3 research outputs found

    The organizational impact of chronic heat: diffuse brood comb and decreased carbohydrate stores in honey bee colonies

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    Insect pollinators are vital to the stability of a broad range of both natural and anthropogenic ecosystems and add billions of dollars to the economy each year. Honey bees are perhaps the best studied insect pollinator due to their economic and cultural importance. Of particular interest to researchers are the wide variety of mechanisms honey bees use for thermoregulation, such as fanning cool air currents around the hive and careful selection of insulated nest sites. These behaviors help honey bees remain active through both winter freezes and summer heatwaves, and may allow honey bees to deal with the ongoing climate crisis more readily than other insect species. Surprisingly, little is known about how honey bee colonies manage chronic heat stress. Here we provide a review of honey bee conservation behavior as it pertains to thermoregulation, and then present a novel behavior displayed in honey bees—the alteration of comb arrangement in response to 6 weeks of increased hive temperature. We found that while overall quantities of brood remained stable between treatments, brood were distributed more diffusely throughout heated hives. We also found that heated hives contained significantly less honey and nectar stores than control hives, likely indicating an increase in energy expenditure. Our results support previous findings that temperature gradients play a role in how honey bees arrange their comb contents, and improves our understanding of how honey bees modify their behavior to survive extreme environmental challenges

    A Symbiotic Qualia: Studio Art, Bachelor of Fine Arts 2017–18 \ Western Gallery Exhibition

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    A Symbiotic Qualia is the fourth annual Studio Art, BFA catalogue. “Qualia” is the moment when one becomes aware of the subjectivity of an experience. Although each of our works represent individual experiences, we have formed a symbiotic network through concurrent artistic expression.https://cedar.wwu.edu/bfa_catalogs/1002/thumbnail.jp

    Lux : A Decade of Artists' Film and Video

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    “Lux” gathers together a variety of essays, commentaries, interviews, scripts and artists’ projects representative of a decade of artists’ film and video. As the editors note, the book is intended to be a print analogue to the screening activities of Toronto’s Pleasure Dome, and to blur the distinction between the artist’s and the critic’s practice. Includes a chronology of Pleasure Dome’s film and video events from their inception in 1989 to 1999. Notes on contributors. Circa 95 bibl. ref
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