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What bacteria and fungi lurk in your city? Bees may have the answer.

A researcher from University of California-Davis checking on honeybee hives in an almond orchard. Bees collect many substances from their environment—including many types of microbes.
PHOTOGRAPH BY ANAND VARMA, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
A researcher from University of California-Davis checking on honeybee hives in an almond orchard. Bees collect many substances from their environment—including many types of microbes. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANAND VARMA, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION

What bacteria and fungi lurk in your city? Bees may have the answer.

DNA found in honeybee hives show that each city has a unique microbiome—and that could have big implications for human health.

ByAnnie Roth

Although we try not to think about it, our cities are teeming with trillions upon trillions of bacteria, fungi, and viruses. Knowing which ones are afoot can tell researchers a lot about the health of the plants, animals, and humans in the area, but collecting microorganisms on a city-wide scale is quite difficult and expensive.

Now, scientists have found a way to sample entire cities using honeybees. In a new study published March 30 in the journal Environmental Microbiome, scientists demonstrated how sampling the debris at the bottom of honeybee hives can provide scientists with a snapshot of the microbial landscape of urban environments.

In the paper, scientists analyzed DNA in debris from rooftop and backyard honeybee hives in New York City, Sydney, Melbourne, Venice, and Tokyo—and found that each location had a unique genetic signature. Some samples even contained a pathogen known to cause disease in humans.

Although more research is needed to know if honeybees can be used to effectively detect diseases in cities, the study’s authors say the handy little honey-producers have the potential to make city-wide microorganism monitoring much easier.

Worker bees construct a new comb out of beeswax in Langen, Germany. After entering the nest the bees clean themselves off—and leave behind hints of their travels for researchers to study. PHOTOGRAPH BY INGO ARNDT, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION
Worker bees construct a new comb out of beeswax in Langen, Germany. After entering the nest the bees clean themselves off—and leave behind hints of their travels for researchers to study. PHOTOGRAPH BY INGO ARNDT, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION

Swapping swabs for swarms

“It's important to be able to characterise the microbiomes of the cities that we live in,” says

Elizabeth Hénaff, an assistant professor at NYU who studies how living beings interact with their environment. More than half of the world’s population live in cities, yet the microbial landscapes of these environments remain poorly understood. What scientists do know is that the microbial city slickers we interact with can greatly impact on their health.

In 2010, honeybees in Red Hook, Brooklyn raided a nearby maraschino cherry factory, producing bright-red syrup, which garnered a lot of press. This inspired Hénaff and her colleagues to launch a pilot study to examine what other substances New York’s honey bees were bringing back to their hives. It struck the researchers that this might be an easier way to sample microbes than swabbing for organisms on subway poles, sidewalks, and the like.

The scientists sampled honey, dead bees, and debris from three hives in New York City and found a diverse array of genetic data, most of which came from the hive debris. After that, the researchers collected hive debris from beekeepers in Australia, Italy, and Japan, each of which had its own local flair.

Beekeepers inspect hives in Australia. A recent paper found unique microbial signatures from bee hives worldwide, a result of their wanderings throughout their environment.PHOTOGRAPH BY LISA MAREE WILLIAMS, GETTY IMAGES
Beekeepers inspect hives in Australia. A recent paper found unique microbial signatures from bee hives worldwide, a result of their wanderings throughout their environment.PHOTOGRAPH BY LISA MAREE WILLIAMS, GETTY IMAGES

The hive debris from Venice was dominated by fungi commonly found in rotting wood, which is abundant in the waterlogged city. In Tokyo, samples of hive debris were loaded with Zygosaccharomyces rouxii, a strain of yeast used in soy sauce fermentation. Additionally, DNA from the pathogen Rickettsia felis, which causes a typhus-like febrile disease in humans—sometimes called cat’s scratch fever—was found in some of the samples from Tokyo.

They also uncovered some noteworthy bacteria inside the Brooklyn hives, including a species known to degrade polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and another previously found in high-altitude Andean lakes that’s tolerant to extreme conditions.

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