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1.
Summary In the polyandrous honey bee, Apis mellifera, workers can potentially increase their inclusive fitness by rearing full-sister queens. If the mother queen dies suddenly, workers feed a few larvae in worker cells with royal jelly and rear them into queens (emergency queen rearing). Using DNA microsatellite markers we determined the patriline of emergency queens reared in two colonies headed by naturally-mated queens before being made queenless. We found that some patrilines were reared more than others in one colony, but not in the other. These differences between colonies suggest that selective rearing is not always present and this might explain the mixed results of previous nepotism studies in the honey bee.Received 10 February 2003; revised 7 March 2003; accepted 17 March 2003. 相似文献
2.
Jasna Kralj Axel Brockmann Stefan Fuchs Jürgen Tautz 《Journal of comparative physiology. A, Neuroethology, sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology》2007,193(3):363-370
The parasitic mite Varroa destructor influences flight behavior, orientation and returning success of forager honeybees (Apis mellifera) infested as adults. As impaired orientation toward the nest entrance might be due to deficiency in recognition and responsiveness
to stimuli in the environment, we examined effects of V. destructor on sensory responsiveness, non-associative and associative learning of honey bee foragers by using proboscis extension reaction
paradigm (PER). Although infested and uninfested workers were initially equally responsive to different concentrations of
sugar water, we found differences in non-associative learning. In habituation, PER to repeated sugar stimulation of the antennae
occurred faster in infested foragers compared to uninfested foragers. In sensitization, infested foragers showed a lower response
to an odor stimulus following sugar stimulation than non-infested foragers. Differences in non-associative paradigms were
more pronounced in bees with lower responsiveness to sucrose. In conditioning learning experiments, a significant reduction
in proboscis extension response was found 1 min but not 12 min after a single conditioning trial indicating that V. destructor predominantly affects the non-associative components of learning and its underlying neural and molecular processes.
Jasna Kralj and Axel Brockmann have contributed equally to this study. 相似文献
3.
R. A. Calderón J. W. van Veen M. J. Sommeijer L. A. Sanchez 《Experimental & applied acarology》2010,50(4):281-297
Since its first contact with Apis mellifera, the population dynamics of the parasitic mite Varroa destructor varies from one region to another. In many regions of the world, apiculture has come to depend on the use of acaricides,
because of the extensive damage caused by varroa to bee colonies. At present, the mite is considered to contribute to the
recent decline of honey bee colonies in North America and Europe. Because in tropical climates worker brood rearing and varroa
reproduction occurs all year round, it could be expected that here the impact of the parasite will be even more devastating.
Yet, this has not been the case in tropical areas of South America. In Brazil, varroa was introduced more than 30 years ago
and got established at low levels of infestation, without causing apparent damage to apiculture with Africanized honey bees
(AHB). The tolerance of AHB to varroa is apparently attributable, at least in part, to resistance in the bees. The low fertility
of this parasite in Africanized worker brood and the grooming and hygienic behavior of the bees are referred as important
factors in keeping mite infestation low in the colonies. It has also been suggested that the type of mite influences the level
of tolerance in a honey bee population. The Korea haplotype is predominant in unbalanced host-parasite systems, as exist in
Europe, whereas in stable systems, as in Brazil, the Japan haplotype used to predominate. However, the patterns of varroa
genetic variation have changed in Brazil. All recently sampled mites were of the Korea haplotype, regardless whether the mites
had reproduced or not. The fertile mites on AHB in Brazil significantly increased from 56% in the 1980s to 86% in recent years.
Nevertheless, despite the increased fertility, no increase in mite infestation rates in the colonies has been detected so
far. A comprehensive literature review of varroa reproduction data, focusing on fertility and production of viable female
mites, was conducted to provide insight into the Africanized bee host-parasite relationship. 相似文献
4.
