On 18 July this year, I received a letter
confirming the consortium had won
this funding.
The consortium includes:
• Newcastle University (Dr Giles Budge,
principal investigator; Professor Steve
Rushton, biological modeller)
• University of St Andrews (Professor
David Evans, virologist)
• The Bee Farmers’ Association
(members opting to participate)
• National Bee Unit, Animal and Plant
Health Agency (Mike Brown)
• ANSES (French agency for food,
environmental and occupational health
and safety), European Union Reference
Laboratory for Honey Bee Health
(Dr Magali Ribière)
• additional support from Dr Jay Evans,
USDA (US Department of Agriculture),
USA, and Dr Joachim de Miranda, SLU
(Swedish university of agricultural
sciences), Sweden.
Objectives
The chronic bee paralysis research
project is divided into four objectives.
Objective 1: modelling the epidemiology
and drivers of chronic bee paralysis
We will gather new information on what
stressors are associated with colonies
suffering from chronic bee paralysis
and will consider pathogens in adult
bees, pesticide exposure in adult bees,
weather, local land use and apiary
management practices. As such, we will
be collecting samples from healthy and
diseased colonies, along with husbandry
information from bee farmers this year
and next. Next year, we will set up field
trials with bee farmers on apiaries that
are suffering from reoccurring disease to
monitor the dynamics of disease spread
in individual colonies and apiaries. This
will provide new information on
where and when the virus becomes
associated with the colony. This first
objective will inform us about the
pre-requisite colony stressors necessary
for disease to develop, with the aim of
writing new protocols for early
disease detection.
Objective 2: CBPV evolution,
transmission and virulence
We will assess whether the recent
emergence of chronic bee paralysis is
the result of shifts in the transmissibility
or virulence of modern CBPV strains.
We will describe temporal and spatial
genetic variation, by sequencing
representative historic and recent
samples. We will recover infectious
historic strains and use these to compare
the risk posed by past and current
strains. Finally, we will assess the risk
posed by CBPV to other non-Apis
pollinators, such as solitary bees
and bumblebees.
Objective 3: quantifying the impact of
co-stressors on disease development
We will investigate co-stressors of
chronic bee paralysis using controlled
in vivo challenge tests to include:
lack of foraging due to poor weather,
overcrowding and the presence of the
gut parasite, Nosema ceranae. We will
assess the impact of these factors on
transmission and virulence for different
virus strains.
Objective 4: developing a management
toolkit to mitigate chronic bee paralysis
We will work closely with the BFA
to translate research outcomes into
improved professional practices when
managing chronic bee paralysis. This
will include a series of controlled
field experiments using bee farmer
apiaries where different management
practices are employed. We expect this
programme of work to provide a
step-change in our understanding
of chronic bee paralysis disease
development, virus evolution and the
role of co-stressors to develop informed,
evidence-based management practices.
Chronic Bee Paralysis:
Past, Present
and Future
Dr Giles Budge, senior lecturer at Newcastle University and crop and
bee health lead at Fera Science Ltd, with an update on research initiatives
Final Comments
I would like to thank everyone who
has discussed this difficult issue with
me in recent years and all those BFA
members who have already pledged their
support for the project. As a team, we
look forward to working together over
the next four years to help mitigate the
impact from this damaging disease. If you
have any questions, please contact me by
email at:
[email protected] □
References
1. Ribière, M, et al (2010). Chronic bee
paralysis: a disease and a virus like no
other? Journal of Invertebrate Pathology,
103, Supplement 1, S120–131.
2. Bailey, L, et al (1983). Honey bee paralysis:
its natural spread and diminished incidence
in England and Wales. Journal of Apicultural
Research, 22(3), 191–195.
3. Budge, GE, et al (2015). Pathogens as
Predictors of Honey Bee Colony Strength
in England and Wales. PLOS ONE 10(7),
e0133228.
4. Traynor, KS, et al (2016). Multiyear survey
targeting disease incidence in US honey
bees. Apidologie 47(3), 325–347.
5. Porrini, C, et al (2016). The Status of
Honey Bee Health in Italy: Results from the
Nationwide Bee Monitoring Network.
PLOS ONE, 11(5), e0155411.
6. Neel, C (2016). Chronic bee paralysis virus.
Bee Farmer, 2(2), 11.
Signs of Paralysis
Signs of chronic bee paralysis include a range of individual and colony-level
symptoms. Individual signs include abnormal trembling motion with paralysis
of the wings and body. Affected bees are unable to fly and sometimes crawl on
the ground. They are often displaced in the hive, appearing on frame top-bars
and lugs. Abdomens can be shiny, hairless and bloated, with the bees sometimes
suffering from dysentery and dislocated wings. Affected individuals may suffer
from nibbling attacks by healthy bees, giving them the appearance of ‘robber’
bees (below, left). Affected bees die after a few days of showing signs, leading
to piles of dead bees inside the hive or just outside the entrance (below, right).
Affected colonies can sometimes recover, but often the colony will lose so many
adult bees that it will enter terminal decline.