Despite growing interest in gut microbiomes of aculeate Hymenoptera, research so far focused on social bees, wasps, and ants, whereas non-social taxa and their brood parasites have not received much attention. Brood parasitism, however, allows to distinguish between microbiome components horizontally transmitted by spill-over from the host with such inherited through vertical transmission by mothers. Here, we studied the bacterial gut microbiome of adults in seven aculeate species in four brood parasite-host systems: two bee-mutillid (host-parasitoid) systems, one halictid bee-cuckoo bee system, and one wasp-chrysidid cuckoo wasp system. We addressed the following questions: (1) Do closely related species possess a more similar gut microbiome? (2) Do brood parasites share components of the microbiome with their host? (3) Do brood parasites have different diversity and specialization of microbiome communities compared with the hosts? Our results indicate that the bacterial gut microbiome of the studied taxa was species-specific, yet with a limited effect of host phylogenetic relatedness and a major contribution of shared microbes between hosts and parasites. However, contrasting patterns emerged between bee-parasite systems and the wasp-parasite system. We conclude that the gut microbiome in adult brood parasites is largely affected by their host-parasite relationships and the similarity of trophic food sources between hosts and parasites.

Bacterial gut microbiomes of aculeate brood parasites overlap with their aculeate hosts', but have higher diversity and specialization / F. Ronchetti, C. Polidori, A. Keller, I. Steffan-Dewenter, T. Schmitt. - In: FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY. - ISSN 0168-6496. - 98:12(2022 Dec), pp. fiac137.1-fiac137.12. [10.1093/femsec/fiac137]

Bacterial gut microbiomes of aculeate brood parasites overlap with their aculeate hosts', but have higher diversity and specialization

C. Polidori
Secondo
;
2022

Abstract

Despite growing interest in gut microbiomes of aculeate Hymenoptera, research so far focused on social bees, wasps, and ants, whereas non-social taxa and their brood parasites have not received much attention. Brood parasitism, however, allows to distinguish between microbiome components horizontally transmitted by spill-over from the host with such inherited through vertical transmission by mothers. Here, we studied the bacterial gut microbiome of adults in seven aculeate species in four brood parasite-host systems: two bee-mutillid (host-parasitoid) systems, one halictid bee-cuckoo bee system, and one wasp-chrysidid cuckoo wasp system. We addressed the following questions: (1) Do closely related species possess a more similar gut microbiome? (2) Do brood parasites share components of the microbiome with their host? (3) Do brood parasites have different diversity and specialization of microbiome communities compared with the hosts? Our results indicate that the bacterial gut microbiome of the studied taxa was species-specific, yet with a limited effect of host phylogenetic relatedness and a major contribution of shared microbes between hosts and parasites. However, contrasting patterns emerged between bee-parasite systems and the wasp-parasite system. We conclude that the gut microbiome in adult brood parasites is largely affected by their host-parasite relationships and the similarity of trophic food sources between hosts and parasites.
English
brood parasitism; horizontal transmission; Hymenoptera; microbial spill-over; microbiome;
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
dic-2022
Oxford Academic : FEMS
98
12
fiac137
1
12
12
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
orcid
crossref
wos
NON aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Bacterial gut microbiomes of aculeate brood parasites overlap with their aculeate hosts', but have higher diversity and specialization / F. Ronchetti, C. Polidori, A. Keller, I. Steffan-Dewenter, T. Schmitt. - In: FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY. - ISSN 0168-6496. - 98:12(2022 Dec), pp. fiac137.1-fiac137.12. [10.1093/femsec/fiac137]
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
5
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
F. Ronchetti, C. Polidori, A. Keller, I. Steffan-Dewenter, T. Schmitt
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/945729
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