Summary In queenright colonies of Apis mellifera, worker policing normally eliminates worker-laid eggs thereby preventing worker reproduction. However, in queenless colonies that have failed to rear a replacement queen, worker reproduction is normal. Worker policing is switched off, many workers have active ovaries and lay eggs, and the colony rears a last batch of male brood before dying out. Here we report a colony which, when hopelessly queenless, did not stop policing although a high proportion of workers had active ovaries (12.6%) and many eggs were laid. However, all these eggs and also worker-laid eggs transferred from another colony were policed. This unusual pattern was repeated eight weeks later by a second queenless colony made using worker bees from the same mother colony, which strongly suggests genetic determination.Received 19 May 2003; revised 11 September 2003; accepted 23 September 2003. 相似文献
5.
Tan K Yang M Wang Z Radloff SE Pirk CW 《Journal of comparative physiology. A, Neuroethology, sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology》2012,198(4):319-323
When a honeybee colony loses its queen, workers activate their ovaries and begin to lay eggs. This is accompanied by a shift
in their pheromonal bouquet, which becomes more queen like. Workers of the Asian hive bee Apis cerana show unusually high levels of ovary activation and this can be interpreted as evidence for a recent evolutionary arms race
between queens and workers over worker reproduction in this species. To further explore this, we compared the rate of pheromonal
bouquet change between two honeybee sister species of Apis cerana and Apis mellifera under queenright and queenless conditions. We show that in both species, the pheromonal components HOB, 9-ODA, HVA, 9-HDA, 10-HDAA and 10-HDA have significantly higher
amounts in laying workers than in non-laying workers. In the queenright colonies of A. mellifera and A. cerana, the ratios (9-ODA)/(9-ODA + 9-HDA + 10-HDAA + 10-HDA) are not significantly different between the two species, but in queenless
A. cerana colonies the ratio is significant higher than in A. mellifera, suggesting that in A. cerana, the workers’ pheromonal bouquet is dominated by the queen compound, 9-ODA. The amount of 9-ODA in laying A. cerana workers increased by over 585% compared with the non-laying workers, that is 6.75 times higher than in A. mellifera where laying workers only had 86% more 9-ODA compared with non-laying workers. 相似文献
6.
The complementary sex determination (csd) gene is the primary gene determining the gender of honey bees (Apis spp). In this study we analyzed the polymorphism of csd gene in six Apis mellifera subspecies. The genomic region 3 of csd gene in these six A. mellifera was cloned, and identified. A total of 79 haplotypes were obtained from these six subspecies. Analysis showed that region
3 of csd gene has a high level of polymorphism in all the six A. mellifera subspecies. The A. m. anatolica subspecies has a slightly higher nucleotide diversity (π) than other subspecies, while the π values showed no significant
difference among the other five subspecies. The phylogenetic tree showed that all the csd haplotypes from different A. mellifera subspecies are scattered throughout the tree, without forming six different clades. Population differentiation analysis showed
that there are significant genetic differentiations among some of the subspecies. The NJ phylogenetic tree showed that the
A. m. caucasica and A. m. carnica have the closest relationship, followed by A. m. ssp, A. m. ligustica, A. m. carpatica and A. m. anatolica that were gathered in the tree in turn. 相似文献
7.
The tracheal mite has been associated with colony deaths worldwide since the mite was first discovered in 1919. Yet controversy
about its role in honey bee colony mortality has existed since that time. Other pathogens such as bacteria and viruses have
been suggested as the cause of colony deaths as well as degenerative changes in individual honey bees. Using data from published
work we developed a qualitative mortality model to explain colony mortality due to tracheal mite infestation in the field.
Our model suggests that colonies of tracheal-mite infested honey bees, with no other pathogens present, can die out in the
late winter/early spring period due to their inability to thermoregulate. An accumulation of factors conspire to cause colony
death including reduced brood/bee population, loose winter clusters, reduced flight muscle function and increasing mite infestation.
In essence a cascade effect results in the colony losing its cohesion and leading to its ultimate collapse. 相似文献
8.
