Skip to content
Environment, Science

Patrolling honey bees expose spread of antimicrobial resistance

Macquarie University 2 mins read

Insects prove their strength as environmental biomonitors

 

Bees could become biomonitors, checking their neighbourhoods to determine how far antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has spread, according to research by Macquarie University scientists.

 

At least 700,000 people die each year due to drug-resistant diseases, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), which estimates that 10 million people will die due to AMR by 2050. But we have few tools to keep track of its spread in the environment.

 

The study, published in Environmental Science and Technology, recruited honey bees, which can be a “crowdsourced” environmental proxy as they interact with contaminants in soil, dust, air, water and pollen while they forage.

 

“Bees interact with human environments, so they are a really good indicator of pollution that may present of risk of harm to humans,” says first author Kara Fry, from Macquarie University’s School of Natural Sciences.

 

“Bees only live for about four weeks, so whatever you're seeing in a bee is something that is in the environment right now.”

Fry, who, along with lead author Professor Mark Taylor, now works for the Environmental Protection Authority Victoria (EPA), examined 18 hives from citizen-scientist beekeepers who had hives across Greater Sydney in a mixture of land-use types. She sampled eight bees from each hive to see what was in their digestive tracts.

 

Specifically, she was looking for genetic elements called Class 1 integrons, key drivers of resistance to antibiotics. She also looked for toxic metals such as lead.

 

“As humans have released their own bacteria into the environment, Class 1 integrons have spread into other natural systems. You can now find them on every continent, even Antarctica. You can find them in really diverse spaces,” Fry says.

 

The study found that more than 80 per cent of the bees sampled across all hives were positive for one or more antimicrobial resistance targets, surprising the researchers by showing that AMR is prevalent irrespective of the land-use context.

 

Fry and her team expected to find more integrons in more densely populated areas. Instead, they found them distributed over an extremely wide area but with higher concentrations around waterbodies such as dams and lakes.

 

“We suspect the presence of local waterbodies that collect run-off is a critical source of AMR contamination,” Fry says. “Everything from the catchment drains down, then it stays in that system.

 

“As anticipated, our study data showed that residential and industrial areas were impacted very heavily with environmental lead, with greater concentrations in more densely populated areas. By contrast, AMR was much more pervasive across the whole urban environment.”

 

While being able to monitor pollutants and determine where their concentrations are highest could provide an invaluable tool to understand where to implement clean-ups, the discovery of how widespread AMR is also provides a wake-up call for people to alter their behaviour.

 

“The main drivers of AMR are the misuse and overuse of antimicrobial products. The message from this research reinforces the need to use antibiotics when needed and as directed, and to dispose of them appropriately by returning unused medicines to your pharmacy,” Fry says.

 

“In addition, we should also take a look at the products we are using in our homes and avoid those with added antimicrobial agents.”

 

Read the full paper here.


Contact details:

Fran Molloy
0412 485 677
fran.molloy@mq.edu.au

A copy of this release will be available online at mq.edu.au/newsroom

Media

More from this category

  • Environment
  • 28/10/2024
  • 20:11
Transition Industries LLC

Transition Industries LLC and Mitsubishi Gas Chemical announce Letter of Intent for a long-term Methanol Sales Agreement from the Pacifico Mexinol project in Sinaloa, Mexico

HOUSTON–BUSINESS WIRE– Transition Industries LLC announced that it has signed a Letter of Intent (LOI) with Mitsubishi Gas Chemical Company, Inc. (MGC) to enter…

  • Contains:
  • Business Company News, Environment
  • 28/10/2024
  • 14:52
Schneider Electric

Ausgrid partners with Schneider Electric to decarbonise grid

Ausgrid takes a significant step toward achieving its environmental goals, supported by Schneider Electric. The collaboration saw the introduction of alternate environmentally friendly SF6-free…

  • Contains:
  • Animal Animal WelfareRights, Environment
  • 28/10/2024
  • 12:41
Australian Conservation Foundation

New species on the brink: our endangered wildlife are sending us a dire warning

Much-loved and well-known Australian animals have been added to the international Red List of threatened species, sounding the alarm on the escalating extinction crisis here in Australia and around the world. There are now 742 endangered Australian plants and animals on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of threatened species. “Our disappearing wildlife are sending us a dire warning,” ACF National Nature campaigner Jess Abrahams said. “Australia has one of the worst extinction rates in the world, we’ve caused the extinction of more mammals than any other country. “Wildlife populations across Australia and across the planet are…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.