The gut microbiota can have profound effects on hosts, but the study of these relationships in humans is
challenging. The specialized gut microbial community of honey bees is similar to the mammalian microbiota,
as both are mostly composed of host-adapted, facultatively anaerobic and microaerophilic bacteria. However,
the microbial community of the bee gut is far simpler than the mammalian microbiota, being dominated by
only nine bacterial species clusters that are specific to bees and that are transmitted through social interactions
between individuals. Recent developments, which include the discovery of extensive strain-level variation,
evidence of protective and nutritional functions, and reports of eco-physiological or disease-associated
perturbations to the microbial community, have drawn attention to the role of the microbiota in bee health
and its potential as a model for studying the ecology and evolution of gut symbionts.