Octopamine treatment has previously been shown to increase honey bee foraging behaviour. We determined the effects of octopamine on other tasks to learn how octopamine affects division of labour in honey bee colonies. Octopamine treatment did not increase the rate of corpse removal from the hive, suggesting that elevated brain levels of octopamine do not act to increase the performance of all flight-related tasks. Octopamine treatment also did not increase attendance in the queen's retinue, suggesting that elevated brain levels of octopamine do not act to increase responsiveness to all olfactory stimuli. Consistent with these findings, octopamine treatment enhanced the foraging response to brood pheromone but not the cell capping response, a component of brood care. These results demonstrate a relatively specific form of neuromodulation by octopamine in the regulation of division of labour in honey bee colonies. 相似文献
9.
Forsgren E de Miranda JR Isaksson M Wei S Fries I 《Experimental & applied acarology》2009,47(2):87-97
Mites in the genus Tropilaelaps (Acari: Laelapidae) are ectoparasites of the brood of honey bees (Apis spp.). Different Tropilaelaps subspecies were originally described from Apis dorsata, but a host switch occurred to the Western honey bee, Apis mellifera, for which infestations can rapidly lead to colony death. Tropilaelaps is hence considered more dangerous to A. mellifera than the parasitic mite Varroa destructor. Honey bees are also infected by many different viruses, some of them associated with and vectored by V. destructor. In recent years, deformed wing virus (DWV) has become the most prevalent virus infection in honey bees associated with V. destructor. DWV is distributed world-wide, and found wherever the Varroa mite is found, although low levels of the virus can also be found in Varroa free colonies. The Varroa mite transmits viral particles when feeding on the haemolymph of pupae or adult bees. Both the Tropilaelaps mite and the Varroa mite feed on honey bee brood, but no observations of DWV in Tropilaelaps have so far been reported. In this study, quantitative real-time RT-PCR was used to show the presence of DWV in infested
brood and Tropilaelaps
mercedesae mites collected in China, and to demonstrate a close quantitative association between mite-infested pupae of A. mellifera and DWV infections. Phylogenetic analysis of the DWV sequences recovered from matching pupae and mites revealed considerable
DWV sequence heterogeneity and polymorphism. These polymorphisms appeared to be associated with the individual brood cell,
rather than with a particular host. 相似文献
10.
We performed two experiments to study the hiding behavior of various beetles introduced into colonies of European honey bees,
Apis mellifera L. In the first experiment, we studied the spatial distribution within confinement sites of six beetle species at eight time
intervals following their introduction into honey bee observation hives. For each beetle species, we also determined whether
the beetle’s level of integration into honey bee colonies correlated with its ability to hide at confinement sites within
colonies. In experiment 1, we used five species of nitidulid beetles and one species of tenebrionid beetle, collectively representing
three differing levels of integration into honey bee colonies. These species (and their level of integration) included Aethina tumida (highly integrated), Lobiopa insularis, and Epuraea luteola (accidentals), and Carpophilus humeralis, C. hemipterus, and Tribolium castaneum (non-integrated). There were always more A. tumida found in confinement sites than beetles of the other species. This difference became more pronounced over the 24-h observation
period. In experiment 2, we determined whether previous A. tumida occupation of confinement sites predisposed those sites to hosting invading A. tumida never before exposed to honey bee colonies. The results from this study indicate that invading A. tumida find hiding sites within honey bee colonies more rapidly if other A. tumida previously occupied the confinement sites. Collectively, these studies suggest that A. tumida is unique among beetle invaders with respect to its ability to seek out and occupy confinement sites inside honey bee colonies. 相似文献
11.
