
Red-tailed bumblebees can act as hosts for a dangerous bee virus.
Photo Credit: Uni Halle / Patrycja Pluta
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Viral Transmission Dynamics in Multispecies Bee Communities
The Core Concept: Wild red-tailed bumblebees (Bombus lapidarius) act as the primary reservoir hosts for the acute bee paralysis virus (ABPV), carrying the pathogen with minimal harm while posing a fatal transmission risk to vulnerable honeybee populations.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Historically, scientific consensus held that managed honeybees were the primary source of viral infections, spilling pathogens over into wild bee populations. This research fundamentally shifts that paradigm by demonstrating that wild bumblebees can serve as the key epidemiological reservoir for certain viruses, transmitting the pathogen back to honeybees via contaminated pollen and nectar at shared floral feeding sites.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Epidemiological Modeling: Utilization of the basic reproduction number (\(R_0\)) to quantify and estimate the specific viral spread potential from one insect to others of the same species.
- Multispecies Network Analysis: Observational tracking of shared floral visitation patterns among diverse bee species to map potential interspecies transmission nodes.
- Comprehensive Pathogen Screening: Molecular virus screening of 1,725 insects to determine host-specific viral prevalence and vector capabilities.
- Differentiated Host Profiling: Identification of distinct primary hosts for specific pathogens (e.g., honeybees as main carriers for deformed wing virus and black queen cell virus; red-tailed bumblebees for acute bee paralysis virus).
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