نتایج جستجو برای: worker bees

تعداد نتایج: 30225  

Journal: :Journal of economic entomology 2015
Gloria Degrandi-Hoffman Yanping Chen Emily Watkins Dejong Mona L Chambers Geoffrey Hidalgo

Sublethal exposure to fungicides can affect honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) in ways that resemble malnutrition. These include reduced brood rearing, queen loss, and increased pathogen levels. We examined the effects of oral exposure to the fungicides boscalid and pyraclostrobin on factors affecting colony nutrition and immune function including pollen consumption, protein digestion, hemolymph pr...

2014
Sally M. Williamson Sarah J. Willis Geraldine A. Wright

Systemic pesticides such as neonicotinoids are commonly used on flowering crops visited by pollinators, and their use has been implicated in the decline of insect pollinator populations in Europe and North America. Several studies show that neonicotinoids affect navigation and learning in bees but few studies have examined whether these substances influence their basic motor function. Here, we ...

Journal: :Ecotoxicology 2014
Hannah Feltham Kirsty Park Dave Goulson

Bumblebees and other pollinators provide a vital ecosystem service for the agricultural sector. Recent studies however have suggested that exposure to systemic neonicotinoid insecticides in flowering crops has sub-lethal effects on the bumblebee workforce, and hence in reducing queen production. The mechanism behind reduced nest performance, however, remains unclear. Here we use Radio Frequency...

2005
Anna L. Birmingham Shelley E. Hoover Mark L. Winston Ron C. Ydenberg

Commercial greenhouses require high densities of managed bumble bee (Bombus occidentalis Greene, 1858 and Bombus impatiens Cresson, 1863) colonies to pollinate crops such as tomatoes (Lycopersicon esculentum Miller). We examined drifting, a behavioural consequence of introducing closely aggregated colonies into greenhouse habitats, to determine possible explanations for observed drifting freque...

2010
K. Tan H. Li M.X. Yang H.R. Hepburn S.E. Radloff

When vespine wasps, Vespa velutina Lepeletier (Hymenoptera: Vespidae), hawk (capture) bees at their nest entrances alerted and poised guards of Apis cerana cerana F. and Apis mellifera ligustica Spinola (Hymenoptera: Apidae) have average thoracic temperatures slightly above 24° C. Many additional worker bees of A. cerana, but not A. mellifera, are recruited to augment the guard bee cohort and b...

Journal: :Journal of neurobiology 2003
Susan E Fahrbach Sarah M Farris Joseph P Sullivan G E Robinson

The behavioral maturation of adult worker honey bees is influenced by a rising titer of juvenile hormone (JH), and is temporally correlated with an increase in the volume of the neuropil of the mushroom bodies, a brain region involved in learning and memory. We explored the stability of this neuropil expansion and its possible dependence on JH. We studied the volume of the mushroom bodies in ad...

Journal: :Neotropical entomology 2010
Camila G dos Santos Betina Blochtein Fernanda L Megiolaro Vera L Imperatriz-Fonseca

Stingless bees collect plant resins and make it into propolis, although they have a wider range of use for this material than do honey bees (Apis spp.). Plebeia spp. workers employ propolis mixed with wax (cerumen) for constructing and sealing nest structures, while they use viscous (sticky) propolis for defense by applying it onto their enemies. Isolated viscous propolis deposits are permanent...

2015
Nadja Steinmann Miguel Corona Peter Neumann Benjamin Dainat Stephen J. Martin

The eusocial honey bee, Apis mellifera, has evolved remarkable abilities to survive extreme seasonal differences in temperature and availability of resources by dividing the worker caste into two groups that differ in physiology and lifespan: summer and winter bees. Most of the recent major losses of managed honey bee colonies occur during the winter, suggesting that winter bees may have compro...

Journal: :Pest management science 2005
Lora A Morandin Mark L Winston Michelle T Franklin Virginia A Abbott

Recent developments of new families of pesticides and growing awareness of the importance of wild pollinators for crop pollination have stimulated interest in potential effects of novel pesticides on wild bees. Yet pesticide toxicity studies on wild bees remain rare, and few studies have included long-term monitoring of bumble bee colonies or testing of foraging ability after pesticide exposure...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2014
Joseph Caspermeyer

There is an exquisite genetic control behind a honeybee’s fate in the hive—from the lowly drone to the almighty queen— which literally represents the bee’s knees for evolutionary scientists exploring how multiple mutations, or alleles, of a single gene called the complementary sex determiner (csd) can have a profound influence on honeybee society. Unlike people, there are no X and Y sex chromos...

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