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Rare royal families in honeybees, Apis mellifera 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Moritz RF Lattorff HM Neumann P Kraus FB Radloff SE Hepburn HR 《Die Naturwissenschaften》2005,92(10):488-491
The queen is the dominant female in the honeybee colony, Apis mellifera, and controls reproduction. Queen larvae are selected by the workers and are fed a special diet (royal jelly), which determines
caste. Because queens mate with many males a large number of subfamilies coexist in the colony. As a consequence, there is
a considerable potential for conflict among the subfamilies over queen rearing. Here we show that honeybee queens are not
reared at random but are preferentially reared from rare “royal” subfamilies, which have extremely low frequencies in the
colony's worker force but a high frequency in the queens reared. 相似文献
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Wild rodents were collected using live snap traps in pistachio gardens of Kerman Province, Southeast Iran from 2007 to 2009, then some physiological parameters of them were measured. The samples were identified as follow: Nesokia indica, Meriones persicus, Meriones lybicus and Tatera indica. Blood samples were obtained from the heart, then the blood parameters (glucose, cholesterol, triglyceride, total protein, HDL, red and white blood cell number) in wild species of rodents and laboratory rat were compared. The results showed that there were no significant differences in serum glucose, triglyceride, HDL and total protein levels among different experimental groups. The concentration of cholesterol in T. indica was more than that in N. indica (P < 0.01). The total numbers of red blood cells also showed significant difference between wild garden rodent species and laboratory rat (P < 0.01), while the numbers of white blood cells showed no significant difference. 相似文献
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Robin?F.?A.?MoritzEmail author H.?Michael?G.?Lattorff Kendall?L.?Crous Randall?H.?Hepburn 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2011,65(4):735-740
Workers of a queenless honeybee colony can requeen the colony by raising a new queen from a young worker brood laid by the
old queen. If this process fails, the colony becomes hopelessly queenless and workers activate their ovaries to lay eggs themselves.
Laying Cape honeybee workers (Apis mellifera capensis) produce female offspring as an additional pathway for requeening. We tested the frequency of successful requeening in ten
hopelessly queenless colonies. DNA genotyping revealed that only 8% of all queens reared in hopelessly queenless colonies
were the offspring of native laying worker offspring. The vast majority of queens resulted from parasitic takeovers by foreign
queens (27%) and invading parasitic workers (19%). This shows that hopelessly queenless colonies typically die due to parasitic
takeovers and that the parasitic laying workers are an important life history strategy more frequently used than in providing
a native queen to rescue the colony. Parasitism by foreign queens, which might enter colonies alone or accompanied by only
a small worker force is much more frequent than previously considered and constitutes an additional life history strategy
in Cape honeybees. 相似文献
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Summary. We describe the use of pieces of silicone tubing
to analyse the mandibular gland components of queen and
worker honeybees and show that these compounds can be
efficiently trapped on bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide
(BSTFA) treated pieces of tubing. The use of this technique
rather than that of solid phase microextraction (SPME) techniques
with commercially available fibres that have been
shown to be efficient at sampling secretions from the cuticle
of insects, is necessitated by a requirement for collection of
large sample numbers in a short space of time or for
sampling in the field. The technique may be generalised for
use with semiochemicals of low volatility in other insect
communciation systems. 相似文献
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