4.7 Article

Why Did the Bee Eat the Chicken? Symbiont Gain, Loss, and Retention in the Vulture Bee Microbiome

Journal

MBIO
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02317-21

Keywords

corbiculate apid core microbiome; carrion; necrophagy; diet switch; pollinator ecology

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program [DGE-1650441]
  2. National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowships in Biology Program [NSF-2010615]
  3. National Science Foundation [1929572]
  4. United States Department of Agriculture Hatch Funds [CA-R-ENT-5109-H]
  5. Organization for Tropical Studies [3120]
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences
  7. Division Of Environmental Biology [1929572] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Diet and gut microbiomes are closely linked on both short and long timescales, with changes in diet potentially altering the microbiome structure. Through investigating the microbiomes of bees with different dietary lifestyles, such as vulture bees and strictly pollinivorous bees, researchers found that diet may interact with microbiomes in both short and long timescales. The study provides insights into the role of microbiomes in extreme diet switches and expands our understanding of how diet influences microbiome composition.
Diet and gut microbiomes are intricately linked on both short and long timescales. Changes in diet can alter the microbiome, while microbes in turn allow hosts to access novel diets. Bees are wasps that switched to a vegetarian lifestyle, and the vast majority of bees feed on pollen and nectar. Some stingless bee species, however, also collect carrion, and a few have fully reverted to a necrophagous lifestyle, relying on carrion for protein and forgoing flower visitation altogether. These vulture bees belong to the corbiculate apid clade, which is known for its ancient association with a small group of core microbiome phylo-types. Here, we investigate the vulture bee microbiome, along with closely related facultatively necrophagous and obligately pollinivorous species, to under-stand how these diets interact with microbiome structure. Via deep sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene and subsequent community analyses, we find that vulture bees have lost some core microbes, retained others, and entered into novel associations with acidophilic microbes found in the environment and on carrion. The abundance of acidophilic bacteria suggests that an acidic gut is important for vulture bee nutrition and health, as has been found in other carrion-feeding animals. Facultatively necrophagous bees have more variable microbiomes than strictly pollinivorous bees, suggesting that bee diet may interact with microbiomes on both short and long timescales. Further study of vulture bees promises to provide rich insights into the role of the microbiome in extreme diet switches. IMPORTANCE When asked where to find bees, people often picture fields of wildflowers. While true for almost all species, there is a group of specialized bees, also known as the vulture bees, that instead can be found slicing chunks of meat from carcasses in tropical rainforests. In this study, researchers compared the microbiomes of closely related bees that live in the same region but vary in their dietary lifestyles: some exclusively consume pollen and nectar, others exclusively depend on carrion for their protein, and some consume all of the above. Researchers found that vulture bees lost some ancestral core microbes, retained others, and entered into novel associations with acidophilic microbes, which have similarly been found in other carrion-feeding animals such as vultures, these bees' namesake. This research expands our understanding of how diet interacts with microbiomes on both short and long timescales in one of the world's biodiversity hot spots.

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