共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 23 毫秒
1.
《Comparative biochemistry and physiology. A, Comparative physiology》1982,71(2):277-281
- 1.1. In late winter, oxygen consumption of honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) clusters showed marked 24-hr periodicity, even when held under constant temperature conditions.
- 2.2. Minimal rates of metabolism (as low as 3.4 w kg −1) were usually reached at night (ca. 0500 hr), and maximum rates (as high as 33.5 w kg−1) in midday (ca. 1400 hr).
- 3.3. Colonies with brood showed less excursion in daily metabolic rate, by maintaining higher night-time levels.
- 4.4. There is a pronounced decrease in metabolic rate for the intact cluster of 9480–23,394 bees from the rates reported for individuals or small groups of bees.
2.
David J. Schulz Gene E. Robinson 《Journal of comparative physiology. A, Neuroethology, sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology》2001,187(1):53-61
Forager honey bees have higher brain levels of octopamine than do bees tending larvae in the hive. To test the hypothesis that octopamine influences honey bee division of labor we treated bees orally with octopamine or its immediate precursor tyramine and determined whether these treatments increased the probability of initiating foraging. Octopamine treatment significantly elevated levels of octopamine in the brain and caused a significant dose-dependent increase in the number of new foragers. This effect was seen for precocious foragers in single-cohort colonies and foragers in larger colonies with more typical age demographies. Tyramine treatment did not increase the number of new foragers, suggesting that octopamine was exerting a specific effect. Octopamine treatment was effective only when given to bees old enough to forage, i.e., older than 4 days of age. Treatment when bees were 1-3 days of age did not cause a significant increase in the number of new foragers when the bees reached the minimal foraging age. These results demonstrate that octopamine influences division of labor in honey bee colonies. We speculate that octopamine is acting in this context as a neuromodulator. 相似文献
3.
Biogenic amines and division of labor in honey bee colonies 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
C. Wagener-Hulme J. C. Kuehn D. J. Schulz G. E. Robinson 《Journal of comparative physiology. A, Neuroethology, sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology》1999,184(5):471-479
Brain levels of dopamine, serotonin, and octopamine were measured in relation to both age-related division of labor and inter-individual
differences in task specialization independent of age in honey bee colonies. The only differences among similarly aged bees
performing different tasks were significantly lower levels of dopamine in food storers than comb builders and significantly
lower levels of octopamine in soldiers than foragers, but soldiers also were slightly younger than foragers. Differences associated
with age-related division of labor were stronger. Older bees, notably foragers, had significantly higher levels of all three
amines than did younger bees working in the hive. Using social manipulations to unlink chronological age and behavioral status,
octopamine was found to exhibit the most robust association between behavior and amine level, independent of age. Octopamine
levels were significantly lower in normal-age nurses versus precocious foragers and overage nurses versus normal-age foragers,
but not different in reverted nurses versus reversion colony foragers. Dopamine levels were significantly lower in normal-age
nurses versus precocious foragers, but higher in reverted nurses versus reversion colony foragers. Serotonin levels did not
differ in any of these comparisons. These correlative results suggest that octopamine is involved in the regulation of age-related
division of labor in honey bees.
Accepted: 10 February 1999 相似文献
4.
5.
N. Bacandritsos A. Granato I. Papanastasiou M. Caldon A. Gallina 《Journal of invertebrate pathology》2010,105(3):335-340
During June and July of 2009, sudden deaths, tremulous movements and population declines of adult honey bees were reported by the beekeepers in the region of Peloponnesus (Mt. Mainalo), Greece. A preliminary study was carried out to investigate these unexplained phenomena in this region. In total, 37 bee samples, two brood frames containing honey bee brood of various ages, eight sugar samples and four sugar patties were collected from the affected colonies. The samples were tested for a range of pests, pathogens and pesticides. Symptomatic adult honey bees tested positive for Varroa destructor,Nosema ceranae, Chronic bee paralysis virus (CBPV), Acute paralysis virus (ABPV), Deformed wing virus (DWV), Sacbrood virus (SBV) and Black queen cell virus (BQCV), but negative for Acarapis woodi. American Foulbrood was absent from the brood samples. Chemical analysis revealed that amitraz, thiametoxan, clothianidin and acetamiprid were all absent from symptomatic adult bees, sugar and sugar patty samples. However, some bee samples, were contaminated with imidacloprid in concentrations between 14 ng/g and 39 ng/g tissue. We present: the infection of Greek honey bees by multiple viruses; the presence of N. ceranae in Greek honey bees and the first record of imidacloprid (neonicotonoid) residues in Greek honey bee tissues. The presence of multiple pathogens and pesticides made it difficult to associate a single specific cause to the depopulation phenomena observed in Greece, although we believe that viruses and N. ceranae synergistically played the most important role. A follow up in-depth survey across all Greek regions is required to provide context to these preliminary findings. 相似文献
6.
