52 research outputs found
Columbus Surpassed: Biophysical Aspects of How Stingless Bees Place an Egg Upright on Their Liquid Food
The highly eusocial stingless bees (reviewed
in [1, 2]) constitute a phylogenetically
old group [3] within the
Apidae. Probably related to this ancient
origin is their mass provisioning
of brood cells: they deposit all the
food on which the larva will develop
into the brood cell, prior to oviposition
and subsequent closure of the
cell.
The other social members of the Apidae,
the honeybees and the bumblebees,
regularly visit the larvae in their
cells to administer small amounts of
liquid food at a time. This system is
called progressive provisioning. Mass
provisioning is practiced by almost all
the other bees. However, while most
of them have a solid type of larval
food, the stingless bees produce a liquid
food. In relation to this, their cylindrical
brood cells are constructed
vertically and are often arranged in
horizontal combs. The food, regurgitated
from the stomach, consists of a
mixture of pollen, nectar, and glandular
secretions [1, 2, 4]. After the workers
have put this liquid food into the
cell, the queen oviposits. Her egg,
with its elongated shape, stands
upright on the fluid
Task allocation and reproductive skew in social mass provisioning carpenter bees in relation to age and size
The mass provisioning carpenter bees comprise two tribes,
the Xylocopini and the Ceratinini. Although social nesting
occurs in both tribes, no morphological castes have evolved
and females are totipotent, which makes the tribe as a whole
highly suitable to test predictions of reproductive skew
models. We review current information for the two tribes
with respect to reproductive competition and reproductive
skew and then investigate whether the observed skew fits
with predictions from optimal skew theory. Social nests of
Xylocopa species include a non-foraging guard and a foraging
egg layer who completely dominates reproduction.
Reproductive dominance is settled by aggression, and the
probability of winning this fight is influenced by both age
and size. In Ceratina species, task allocation is also very
clear: one female guards the nest, while the other female(s)
forage(s). Although the guard is usually the first to produce
an egg, her eggs are frequently replaced by those of the forager,
and skew is incomplete.
Using comparisons between species and genera the
impact of ecological constraints on solitary nesting, relative
group productivity and relatedness on reproductive partitioning
between dominants and subordinates are investigated in
a qualitative way. In support of the optimal skew model,
strong constraints on solitary nesting coincided with strong
skew. However, the predicted effects of relatedness and group
productivity on skew were not found. Furthermore, no support
was found for the predictions of the optimal skew model
that high skew coincides with frequent aggressive testing and
risky task performance by subordinates
High Humidity in the Honey Bee (Apis mellifera L.) Brood Nest Limits Reproduction of the Parasitic Mite Varroa jacobsoni Oud.
Factors influencing reproduction of
the parasitic mite Varroa jacobsoni
have become a central theme of honey
bee pathology. In large parts of the
world the mite has made it impossible
for colonies of the honey bee Apis
mellifera to survive if no measures of
treatment are applied [1]. Originally a
parasite of the Eastern honey bee A.
cerana, the mite was detected in colonies
of A. mellifera only less than 4
decades ago [2]. A. cerana colonies
are not damaged by V. jacobsoni because
several factors prevent the
build-up of a large mite population
[3]. The most important factor is that
in colonies of A. cerana the parasite,
which can reproduce only in capped
brood cells, reproduces exclusively in
drone brood cells while in colonies of
A. mellifera it reproduces in worker
brood cells as well [4]. In cold, temperate,
and Mediterranean climates
the mite population grows exponentially
until the colony collapses, due
mainly to a high percentage of bees
damaged by V. jacobsoni during their
pupal development [5]
De Apisticus-Dag en sojameel
5 februari jl. vond voor de 14de keer de Apisticus-Tag in het slot van Munster plaats. In het artikel een weergave van de voordrachten over het kweken van vitale bijen, sojameel als stuifmeel vervanger en de bijenweid
A case of multiple mating in stingless bees (Meliponinae)
In several stingless bee species many males aggregate in the vicinity of a nest when a virgin queen
is present in the colony and is preparing for the nuptial flight. We report such male assemblage for
Tetragonisca angustula. The departure of a virgin queen from the colony and the subsequent
mating could be video-recorded, because the queen and the males that had mounted her fell to the
ground. Since at least two males had lost their genitalia, multiple mating seems to have occurred.
This is in contrast with the prevailing view found in literature concerning the mating biology of
stingless bees
Feeding frequency and caste differentiation in Bombus terrestris larvae
The frequency with which bumble bee larvae are
fed during their development was studied using video-recordings.
The behaviour of the workers while feeding worker,
male and queen larvae of Bombus terrestris was recorded. At
the beginning of development, female larvae of both castes
were fed at a similar frequency. However, during their last
phase queen larvae were fed much more often than worker
larvae. Despite the differences in frequency, both queen and
worker larval feeding followed a similar pattern. Male larvae
were fed more often than worker larvae, but less often than
queen larvae. They also differed from the female larvae in the
way their feeding frequency increased during development.
This suggests that the process of feeding male larvae occurs
in a different way.
The time intervals between feedings were very variable
for all larvae: from a few seconds up to 3 h. Although there
was a general tendency for the intervals to decrease in duration
with larval development, the irregularity was always
present.
The differences in feeding frequency found at the individual
level for larvae of the same age and the irregularity of
the feeding process can be explained by the variation in the
amount of food per feeding.
Finally, our data suggest that larvae play an active role in
the regulation of the feeding process. This subject is discussed
and compared to the situation in honey bees
Simultaneous queen raising and egg laying by workers in Africanized honeybee colonies (Apis mellifera L) in Costa Rica.
Twenty small queenless colonies of mixed European-Africanized origin were set up to study the development of emergency queen cells, ovarian activation and egg laying by workers. In 2 of the colonies, laying workers were present in large numbers before the queens matured from the emergency queen cells. A low number of worker-laid eggs was found in 7 colonies. In the other colonies, the level of ovarian activation of the workers at the end of the queenless period was very variable. We conclude that the occurrence of egg-laying workers in colonies that still contain young brood is not a rare phenomenon in Africanized bees. No worker-laid eggs were found in any of the colonies once a queen had emerged. There was no correlation between the level of ovarian activation (ie the size of the eggs inside the ovaries) and either the number of queen cells raised or the number of empty queen cups constructed. The average number of ovarioles per worker per colony varied between 3.79 and 8.33 per ovary. Since there was no correlation between the number of ovarioles and the level of ovarian activation (either within or between colonies), we conclude that these are independent traits in a mixed population
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