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Lethal fighting between honeybee queens and parasitic workers (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Apis mellifera</Emphasis>)
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Robin?F?A?MoritzEmail author  Jochen?Pflugfelder  Robin?M?Crewe
Institution:(1) Institut für Zoologie, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle/Wittenberg, Kröllwitzer Strasse 44, 06099 Halle/Saale, Germany;(2) Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, 0002 Pretoria, South Africa;(3) Institut für Bienenkunde, Polytechnische Gesellschaft, Wolfgang-Goethe-Universität Frankfurt/Main, Karl-von-Frisch Weg 2, 61440 Oberursel, Germany
Abstract:Pheromonal signals associated with queen and worker policing prevent worker reproduction and have been identified as important factors for establishing harmony in the honeybee (Apis mellifera) colony. However, "anarchic workers", which can evade both mechanisms, have been detected at low frequency in several honeybee populations. Worker bees of the Cape honeybee, Apis mellifera capensis, also show this anarchistic trait but to an extreme degree. They can develop into so called "pseudoqueens", which release a pheromonal bouquet very similar to that of queens. They prime and release very similar reactions in sterile workers to those of true queens (e.g. suppress ovary activation; release retinue behavior). Here we show in an experimental bioassay that lethal fights between these parasitic workers and the queen (similar to queen–queen fights) occur, resulting in the death of either queen or worker. Although it is usually the queen that attacks the parasitic workers and kills many of them, in a few cases the workers succeeded in killing the queen. If this also occurs in a parasitized colony where the queen encounters many parasitic workers, she may eventually be killed in one of the repeated fights she engages in.
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