| Literature DB >> 31337780 |
Elena Facchini1, Laura Nalon2, Maria Elena Andreis2, Mauro Di Giancamillo2, Rita Rizzi2, Michele Mortarino2.
Abstract
Honeybee pupae morphology can be affected by a number of stressor, but in vivo investigation is difficult. A computed tomography (CT) technique was applied to visualize a comb's inner structure without damaging the brood. The CT scan was performed on a brood comb containing pupae developed from eggs laid by the queen during a time window of 48 hours. From the CT images, the position of each pupa was determined by recording coordinates to a common reference point. Afterwards, every brood cell was inspected in order to assess the developmental stage of the pupa, the presence of Varroa destructor, the number and progeny of foundress mites. Using data on 651 pupae, the relationships between varroa infestation status, developmental stage and spatial position of the pupa within the brood comb, and its length were investigated. Pupae at 8 post-capping days were shorter than pupae at 7 post-capping days. Pupae in infected cells were significantly shorter than those in varroa-free cells and this effect was linked both to mite number and stage and to the position in the comb. Overall, the results suggest that the CT-scan may represent a suitable non-invasive tool to investigate the morphology and developing status of honeybee brood.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31337780 PMCID: PMC6650481 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-46474-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Honeybee brood area investigated by medical CT-scan and manual uncapping. Panel a, frontal picture of both left and right side of the brood comb. Panel b, pupal development across five sections of the brood comb assessed by the two CT scans. The five coupled images of the coronal plane of the comb show the honeybee larvae on Day 10 on the left (Ln) and right (Rn) side of the comb and the corresponding developed pupae on Day 17. Panel c, frontal picture of both left and right side of the uncapped brood comb after manual inspection.
Figure 2Brood area sections (1–12) and superimposed contingency table for absence (0) and presence (1) of observed and expected (in brackets) varroa mites. *Significant χ2values (P < 0.05).
LS Means (±SE) and relative number of observations (N) of length of pupa for the three categories of mite infestation: presence or absence; number of foundress mites; total number of mites.
| Presence/absence model | N | LSMeans ± SE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 – absence | 593 | 10.54 ± 0.02a |
| 1 – presence | 58 | 10.19 ± 0.04b |
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| 0 – absence | 593 | 10.54 ± 0.02a |
| 1 foundress mite | 52 | 10.20 ± 0.04b |
| >=2 foundress mites | 6 | 10.08 ± 0.11b |
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| 0 – absence | 593 | 10.54 ± 0.02a |
| 1 mite | 9 | 10.30 ± 0.09ab |
| 2–3 mites | 17 | 10.24 ± 0.07b |
| 4 mites | 18 | 10.16 ± 0.06b |
| ≥5 mites | 14 | 10.09 ± 0.07b |
Means with different superscript are statistically different (P < 0.05).