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Queen substances from the abdomen of the honey bee queen
Authors:H H W Velthuis
Institution:(1) Laboratory of Comparative Physiology, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands
Abstract:Summary The secretion of the mandibular glands of a honey bee queen enables the worker bees to react to the presence of their queen. Extirpating the mandibular glands of the queen does not prevent that she is accepted by her colony. Hitherto this was attributed to contamination of the queen's body by mandibular gland substances during or preceding the extirpation. When, however, these glands are extirpated before they have secreted any material and the queens are inseminated artificially, the colonies still accept these queens. A normal-sized retinue, the absence of emergency cell building and the absence of activation of the worker's ovaries indicate that such a queen is still able to maintain her social position. This supports Verheijen-Voogd's (1959) conclusion that the queen's influence on her workers has a behavioural basis (chemoreception) rather than a biochemical one.Laboratory experiments reveal that apart from the mandibular gland substances other queen pheromones are produced in glands on the abdomen, most probably in the glands described by Renner and Baumann (1964).
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