Oversharing by honey bees and the spread of viruses
Lamas, Z. S.; Ryabov, E. V.; Hawthorne, D. J.; Evans, J. D.
Show abstract
Deformed wing virus (DWV) is an emerging insect pathogen efficiently transmitted through communicable and vector-borne routes with Apis mellifera. Continual transmission of DWV between hosts and vectors is required for maintenance of the pathogen within the population, and this vector-host-pathogen system offers unique disease transmission dynamics for pathogen maintenance between vector and a social host. In a series of experiments, we study how vector-vector, host-host and host-vector transmission routes maintain DWV in a honey bee population. We found co-infestations on shared hosts allowed for movement of DWV from mite to mite. Additionally, two social behaviors of the honeybee, trophallaxis and cannibalization of pupae, provide routes for communicable transmission from bee to bee. Communicable circulation of the virus solely amongst hosts was then shown to act as a reservoir of DWV for naive Varroa to acquire and subsequently vector the pathogen. Our findings illustrate communicable transmission between hosts can maintain and influence the future acquisition and vectoring of a pathogen by a vector. There are a handful of other infectious diseases, both zoonotic and which impact human health, that have potentially similar transmission dynamics.
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