The honey bee (Apis mellifera) gut microbiome plays a central role in host health, yet its variation across agricultural landscapes remains poorly resolved. This study investigates how major environmental stressors, particularly pesticide exposure and RNA virus loadings, shape the honey bee gut microbiome in a large-scale field study conducted across Canada, spanning diverse agroecosystems from British Columbia to Quebec. We identify consistent associations between specific bacterial taxa and major RNA viruses, including enrichment of Serratia marcescens with SBV and depletion of Bombella intestini with BQCV. Pesticide exposure is likewise linked to reproducible shifts in key microbial taxa. Together, these findings reveal that interacting stressors jointly shape the bee gut microbiome and enable prediction of microbiome responses in agroecosystems.
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