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Honeybee Exposure to Veterinary Drugs: How Is the Gut Microbiota Affected?

Loredana Baffoni, Daniele Alberoni, Francesca Gaggìa, Chiara Braglia, Catherine Stanton, R. Paul Ross, Diana Di Gioia

2021Microbiology Spectrum45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study investigates the impact of the three most widely used antibiotics in the beekeeping sector (oxytetracycline, tylosin, and sulfonamides) on the honeybee gut microbiota and on the spread of antibiotic resistance genes. The research represents an advance to the present literature, considering that the tylosin and sulfonamides effects on the gut microbiota have never been studied. Another original aspect lies in the experimental approach used, as the study looks at the impact of veterinary drugs and feed supplements 24 days after the beginning of the administration, in order to explore perturbations in newly eclosed honeybees, instead of the same treated honeybee generation. Moreover, the study was not performed with cage tests but in micro-hives, thus achieving conditions closer to real hives. The study reaches the conclusion that the most common veterinary drugs determine changes in some core microbiota members and that incidence of resistance genes for tetracycline and sulfonamides increases following antibiotic treatment.

Topics & Concepts

TylosinBiologyGut floraAntibioticsAntibiotic resistanceOxytetracyclinePopulationMicrobiologyTetracyclineZoologyMicrobiomeVeterinary medicineImmunologyMedicineGeneticsEnvironmental healthInsect and Pesticide ResearchPlant and animal studiesBee Products Chemical Analysis
Honeybee Exposure to Veterinary Drugs: How Is the Gut Microbiota Affected? | Litcius