1. Information about the density of wild honey bee (Apis spp.) colonies in an ecosystem is central to understanding the functional role of honey bees in that ecosystem, necessary for effective biosecurity response planning, and useful for determining whether pollination services are adequate. However, direct visual surveys of colony locations are not practical at ecosystem scales. Thus, indirect methods based on population genetic analysis of trapped males have been proposed and implemented. 2. In this review, indirect methods of assessment of honey bee colony densities are described, which can be applied at ecosystem scales. The review also describes how to trap males in the field using the Williams drone trap (or virgin queens) the appropriate genetic markers and statistical analyses, and discusses issues surrounding sample size. 3. The review also discusses some outstanding issues concerning the methods and the conversion of estimated colony number to colony density per km2. The appropriate conversion factor will require further research to determine the area over which a drone trap draws drones. 相似文献
7.
Michael J. Jenkins James Sneyd Scott Camazine J. D. Murray 《Journal of mathematical biology》1992,30(3):281-306
We present a simplified version of a previously presented model (Camazine et al. (1990)) that generates the characteristic
pattern of honey, pollen and brood which develops on combs in honey bee colonies. We demonstrate that the formation of a band
of pollen surrounding the brood area is dependent on the assumed form of the honey and pollen removal terms, and that a significant
pollen band arises as the parameter controlling the rate of pollen input passes through a bifurcation value. The persistence
of the pollen band after a temporary increase in pollen input can be predicted from the model. We also determine conditions
on the parameters which ensure the accumulation of honey in the periphery and demonstrate that, although there is an important
qualitative difference between the simplified and complete models, an analysis of the simplified version helps us understand
many biological aspects of the more complex complete model.
Corresponding author 相似文献
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Comparisons were made between the infestation levels of the honey bee tracheal miteAcarapis woodi (Rennie) in newly emerged honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) exposed for 12 h during the daytime or nighttime in mite-infested bee colonies. Bees exposed during the night harbored a significantly higher number of mites (718) when compared with the daytime bees (88 mites) (n=14 day/night cycles utilizing 33 colonies). On 4 days of an 8-day study, three test colonies were closed during the daytime to eliminate foraging flights. Thus equal numbers of bees were present in the colonies during the day and night sample periods. These 4 flightless days were compared to 4 free-flight days and mite dispersal rates were not significantly different. Additionally, the movement of bees on the combs of four glass-walled observation hives was quantified on 10 days at 0800, 1200, 1600, 2000, 2400 and 0400 h. Bee movement at 2400 and 0400 h was significantly lower than the other observation times. Movement of host bees may be one factor involved in the increased nighttime mite dispersals. These findings do not support the hypothesis that the absence of foraging bees during the day reduces the bee to bee contact time, thus reducing mite dispersals between host bees. Differential diurnal activity levels between host bees and mite parasites was demonstrated. The exact role of host-bee behavior and/or mite behavior in the nighttime dispersal patterns observed, remains for further investigation. 相似文献
13.
The hypothesis that parasites and pathogens select for polyandry in eusocial Hymenoptera was tested, using the honey bee Apis mellifera and its microsporidian parasite Nosema apis. Five honey bee colonies with low and five with high worker genetic diversity were infected with N. apis spores. At 54-56 days after inoculation, parasite spores in the workers' midguts were counted to determine whether there was a greater variation of infection intensity (spore counts per worker) in high-diversity colonies than in low-diversity ones. In all colonies there were two discrete sets of workers, with few or many parasite spores. To compare the variations of infection intensity between two colony groups, coefficients of variation were calculated for all workers examined, and for the slightly infected and strongly infected workers. The percentages of slightly infected workers in the low- and high-diversity groups were also compared. None of the comparisons between low- and high-diversity colonies showed significant differences, therefore no relation was found between honey bee workers' genetic diversity and their infection with N. apis. 相似文献
14.
We examined the dynamics of the queen replacement process in African and European colonies that did and did not produce afterswarms.
In colonies without afterswarms, the queen replacement process was completed in 24–48 hours, the first-emerging virgin queen
(VQ) typically inherited the natal nest even if multiple queens emerged, workers performed few vibration signals on emerged
queens, and all signaling activity was directed toward early emerging VQs. In contrast, if colonies did produce afterswarms,
the queen replacement process required 5–6 days, there was no advantage for first-emerging queens, vibration rates on emerged
queens were 25 times greater, and signaling activity was directed toward all VQs. Although vibration signal activity was more
pronounced in colonies with afterswarms, the signal was consistently associated with increased VQ survival under all conditions.
These trends were exhibited similarly in the African and European colonies, suggesting that they have broad applicability
to queen-replacement decisions over a range of environmental and racial conditions. However, the African and European colonies
differed in the total number of queens involved in the elimination process and the relative importance of queen duels and
pre-emergence destruction under the different reproductive strategies. Taken together, our results suggest that worker behavior
is a major determinant for the outcome of queen replacement, either through reduced interactions that allow first-emerged
queens to rapidly eliminate rivals, or through increased use of interactions such as the vibration signal, which may allow
workers to influence the ultimate fate of each emerged VQ. We discuss the possibility that these behavior patterns may reflect
the roles of cooperation and conflict in shaping honey bee reproductive decisions.
Received 8 May 2007; revised 7 November 2007; accepted 20 November 2007. 相似文献
15.
Honey bee queens (Apis mellifera) who mate with multiple males produce colonies that are filled with numerous genetically distinct patrilines of workers.
