Categories: Science

First Ever Honeybee Vaccine Approved to Target Deadly Global Disease

The vaccine targets American Foulbrood, a deadly disease caused by a bacteria known as Paenibacillus larvae.
Getty Images/NurPhoto

The US Department of Agriculture has approved a vaccine for honeybees that could prevent further devastation to the insects, whose pollinating is key to the global food supply. 

The vaccine, approved on Jan. 4, is developed by Georgia-based biotech company Dalan Animal Health and manufactured by Diamond Animal Health. It targets American Foulbrood, a widespread deadly global disease caused by a bacteria known as Paenibacillus larvae. Prior to the vaccination, American Foulbrood was considered incurable, and the primary way to eliminate it was to incinerate affected hives. That means beekeepers would literally set hives on fire to kill infected bees and keep curbing the spread of the disease. 

Such a drastic practice is usually the standard, and some states even enforce a burn-only policy that requires the burning of bees and equipment found to be infected with antibiotic-resistant American Foulbrood. Certain antibiotics can also be used to help combat the disease, but those antibiotics can’t fully solve the problem.  

“This is an exciting step forward for beekeepers, as we rely on antibiotic treatment that has limited effectiveness and requires lots of time and energy to apply to our hives,” Trevor Tauzer, owner of Tauzer Apiaries and board member of the California State Beekeepers Association said in a statement. 

To administer the novel vaccine — which contains killed whole cell Paenibacillus larvae bacteria — beekeepers can mix it into the feed the worker bees consume and then feed to the queen. Upon ingestion, the vaccine moves into her ovaries. As a result, this ensures immunity in any larvae the queen produces. 

In the future, Dalan Animal Health says it intends to use the format of this vaccine to target other diseases honeybees face. 

“Global population growth and changing climates will increase the importance of honeybee pollination to secure our food supply,” Dr. Annette Kleiser, CEO of Dalan Animal Health, said in the statement.”Our vaccine is a breakthrough in protecting honeybees. We are ready to change how we care for insects, impacting food production on a global scale.”

Share

Recent Posts

Grubhub confirms data breach amid extortion claims

Food delivery platform Grubhub has confirmed a recent data breach after unauthorized actors accessed parts…

12 hours ago

Uber unveils a new robotaxi with no driver behind the wheel

Uber is getting closer to offering rides with no one behind the wheel.  The company…

17 hours ago

AI robot brings emotional care to pets

Tuya Smart just introduced Aura, its first AI-powered companion robot made for pets. Aura is…

1 day ago

Malicious Google Chrome extensions hijack accounts

Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered a serious threat hiding inside Google Chrome.  Several browser extensions pretend…

2 days ago

Google Fast Pair flaw lets hackers hijack headphones

Google designed Fast Pair to make Bluetooth connections fast and effortless. One tap replaces menus,…

3 days ago

Smart pill confirms when medication is swallowed

Remembering to take medication sounds simple. However, missed doses put people at serious health risk…

3 days ago