020 ; Steffan et al, 2017 ; Voulgari‐Kokota, McFrederick, et al, 2019 ; Voulgari‐Kokota et al, 2020 ). This phenomenon appears to be broadly applicable to global bee fauna, whether social (Anderson et al, 2014 ; Gilliam et al, 1989 ) or solitary (Gilliam et al, 1984 ; Graystock et al, 2017 ; McFrederick & Rehan, 2016 ).…”