A genetically diverse colony benefits from an enhanced foraging effort, fuelled in part by an increase in the number of recruitment
signals that are produced by foragers. However, the influence of patriline diversity on the attention paid to these signals
by audiences of potentially receptive workers remains unexplored. To determine whether recruitment dances performed by foragers
in multiple-patriline colonies attract a greater number of dance followers than dances in colonies that lack patriline diversity,
we trained workers from multiple- and single-patriline colonies to forage in a greenhouse and monitored their dance-following
activity back in the hives. On average, more workers followed a dance if it was performed in a multiple-patriline colony rather
than a single-patriline colony (33% increase), and for a greater number of dance circuits per follower. Furthermore, dance-following
workers in multiple-patriline colonies were more likely to exit their hive after following a dance, although this did not
translate to a difference in colony-level exit rates between treatment types. Recruiting nest mates to profitable food sources
through dance communication is critical to a colony’s foraging success and long-term fitness; polyandrous queens produce colonies
that benefit not only from increased recruitment signalling, but also from the generation of larger and more attentive audiences
of signal receivers. This study highlights the importance of integrating responses of both signal senders and receivers to
understand more fully the success of animal-communication systems. 相似文献
16.
17.
18.
van Dooremalen C Gerritsen L Cornelissen B van der Steen JJ van Langevelde F Blacquière T 《PloS one》2012,7(4):e36285
Background
Recent elevated winter loss of honey bee colonies is a major concern. The presence of the mite Varroa destructor in colonies places an important pressure on bee health. V. destructor shortens the lifespan of individual bees, while long lifespan during winter is a primary requirement to survive until the next spring. We investigated in two subsequent years the effects of different levels of V. destructor infestation during the transition from short-lived summer bees to long-lived winter bees on the lifespan of individual bees and the survival of bee colonies during winter. Colonies treated earlier in the season to reduce V. destructor infestation during the development of winter bees were expected to have longer bee lifespan and higher colony survival after winter.Methodology/Principal Findings
Mite infestation was reduced using acaricide treatments during different months (July, August, September, or not treated). We found that the number of capped brood cells decreased drastically between August and November, while at the same time, the lifespan of the bees (marked cohorts) increased indicating the transition to winter bees. Low V. destructor infestation levels before and during the transition to winter bees resulted in an increase in lifespan of bees and higher colony survival compared to colonies that were not treated and that had higher infestation levels. A variety of stress-related factors could have contributed to the variation in longevity and winter survival that we found between years.Conclusions/Significance
This study contributes to theory about the multiple causes for the recent elevated colony losses in honey bees. Our study shows the correlation between long lifespan of winter bees and colony loss in spring. Moreover, we show that colonies treated earlier in the season had reduced V. destructor infestation during the development of winter bees resulting in longer bee lifespan and higher colony survival after winter. 相似文献19.
Summary Special features facilitate the admission of new members, such as neonates, to otherwise closed animal societies. In eusocial insects, such as honeybees and paper wasps, young adults acquire a colony recognition phenotype from other colony members or nesting materials. Older adults must exempt them from expulsion during the acquisition period. Newly emerged adult honeybees gain tolerance in their colony before their acquisition of the colony recognition phenotype by presenting a blank slate, absent recognition cues. This makes them generically acceptable in honey bee colonies. This strategy is analogous to the easily recognizable phenotypes associated with juvenility in birds and mammals.Received 25 September 2002; revised 20 June 2003; accepted 2 July 2003. 相似文献
20.
Benjamin H. Conlon Chedly Kastally Marina Kardell John Kefuss Robin F. A. Moritz Jarkko Routtu 《Ecology and evolution》2020,10(14):7806-7811
Parasitism is expected to select for counter‐adaptations in the host: driving a coevolutionary arms race. However, human interference between honey bees (Apis mellifera) and Varroa mites removes the effect of natural selection and restricts the evolution of host counter‐adaptations. With full‐sibling mating common among Varroa, this can rapidly select for virulent, highly inbred, Varroa populations. We investigated how the evolution of host resistance could affect the infesting population of Varroa mites. We screened a Varroa‐resistant honey bee population near Toulouse, France, for a Varroa resistance trait: the inhibition of Varroa's reproduction in drone pupae. We then genotyped Varroa which had co‐infested a cell using microsatellites. Across all resistant honey bee colonies, Varroa's reproductive success was significantly higher in co‐infested cells but the distribution of Varroa between singly and multiply infested cells was not different from random. While there was a trend for increased reproductive success when Varroa of differing haplotypes co‐infested a cell, this was not significant. This suggests local mate competition, through the presence of another Varroa foundress in a pupal cell, may be enough to help Varroa overcome host resistance traits; with a critical mass of infesting Varroa overwhelming host resistance. However, the fitness trade‐offs associated with preferentially co‐infesting cells may be too high for Varroa to evolve a mechanism to identify already‐infested cells. The increased reproductive success of Varroa when co‐infesting resistant pupal cells may act as a release valve on the selective pressure for the evolution of counter resistance traits: helping to maintain a stable host–parasite relationship. 相似文献