The bumblebees (genus Bombus) are an ecologically and economically important group in decline. Their decline is driven by many factors, but parasites are believed to play a role. This thesis examines the factors that influence the diversity and distribution of multihost viruses in bumblebees using molecular and modelling techniques. In Chapter 2, I performed viral discovery to isolate new multihost viruses in bumblebees. I investigated factors that explain prevalence differences between different host species using co-phylogenetic models. I found that related hosts are infected with similar viral assemblages, related viruses infect similar host assemblages and related hosts are on average infected with related viruses. Chapter 3 investigated the ecology of four of the novel viruses in greater detail. I applied a multivariate probit regression to investigate the abiotic factors that may drive infection. I found that precipitation may have a positive or negative effect depending on the virus. Also, we observe a strong non-random association between two of the viruses. The novel viruses have considerably more diversity than the previously known viruses. Chapter 4 investigated the effect of pesticides on viral and non-viral infection. I exposed Bombus terrestris colonies to field realistic doses of the neoticotinoid pesticide clothianidin in the laboratory, to the mimic pulsed exposure of crop blooms. I found some evidence for a positive effect of uncertain size on the infection rate of pesticide exposed colonies relative to non-pesticide exposed colonies, a potentially important result. Chapter 5 explored the evolution of avirulent multihost digital organisms across fluctuating fitness landscapes within a discrete sequence space. Consistent with theory, I found that evolution across a fluctuating discrete landscape leads to a faster rate of adaptation, greater diversity and greater specialism or generalism, depending on the correlation between the landscapes. A large range of factors are found to be important in the distribution of infection and diversity of viruses, and we find evidence for abiotic, biotic and anthropogenic factors all playing a role.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:739141 |
Date | January 2017 |
Creators | Pascall, David John |
Contributors | Wilfert, Lena |
Publisher | University of Exeter |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | http://hdl.handle.net/10871/31597 |
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