نتایج جستجو برای: nosema apis

تعداد نتایج: 10453  

2017
Manuel Tritschler Gina Retschnig Orlando Yañez Geoffrey R Williams Peter Neumann

The trypanosome Lotmaria passim and the microsporidian Nosema ceranae are common parasites of the honey bee, Apis mellifera, intestine, but the nature of interactions between them is unknown. Here, we took advantage of naturally occurring infections and quantified infection loads of individual workers (N = 408) originating from three apiaries (four colonies per apiary) using PCR to test for int...

2010
Jerry J. Bromenshenk Colin B. Henderson Charles H. Wick Michael F. Stanford Alan W. Zulich Rabih E. Jabbour Samir V. Deshpande Patrick E. McCubbin Robert A. Seccomb Phillip M. Welch Trevor Williams David R. Firth Evan Skowronski Margaret M. Lehmann Shan L. Bilimoria Joanna Gress Kevin W. Wanner Robert A. Cramer

BACKGROUND In 2010 Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), again devastated honey bee colonies in the USA, indicating that the problem is neither diminishing nor has it been resolved. Many CCD investigations, using sensitive genome-based methods, have found small RNA bee viruses and the microsporidia, Nosema apis and N. ceranae in healthy and collapsing colonies alike with no single pathogen firmly lin...

Journal: :Journal of invertebrate pathology 2014
Jorgen Ravoet Lina De Smet Ivan Meeus Guy Smagghe Tom Wenseleers Dirk C de Graaf

Solitary bees and honey bees from a neighbouring apiary were screened for a broad set of putative pathogens including protists, fungi, spiroplasmas and viruses. Most sampled bees appeared to be infected with multiple parasites. Interestingly, viruses exclusively known from honey bees such as Apis mellifera Filamentous Virus and Varroa destructor Macula-like Virus were also discovered in solitar...

2016
Ryan Dosselli Julia Grassl Andrew Carson Leigh W. Simmons Boris Baer

Honey bees (Apis mellifera) host a wide range of parasites, some being known contributors towards dramatic colony losses as reported over recent years. To counter parasitic threats, honey bees possess effective immune systems. Because immune responses are predicted to cause substantial physiological costs for infected individuals, they are expected to trade off with other life history traits th...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2015
Myrsini E Natsopoulou Dino P McMahon Vincent Doublet John Bryden Robert J Paxton

There is increasing appreciation that hosts in natural populations are subject to infection by multiple parasite species. Yet the epidemiological and ecological processes determining the outcome of mixed infections are poorly understood. Here, we use two intracellular gut parasites (Microsporidia), one exotic and one co-evolved in the western honeybee (Apis mellifera), in an experiment in which...

2015
Nadège Forfert Myrsini E. Natsopoulou Eva Frey Peter Rosenkranz Robert J. Paxton Robin F. A. Moritz Olav Rueppell

Pathogens and parasites may facilitate their transmission by manipulating host behavior. Honeybee pathogens and pests need to be transferred from one colony to another if they are to maintain themselves in a host population. Inter-colony transmission occurs typically through honeybee workers not returning to their home colony but entering a foreign colony ("drifting"). Pathogens might enhance d...

2012
Michael L. Smith

Nosema ceranae, a newly introduced parasite of the honey bee, Apis mellifera, is contributing to worldwide colony losses. Other Nosema species, such as N. apis, tend to be associated with increased defecation and spread via a fecal-oral pathway, but because N. ceranae does not induce defecation, it may instead be spread via an oral-oral pathway. Cages that separated older infected bees from you...

2016
Cameron J Jack Hannah M Lucas Thomas C Webster Ramesh R Sagili

Nosema ceranae is a widely prevalent microsporidian parasite in the western honey bee. There is considerable uncertainty regarding infection dynamics of this important pathogen in honey bee colonies. Understanding the infection dynamics at the colony level may aid in development of a reliable sampling protocol for N. ceranae diagnosis, and provide insights into efficient treatment strategies. T...

Journal: :Journal of invertebrate pathology 2013
Ursula Strauss Hannelie Human Laurent Gauthier Robin M Crewe Vincent Dietemann Christian W W Pirk

The loss of Apis mellifera L. colonies in recent years has, in many regions of the world, been alarmingly high. No single cause has been identified for these losses, but the interactions between several factors (mostly pathogens and parasites) have been held responsible. Work in the Americas on honeybees originating mainly from South Africa indicates that Africanised honeybees are less affected...

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