Antibiotics in hives and their effects on honey bee physiology and behavioral development

Author:

Ortiz-Alvarado Yarira1ORCID,Clark David R.2,Vega-Melendez Carlos J.3ORCID,Flores-Cruz Zomary1ORCID,Domingez-Bello Maria G.4,Giray Tugrul1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Puerto Rico, Department of Biology, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico, USA

2. University of Pittsburgh, Department of Biological Sciences, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

3. University of North Carolina, Department of Biology, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA

4. Rutgers State University of New Jersey, Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Camden, New Jersey, USA

Abstract

Recurrent honey bee losses make it critical to understand the impact of human interventions, such as antibiotics use in apiculture. Antibiotics are used to prevent or treat bacterial infections in colonies. However, little is known about their effects on honey bee development. We studied the effect of two commercial beekeeping antibiotics on the bee physiology and behavior throughout development. Our results show that antibiotic treatments have an effect on amount of lipids and rate of behavioral development. Lipid amount in treated bees was higher than those not treated. Also, the timing of antibiotic treatment had distinct effects for the age of onset of behaviors starting with cleaning, then nursing and lastly foraging. Bees treated during larva-pupa stages demonstrated an accelerated behavioral development and loss of lipids, while bees treated from larva to adulthood had a delay in behavioral development and loss of lipids. The effects were shared across the two antibiotics tested, TerramycinR (oxytetracycline) and TylanR (tylosin tartrate). These results on effects of antibiotic treatments suggest a role of microbiota in the interaction between the fat body and brain that is important for honey bee behavioral development.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing, National Science Foundation

Puerto Rico Science, Technology and Research Trust

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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