Maggi M Medici S Quintana S Ruffinengo S Marcángeli J Gimenez Martinez P Fuselli S Eguaras M 《Experimental & applied acarology》2012,56(4):309-318
Although mitochondrial DNA mapping of Varroa destructor revealed the presence of several haplotypes, only two of them (Korean and Japanese haplotypes) were capable to infest Apis mellifera populations. Even though the Korean haplotype is the only one that has been reported in Argentina, these conclusions were
based on mites sampled in apiaries from a specific geographical place (Buenos Aires province). To study mites from several
sites of Argentina could reveal the presence of the Japanese genotype, especially considering sites near to Brazil, where
Japanese haplotype was already detected. The aim of this work was to study the genetic structure of V. destructor populations from apiaries located in various provinces of Argentina, in order to determine the presence of different haplotypes.
The study was carried out between January 2006 and December 2009. Phoretic adult Varroa mites were collected from honey bee workers sampled from colonies of A. mellifera located in Entre Ríos, Buenos Aires, Corrientes, Río Negro, Santa Cruz and Neuquén provinces. Twenty female mites from each
sampling site were used to carry out the genetic analysis. For DNA extraction a nondestructive method was used. DNA sequences
were compared to Korean haplotype (AF106899) and Japanese haplotype (AF106897). All DNA sequences obtained from mite populations
sampled in Argentina, share 98% of similitude with Korean Haplotype (AF106899). Taking into account these results, we are
able to conclude that Korean haplotype is cosmopolite in Argentina. 相似文献
12.
Tropilaelaps
mercedesae is a serious ectoparasite of Apis
mellifera in China. The aim of this study was to investigate the infestation rates and intensity of T. mercedesae in A. mellifera in China, and to explore the relative importance of climate, district, management practices and beekeeper characteristics
that are assumed to be associated with the intensity of T. mercedesae. Of the 410 participating apiaries, 379 apiaries were included in analyses of seasonal infestation rates and 352 apiaries
were included in multivariable regression analysis. The highest infestation rate (86.3%) of T. mercedesae was encountered in autumn, followed by summer (66.5%), spring (17.2%) and winter (14.8%). In autumn, 28.9% (93) of the infested
apiaries were in the north (including the northeast and northwest of China), 71.1% (229) were in the central and south (including
east, southeast and southwest China), and 306 apiaries (82.9%) were co-infested by both T. mercedesae and Varroa. Multivariable regression analysis showed that geographical location, season, royal jelly collection and Varroa infestation were the factors that influence the intensity of T. mercedesae. The influence of beekeeper’s education, time of beekeeping, operation size, and hive migration on the intensity of T. mercedesa was not statistically significant. This study provided information about the establishment of the linkage of the environment
and the parasite and could lead to better timing and methods of control. 相似文献
13.
Margarita M. López-Uribe R. Holden Appler Elsa Youngsteadt Robert R. Dunn Steven D. Frank David R. Tarpy 《Conservation Genetics》2017,18(3):659-666
Honey bees are the most important managed pollinators as they provide key ecosystem services for crop production worldwide. Recent losses of honey bee colonies in North America and Europe have demonstrated a need to develop strategies to improve their health and conserve their populations. Previously, we showed that feral honey bees—colonies that live in the wild without human assistance—exhibit higher levels of immunocompetence than managed colonies in North Carolina (USA). In a first attempt to investigate the underlying mechanisms of this difference in immune response, here we characterize the genetic composition of feral and managed honey bees using microsatellite markers. Our results reveal significant but small genetic differentiation between feral and managed honey bee colonies (?CT = 0.047, P?=?0.03) indicating admixture between these two groups. Higher genetic diversity was correlated with higher immune response in feral (P MANOVA = 0.011) but not managed bees, despite the fact that the latter group showed significantly higher average genetic diversity (P ANCOVA < 0.001). These findings suggest that genetic diversity is positively associated with immunocompetence in feral honey bee colonies, and that the benefits of genetic diversity are obscured in managed bees, perhaps as a result of artificial selection. We hypothesize that high genetic variability provides the raw material upon which natural selection acts and generates adaptive genotypes in unmanaged populations. Feral populations could be useful sources of genetic variation to use in breeding programs that aim to improve honey bee health. 相似文献
14.
