“…Currently, microbiota studies involving invertebrates have been largely limited to terrestrial species with economic or agricultural value, such as bumble bees and honey bees, which play a vital role in crop pollination (Engel et al., 2012; Martinson et al., 2011, 2012); mosquitoes, which are known vectors of viruses and pathogens (Muturi et al., 2017, 2018); and termites and red palm weevils, which are known herbivorous pests (Ayayee et al., 2015; Kitade, 2004; Mikaelyan et al., 2015; Tagliavia et al., 2014). Overall, these studies have revealed that microbiota are shaped by host taxonomy (Colman et al., 2012; Jones et al., 2013; Mikaelyan et al., 2015; Muturi et al., 2017; Singhal et al., 2017; Yun et al., 2014), environmental changes (Yun et al., 2014), and contaminants (Pennington et al., 2017), and the health of the host is often affected when these bacteria become severely disrupted, as is seen in dysbiosis (Clark & Walker, 2018; Hamdi et al., 2011; Raymann & Moran, 2018). Specifically, studies targeting host taxonomy have found that distinct bacterial taxa are exclusively limited to certain terrestrial invertebrate genera belonging to orders such as Blattodea (cockroaches and termites) (Colman et al., 2012; Kakumanu et al., 2018; Sabree et al., 2012; Sabree & Moran, 2014) and Hymenoptera (ants, bees, and wasps) (Colman et al., 2012; Koch et al, 2013; Kwong & Moran, 2015; Sauers & Sadd, 2019); measures of alpha diversity such as bacterial richness and evenness were also shown to differ significantly among eight invertebrate orders, with alpha diversity measures showing greater similarity among closely related invertebrates (Jones et al., 2013).…”