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Foodborne Transmission of Deformed Wing Virus to Ants (Myrmica rubra)
Year:
2019
Source of publication :
Insects (journal)
Authors :
Chejanovsky, Nor
;
.
Volume :
10
Co-Authors:

Daniel Schläppi, Patrick Lattrell, Orlando Yañez and Peter Neumann

Facilitators :
From page:
0
To page:
0
(
Total pages:
1
)
Abstract:

Virus host shifts occur frequently, but the whole range of host species and the actual transmission pathways are often poorly understood. Deformed wing virus (DWV), an RNA virus described from honeybees (Apis mellifera), has been shown to have a broad host range. Since ants are often scavenging on dead honeybees, foodborne transmission of these viruses may occur. However, the role of the ant Myrmica rubra as an alternative host is not known and foodborne transmission to ants has not been experimentally addressed yet. Here, we show with a 16-week feeding experiment that foodborne transmission enables DWV type-A and -B to infect M. rubra and that these ants may serve as a virus reservoir. However, the titers of both plus- and minus-sense viral RNA strands decreased over time. Since the ants were fed with highly virus-saturated honeybee pupae, this probably resulted in initial viral peaks, then approaching lower equilibrium titers in infected individuals later. Since DWV infections were also found in untreated field-collected M. rubra colonies, our results support the wide host range of DWV and further suggest foodborne transmission as a so far underestimated spread mechanism.

Note:
Related Files :
Apis mellifera
bees
deformed wing virus
foodborne transmission
invasive species
Myrmica rubra
viruses and viroids
Show More
Related Content
More details
DOI :
10.3390/insects10110394
Article number:
394
Affiliations:
Database:
PubMed
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
45743
Last updated date:
02/03/2022 17:27
Creation date:
05/01/2020 10:17
You may also be interested in
Scientific Publication
Foodborne Transmission of Deformed Wing Virus to Ants (Myrmica rubra)
10

Daniel Schläppi, Patrick Lattrell, Orlando Yañez and Peter Neumann

Foodborne Transmission of Deformed Wing Virus to Ants (Myrmica rubra)

Virus host shifts occur frequently, but the whole range of host species and the actual transmission pathways are often poorly understood. Deformed wing virus (DWV), an RNA virus described from honeybees (Apis mellifera), has been shown to have a broad host range. Since ants are often scavenging on dead honeybees, foodborne transmission of these viruses may occur. However, the role of the ant Myrmica rubra as an alternative host is not known and foodborne transmission to ants has not been experimentally addressed yet. Here, we show with a 16-week feeding experiment that foodborne transmission enables DWV type-A and -B to infect M. rubra and that these ants may serve as a virus reservoir. However, the titers of both plus- and minus-sense viral RNA strands decreased over time. Since the ants were fed with highly virus-saturated honeybee pupae, this probably resulted in initial viral peaks, then approaching lower equilibrium titers in infected individuals later. Since DWV infections were also found in untreated field-collected M. rubra colonies, our results support the wide host range of DWV and further suggest foodborne transmission as a so far underestimated spread mechanism.

Scientific Publication
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