Honey bee workers maintain the brood nest of their colony within a narrow temperature range of 34.5±1.5°C, implying that there
are significant fitness costs if brood is reared outside the normal range. However, the effects of abnormal incubation temperatures
are subtle and not well documented. Here we show that short-term learning and memory abilities of adult workers are affected
by the temperature they experienced during pupal development. In contrast, long-term learning and memory is not significantly
affected by rearing temperature. Furthermore, we could detect no effects of incubation temperature on fluctuating asymmetry,
as a measure of developmental stability, in workers, queens or drones. We conclude that the most important consequence of
abnormal rearing temperatures are subtle neural deficiencies affecting short-term memory rather than physical abnormalities. 相似文献
15.
Pax group III genes are involved in a number of processes during insect segmentation. In Drosophila melanogaster, three genes, paired, gooseberry and gooseberry-neuro, regulate segmental patterning of the epidermis and nervous system. Paired acts as a pair-rule gene and gooseberry as a segment polarity gene. Studies of Pax group III genes in other insects have indicated that their expression is a good marker for understanding the underlying molecular mechanisms
of segmentation. We have cloned three Pax group III genes from the honeybee (Apis mellifera) and examined their relationships to other insect Pax group III genes and their expression patterns during honeybee segmentation. The expression pattern of the honeybee homologue of paired is similar to that of paired in Drosophila, but its expression is modulated by anterior–posterior temporal patterning similar to the expression of Pax group III proteins in Tribolium. The expression of the other two Pax group III genes in the honeybee indicates that they also act in segmentation and nervous system development, as do these genes in other
insects. 相似文献
16.
The frequency of damaged Varroa
destructor Anderson and Trueman (Mesostigmata: Varroidae) found on the bottom board of hives of the honey bee, Apis mellifera L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae) has been used as an indicator of the degree of tolerance or resistance of honey bee colonies against
mites. However, it is not clear that this measure is adequate. These injuries should be separated from regular dorsal dimples
that have a developmental origin. To investigate damage to Varroa mites and regular dorsal dimples, 32 honey bee (A. mellifera) colonies were selected from four Iranian provinces: Isfahan, Markazi, Qazvin, and Tehran. These colonies were part of the
National Honey bee Breeding Program that resulted in province-specific races. In April, Varroa mites were collected from heavily infested colonies and used to infest the 32 experimental colonies. In August, 20 of these
colonies were selected (five colonies from each province). Adult bees from these colonies were placed in cages and after introducing
mites, damaged mites were collected from each cage every day. The average percentage of injured mites ranged from 0.6 to 3.0%
in four provinces. The results did not show any statistical differences between the colonies within provinces for injuries
to mites, but there were some differences among province-specific lines. Two kinds of injuries to the mites were observed:
injuries to legs and pedipalps, and injuries to other parts of the body. There were also some regular dorsal dimples on dorsal
idiosoma of the mites that were placed in categories separate from mites damaged by bees. This type of classification helps
identifying damage to mites and comparing them with developmental origin symptoms, and may provide criteria for selecting
bees tolerant or resistant to this mite. 相似文献
17.
Background
In the honeybee Apis mellifera, female larvae destined to become a queen are fed with royal jelly, a secretion of the hypopharyngeal glands of young nurse bees that rear the brood. The protein moiety of royal jelly comprises mostly major royal jelly proteins (MRJPs) of which the coding genes (mrjp1-9) have been identified on chromosome 11 in the honeybee’s genome.Results
We determined the expression of mrjp1-9 among the honeybee worker caste (nurses, foragers) and the sexuals (queens (unmated, mated) and drones) in various body parts (head, thorax, abdomen). Specific mrjp expression was not only found in brood rearing nurse bees, but also in foragers and the sexuals.Conclusions
The expression of mrjp1 to 7 is characteristic for the heads of worker bees, with an elevated expression of mrjp1-4 and 7 in nurse bees compared to foragers. Mrjp5 and 6 were higher in foragers compared to nurses suggesting functions in addition to those of brood food proteins. Furthermore, the expression of mrjp9 was high in the heads, thoraces and abdomen of almost all female bees, suggesting a function irrespective of body section. This completely different expression profile suggests mrjp9 to code for the most ancestral major royal jelly protein of the honeybee.18.
