Regulation of Ovary Activation in Worker Honey-Bees (Apis mellifera): Larval Signal Production and Adult Response Thresholds Differ between Anarchistic and Wild-Type Bees

One-day-old anarchistic (selected for successful worker reproduction) and wild-type honey-bee workers were introduced into queenright colonies of honeybees of two treatments. In treatment 1, all eggs and larvae were offspring of queens from an anarchistic line. In treatment 2, all eggs and larvae we...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral ecology and sociobiology 2001-09, Vol.50 (4), p.366-370
Hauptverfasser: Oldroyd, B. P., T. C. Wossler, Ratnieks, F. L. W.
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container_title Behavioral ecology and sociobiology
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creator Oldroyd, B. P.
T. C. Wossler
Ratnieks, F. L. W.
description One-day-old anarchistic (selected for successful worker reproduction) and wild-type honey-bee workers were introduced into queenright colonies of honeybees of two treatments. In treatment 1, all eggs and larvae were offspring of queens from an anarchistic line. In treatment 2, all eggs and larvae were offspring of wild-type queens. In both treatments, adult workers were wild type. This experimental arrangement was used to test the importance of larval genotype on ovary activation in young adult workers. After 12 days, the introduced bees were dissected to determine the frequency of ovary activation. In those colonies provided with wild-type brood, 0% of introduced wild-type bees and 16% of anarchistic bees had activated ovaries. In those colonies provided with anarchistic brood, 13% of introduced wild-type bees and 41% of anarchistic bees had activated ovaries. These results strongly support the hypothesis that selection for high levels of worker reproduction in anarchistic stocks has reduced the amount or composition of brood pheromones produced by larvae that normally signal workers to refrain from reproduction. They also suggest that anarchistic workers have a higher threshold for these signals than wild-type bees.
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subjects Anarchism
Animal ethology
Apidae
Apis mellifera
Biological and medical sciences
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Honey bee colonies
Insect brood
Insect colonies
Insect larvae
Insect reproduction
Ovaries
Protozoa. Invertebrata
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Queen honey bees
Social insects
Worker insects
title Regulation of Ovary Activation in Worker Honey-Bees (Apis mellifera): Larval Signal Production and Adult Response Thresholds Differ between Anarchistic and Wild-Type Bees
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