4.5 Article

Screening of Dietary Ingredients against the Honey Bee Parasite Nosema ceranae

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10091117

Keywords

nosemosis; Vairimorpha ceranae; nisin; Saccharomyces sp.; acetic acid; para-coumaric acid; gut microbiota

Categories

Funding

  1. EU project NOurishingPROBiotics to bees to Mitigate Stressors
  2. H2020-MSCA-RISE 2017 [GA 777760]

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This study explores the potential of using compounds such as organic acids or biological agents, including waste products from the circular economy like wine waste, to improve honeybee health. Some ingredients like acetic acid at high concentration, p-coumaric acid, and Saccharomyces sp. strain KIA1 were found to be effective in controlling nosemosis, while wine acetic acid increased the amount of N. ceranae. New solutions are needed to manage nosemosis, especially natural methods that do not harm honey bees or the environment.
Nosema ceranae is a major pathogen in the beekeeping sector, responsible for nosemosis. This disease is hard to manage since its symptomatology is masked until a strong collapse of the colony population occurs. Conversely, no medicaments are available in the market to counteract nosemosis, and only a few feed additives, with claimed antifungal action, are available. New solutions are strongly required, especially based on natural methods alternative to veterinary drugs that might develop resistance or strongly pollute honey bees and the environment. This study aims at investigating the nosemosis antiparasitic potential of some plant extracts, microbial fermentation products, organic acids, food chain waste products, bacteriocins, and fungi. Honey bees were singularly infected with 5 x 104 freshly prepared N. ceranae spores, reared in cages and fed ad libitum with sugar syrup solution containing the active ingredient. N. ceranae in the gut of honey bees was estimated using qPCR. The results showed that some of the ingredients administered, such as acetic acid at high concentration, p-coumaric acid, and Saccharomyces sp. strain KIA1, were effective in the control of nosemosis. On the other hand, wine acetic acid strongly increased the N. ceranae amount. This study investigates the possibility of using compounds such as organic acids or biological agents including those at the base of the circular economy, i.e., wine waste production, in order to improve honeybee health.

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