نتایج جستجو برای: bee forage

تعداد نتایج: 25706  

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2012
Sarah E J Arnold Lars Chittka

Patchy illumination presents foraging animals with a challenge, as the targets being sought may appear to vary in colour depending on the illumination, compromising target identification. We sought to explore how the bumblebee Bombus terrestris copes with tasks involving flower colour discrimination under patchy illumination. Light patches varied between unobscured daylight and leaf-shade, as a...

2002
TANYA PANKIW WILLIAM L. RUBINK

We examined the pollen foraging responses of Africanized and European honey bee colonies to hexane extractable compounds of Africanized and European larvae (brood pheromone). Brood pheromone was presented to broodless Africanized and European colonies equalized for numbers of bees, food stores and, empty comb space. The pheromone signiÞcantly increased the ratio of pollen to nonpollen foragers ...

Journal: :Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE 2012
Samir Mujagić Simon Michael Würth Sven Hellbach Volker Dürr

Honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) are eusocial insects and well known for their complex division of labor and associative learning capability(1, 2). The worker bees spend the first half of their life inside the dark hive, where they are nursing the larvae or building the regular hexagonal combs for food (e.g. pollen or nectar) and brood(3). The antennae are extraordinary multisensory feelers and p...

Journal: :Journal of insect physiology 2008
Noah Wilson-Rich Stephanie T Dres Philip T Starks

Honey bees (Apis mellifera) are of vital economic and ecological importance. These eusocial animals display temporal polyethism, which is an age-driven division of labor. Younger adult bees remain in the hive and tend to developing brood, while older adult bees forage for pollen and nectar to feed the colony. As honey bees mature, the types of pathogens they experience also change. As such, pat...

2016
Fred Heimbach Anja Russ Maren Schimmer Katrin Born

Monitoring studies at the landscape level are complex, expensive and difficult to conduct. Many aspects have to be considered to avoid confounding effects which is probably the reason why they are not regularly performed in the context of risk assessments of plant protection products to pollinating insects. However, if conducted appropriately their contribution is most valuable. In this paper w...

Journal: :Ecotoxicology 2012
Ian Laycock Kate M Lenthall Andrew T Barratt James E Cresswell

Bumble bees are important pollinators whose populations have declined over recent years, raising widespread concern. One conspicuous threat to bumble bees is their unintended exposure to trace residues of systemic neonicotinoid pesticides, such as imidacloprid, which are ingested when bees forage on the nectar and pollen of treated crops. However, the demographic consequences for bumble bees of...

2015
Margaret J. Couvillon Francis L. W. Ratnieks

Here we explore how waggle dance decoding may be applied as a tool for ecology by evaluating the benefits and limitations of the methodology compared to other existing ways to evaluate the honey bees’ use of the landscape. The honey bee foragers sample and “report” back on large areas (c. 100 km2). Because honey bees perform dances only for the most profitable resources, these data provide spat...

Journal: :Zeitschrift fur Naturforschung. C, Journal of biosciences 2000
M Velikova V Bankova M C Marcucci I Tsvetkova A Kujumgiev

Twenty-one propolis samples produced by 12 different Meliponinae species were analyzed by GC-MS. Several chemical types of stingless bees' propolis could be grouped, according to the prevailing type of compounds like: 'gallic acid", "diterpenic" and "triterpenic" types. The results confirm that neither the bee species nor the geographical location determine the chemical composition of Meliponin...

Journal: :Biology letters 2017
D J Pritchard M C Tello Ramos F Muth S D Healy

Hummingbirds feed from hundreds of flowers every day. The properties of these flowers provide these birds with a wealth of information about colour, space and time to guide how they forage. To understand how hummingbirds might use this information, researchers have adapted established laboratory paradigms for use in the field. In recent years, however, experimental inspiration has come less fro...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2008
Rémy S Pasquet Alexis Peltier Matthew B Hufford Emeline Oudin Jonathan Saulnier Lénaic Paul Jette T Knudsen Hans R Herren Paul Gepts

Foraging range, an important component of bee ecology, is of considerable interest for insect-pollinated plants because it determines the potential for outcrossing among individuals. However, long-distance pollen flow is difficult to assess, especially when the plant also relies on self-pollination. Pollen movement can be estimated indirectly through population genetic data, but complementary d...

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