Summary One day old honeybee workers (Apis mellifera) were observed in small experimental groups (10 workers per group). These groups were either composed of offspring workers of singly inseminated queens (super-sister groups) or multiply inseminated queens (mixed groups). The groups thus consisted of either super-sisters or a mix of super- and halfsisters. The positions of the individually labelled workers were observed with infrared sensitive video equipment over a 24 h period and analysed with digital image analysis. The spatial distribution of workers in super-sister and mixed groups differed significantly. The distance between super-sister workers was significantly less than in mixed groups (n = 339; p < 0.01). Also the distance of the workers from the group centre was significantly less in super-sister groups as compared to mixed groups (n = 3440, p<0.05). The super-sisters thus formed tighter groups than the groups including half-sisters. A genotypic analysis of the mixed groups with microsatellite DNA markers revealed that workers were significantly more frequently observed next to a super-sister rather than a half-sister (p < 0.001). Irrespective whether this results from kin recognition or not, we expect clique formation to be an important factor for the development of task specialisation among worker bees.Received 26 August 2002; revised 22 April 2003; accepted 25 July 2003. 相似文献
19.
James P. Strange Lionel Garnery Walter S. Sheppard 《Journal of Insect Conservation》2008,12(5):527-537
A population of honey bees (Apis mellifera mellifera L.) with an annual colony brood cycle adapted to a locally abundant floral source in the Landes region of Southwest France
is the subject of genetic conservation efforts. This population is maintained by local beekeepers in an area that experiences
both an annual seasonal influx of non-local colonies and the permanent culture of imported stock. However, some colonies native
to the Landes do not have the adapted brood cycle and their status as ecotypic are in question. The present study used morphology,
mitochondrial DNA and microsatellites to characterize the endemic population and suggests further genetic conservation strategies.
These methods yielded different degrees of discrimination of native and imported colonies and provided a powerful suite of
tools for local resource managers. Colonies from the Landes could be differentiated from non-local French A. m. mellifera populations using morphometric analysis, and from non-native and reference populations using mtDNA and microsatellites. Seven
morphological characters were identified by discriminant analysis as informative for delineating the Landes ecotype from other
A. m. mellifera populations. Mitochondrial haplotypes for the population were characterized and five microsatellite loci were found to be
informative in characterizing the Landes population. Asymmetric gene flow detected with microsatellite alleles was observed
to be 5.5–5.9% from imported to native stocks of honey bees while introgression of native microsatellite alleles into imported
colonies was 21.6%. 相似文献
20.
Jerzy Woyke Jerzy Wilde Maria Wilde Venkataramegowda Sivaram Cleofas Cervancia Narajanappa Nagaraja Muniswamyreddy Reddy 《Journal of Insect Behavior》2008,21(6):481-494
Defense behavior of three, free living giant (Megapis) honey bee subspecies, Apis laboriosa, A. dorsata dorsata and A. dorsata breviligula, was compared. Disturbed worker bees responded with characteristic dorso-ventral defense body twisting (DBT). Workers of
A. laboriosa twisted the thorax by 55°, and the two other A. dorsata subspecies by about 10° more. A. laboriosa workers raised the tip of the abdomen by 90° and workers of the two other bee subspecies by about 20° higher. Differences
in those traits were highly significant between A. laboriosa and both A. dorsata subspecies, but were not significant between those two subspecies. The whole cycle of DBT was the most vigorous in A. d. breviligula (0.11 s), and it was twice as vigorous as in A. d. dorsata (0.26 s) and trice as in A. laboriosa (0.32 s). A. laboriosa twisted the body together with wings folded over the abdomen, while the two A. dorsata subspecies raised the abdomen between spread wings. This supports the opinion to treat A. laboriosa as a separate species.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献