A heap of dead bees was supposed to become food
for a newly
captured praying mantis. Instead, the pile ended up revealing
a previously
unrecognized suspect in colony
collapse disorder
a mysterious condition that for several years has been causing
declines in U.S.
honeybee populations, which
are needed to
pollinate many important crops. This new potential culprit is
a bizarre and
potentially devastating parasitic fly that has been taking
over the bodies of
honeybees (Apis mellifera) in Northern
California.
John
Hafernik, a biology professor at San
Francisco State University, had collected some
belly-up bees from the
ground underneath lights around the University’s biology
building. “But being
an absent-minded professor,” he noted in a prepared statement,
“I left them in
a vial on my desk and forgot about them.” He soon got a shock.
“The next time I
looked at the vial, there were all these fly pupae surrounding
the bees,” he
said. A fly (Apocephalus borealis) had
inserted its eggs into
the bees, using their bodies as a home for its developing
larvae. And the
invaders had somehow led the bees from their hives
to their deaths. A detailed description of the newly
documented relationship was
published online Tuesday in PLoS ONE.
The team performed a genetic analysis of the fly
and found that it
is the same species that has previously been documented to
parasitizie
bumblebee as well as paper wasp populations. That this
parasite hasn’t
previously been reported as a honeybee killer came as a
surprise, given that
“honeybees are among the best-studied insects of the world,” Hafernik said. “We would expect
that if this has
been a long-term parasite of honeybees, we would have
noticed.”
The team found evidence of the fly in 77 percent
of the hives they
sampled in the Bay Area of California, as well as in some
hives in the state’s
agricultural Central Valley and in South Dakota. Previous
research has found
evidence that mites, a virus, a fungus, or a combination of
these factors might
be responsible for the widespread colony collapse. (Read more
about colony
collapse disorder in our feature “Solving the Mystery of the
Vanishing Bees.”)
And with the discovery that this parasitic fly has been
quietly killing bees in
at least three areas, it might join the list of possible
forces behind colony
collapse disorder.
Parasitic fly larva emerging from a dead bee's
neck. Courtesy of
John Hafernik
The parasitic fly lays eggs in a bee’s abdomen.
Several days later,
the parasitized bee bumbles out of the hives often at night on
a solo
mission to nowhere. These bees often fly toward
light and wind up
unable to control their own bodies. After a bee dies, as many
as 13 fly larvae crawl out
from the bee’s neck. The bees’
behavior seems similar to that of ants that are parasitized
and then
decapitated from within by other fly larvae from the Apocephalus
genus.
“When we observed the bees for some time the ones
that were alive
we found that they walked in circles, often with no sense of
direction,” Andrew
Core, a graduate student who works with Hafernik and a
co-author on the new
paper, said in a prepared statement, describing them as
behaving “something
like a zombie.” (Read about other parasites that turn their
hosts into zombies
in the article “Zombie Creatures.”)
Bees from affected hives and the parasitizing
flies and their
larvae curiously also contained genetic traces of Nosema
ceranae,
another parasite, as well as a virus that leads to deformed
wings which had
already been implicated in colony collapse disorder. This
double infection
suggests that the flies might even be spreading these
additional hive-weakening
factors.
The research
team plans to track bees with radio tags and video cameras to
see whether
infected bees are leaving the hive willingly or getting kicked
out in the
middle of the night and where the flies are finding the bees
in which they lay
their eggs. “We assume it’s while the bees are out foraging
because we don’t
see the flies hanging around the bee hives,” Hafernik said.
“But it’s still a
bit of a black hole in terms of where it’s actually
happening.” Most of the
parasitized bees found so far have been foraging worker bees,
but even if other
groups of bees within a hive are not becoming infected, a
decline in the number
of foragers in a hive could have a large impact on a hive as a
whole. Models of
colony dynamics suggest that “significant loss of foragers
could cause rapid
population decline and colony collapse,” the researchers noted
in their paper.
Hafernik and
his colleagues hope that the simple way they made their
discovery “will enable
professional and amateur beekeepers to collect vital samples
of bees that leave
the hive at night” with a light trap, for instance and keep
them around for a
week or so to observe for any signs of emerging larvae.
Pinpointing the extent
of this strange bee behavior could be key to stemming colony
collapse disorder
by possibly allowing keepers to isolate affected populations.
If the parasitic
fly is just starting to infect honeybee populations, this
could be an important
move, especially given the newly prevalent mobile commercial
hives, which mean
that honeybees and their ailments are on the move in much
greater numbers than
ever before.