Data from: A test of the invasive pathogen hypothesis of bumble bee decline in North America
Emergent fungal diseases are critical factors in global biodiversity declines. The fungal pathogen Nosema bombi was recently found to be widespread in declining species of North American bumble bees (Bombus), with circumstantial evidence suggesting an exotic introduction from Europe. This interpreta...
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Zusammenfassung: | Emergent fungal diseases are critical factors in global biodiversity
declines. The fungal pathogen Nosema bombi was recently found to be
widespread in declining species of North American bumble bees (Bombus),
with circumstantial evidence suggesting an exotic introduction from
Europe. This interpretation has been hampered by a lack of knowledge of
global genetic variation, geographic origin, and changing prevalence
patterns of N. bombi in declining North American populations. Thus, the
temporal and spatial emergence of N. bombi and its potential role in
bumble bee decline remain speculative. We analyze Nosema prevalence and
genetic variation in the United States and Europe from 1980, before an
alleged introduction in the early 1990s, to 2011, extracting Nosema DNA
from Bombus natural history collection specimens from across this time
period. Nosema bombi prevalence increased significantly from low
detectable frequency in the 1980s to significantly higher frequency in the
mid- to late-1990s, corresponding to a period of reported massive
infectious outbreak of N. bombi in commercial bumble bee rearing stocks in
North America. Despite the increased frequency, we find no conclusive
evidence of an exotic N. bombi origin based on genetic analysis of global
Nosema populations; the widespread Nosema strain found currently in
declining United States bumble bees was present in the United States
before commercial colony trade. Notably, the US N. bombi is not detectably
different from that found predominantly throughout Western Europe, with
both regions characterized by low genetic diversity compared with high
levels of diversity found in Asia, where commercial bee breeding
activities are low or nonexistent. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.83fb8 |