نتایج جستجو برای: bee forage

تعداد نتایج: 25706  

2017
Kevin C. Matteson Gail A. Langellotto

A variety of crops are grown in New York City community gardens. Although the production of many crops benefits from pollination by bees, little is known about bee abundance in urban community gardens or which crops are specifically dependent on bee pollination. In 2005, we compiled a list of crop plants grown within 19 community gardens in New York City and classified these plants according to...

Journal: :Agronomy for Sustainable Development 2021

Abstract The honey bee is an important fruit and vegetable pollinator a producer of other hive products. Beekeeping sustainable high-potential activity for local communities especially the rural poor to gain additional income through non-timber forest products, does not require much land or high starting costs, maintains biodiversity increases crop yields. Ethiopia one top ten beeswax producers...

Journal: :medical journal of islamic republic of iran 0
f sari aslani from the department of pathology, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, i.r. iran. m salehi

argyrophilic staining of nucleolar organizer regions (agnor) has been considered to be useful in the diagnosis and prognostic evaluation of different cutaneous tumors. in order to evaluate the role of the agnor technique in discriminating aggressive from non-aggressive basal cell carcinoma (bcc), paraffin-embedded histologic sections from 30 cases of aggressive bcc (bcc2) and 30 cases of non-ag...

2010
Alban Maisonnasse Jean-Christophe Lenoir Dominique Beslay Didier Crauser Yves Le Conte

BACKGROUND In honey bee colony, the brood is able to manipulate and chemically control the workers in order to sustain their own development. A brood ester pheromone produced primarily by old larvae (4 and 5 days old larvae) was first identified as acting as a contact pheromone with specific effects on nurses in the colony. More recently a new volatile brood pheromone has been identified: E-β-o...

2015
Ken Tan Tanya Latty Shihao Dong Xiwen Liu Chao Wang Benjamin P. Oldroyd

Animals may adjust their behavior according to their perception of risk. Here we show that free-flying honey bee (Apis cerana) foragers mitigate the risk of starvation in the field when foraging on a food source that offers variable rewards by carrying more 'fuel' food on their outward journey. We trained foragers to a feeder located 1.2 km from each of four colonies. On average foragers carrie...

Journal: :PLoS Biology 2008
Benjamin P Oldroyd Madeleine Beekman

The "reproductive ground plan" hypothesis (RGPH) proposes that reproductive division of labour in social insects had its antecedents in the ancient gene regulatory networks that evolved to regulate the foraging and reproductive phases of their solitary ancestors. Thus, queens express traits that are characteristic of the reproductive phase of solitary insects, whereas workers express traits cha...

2016
Michael Simone-Finstrom Hongmei Li-Byarlay Ming H. Huang Micheline K. Strand Olav Rueppell David R. Tarpy

Most pollination in large-scale agriculture is dependent on managed colonies of a single species, the honey bee Apis mellifera. More than 1 million hives are transported to California each year just to pollinate the almonds, and bees are trucked across the country for various cropping systems. Concerns have been raised about whether such "migratory management" causes bees undue stress; however ...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2008
Songkun Su Fang Cai Aung Si Shaowu Zhang Jürgen Tautz Shenglu Chen

The honeybee waggle dance, through which foragers advertise the existence and location of a food source to their hive mates, is acknowledged as the only known form of symbolic communication in an invertebrate. However, the suggestion, that different species of honeybee might possess distinct 'dialects' of the waggle dance, remains controversial. Furthermore, it remains unclear whether different...

Journal: :Current Biology 2015
Margaret J. Couvillon Hasan Al Toufailia Thomas M. Butterfield Felix Schrell Francis L.W. Ratnieks Roger Schürch

In pollination, plants provide food reward to pollinators who in turn enhance plant reproduction by transferring pollen, making the relationship largely cooperative; however, because the interests of plants and pollinators do not always align, there exists the potential for conflict, where it may benefit both to cheat the other [1, 2]. Plants may even resort to chemistry: caffeine, a naturally ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید