首页> 外文期刊>Insectes Sociaux: Bulletin de l'Union Internationale pour l'Etude des Insectes Sociaux >The influence of worker behavior and paternity on the development and emergence of honey bee queens
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The influence of worker behavior and paternity on the development and emergence of honey bee queens

机译:工人的行为和父子关系对蜂皇后发育和出现的影响

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The interactions of worker honey bees with queens cells could influence the outcome of the queen replacement process, and could potentially contribute to the spread of the African honey bee in the New World if workers exhibit racial preferences during queen rearing. We examined worker-queen cell interactions in hybrid colonies that contained African and European patrilines. Worker interactions were associated with a queen's emergence success (e.g. the probability that she would develop to emergence). Compared to queen cells that were destroyed, those that emerged were initiated sooner during the rearing process, were started from younger brood, were visited and incubated at higher rates, and received more vibration signals from workers. In contrast, the worker interactions examined did not influence emergence order (e. g. the sequence that queens emerged relative to one another). African- and European-paternity queens experienced similar emergence success, and did not differ in the rates at which workers visited, incubated or vibrated their cells. African-patriline workers were more likely to engage in queen rearing than their European-paternity nestmates. Workers of both patrilines exhibited super-sister preferences when visiting queen larvae, but showed variable or no kin discrimination during incubation and vibration signal activity. Thus, honey bee workers may use a variety of mechanisms to influence queen development. However, they do not exhibit marked racial or kinship preferences when interacting with queen cells, suggesting that the queen rearing process has not contributed strongly to the spread of the African bee in the Western Hemisphere.
机译:工蜂与皇后细胞的相互作用可能影响皇后替换过程的结果,并且如果工蜂在饲养皇后期间表现出种族偏爱,可能会促进非洲蜜蜂在新世界的传播。我们在包含非洲和欧洲父系的杂交殖民地中研究了工蜂细胞相互作用。工人们的互动与女王的出头成功相关(例如,女王成长为出头的概率)。与被破坏的蚁后细胞相比,出现的那些在饲养过程中更快地启动,从年轻的雏鸟开始,以更高的速率被访问和孵化,并从工人那里收到更多的振动信号。相反,所检查的工人交互作用不影响出现顺序(例如,皇后相对于彼此出现的顺序)。非洲和欧洲亲子皇后也经历了类似的出苗成功,并且工人探视,孵化或振动细胞的频率没有差异。非洲的父系工人比欧洲父系的同窝人更可能从事皇后饲养。两个父系的工人在拜访皇后幼虫时都表现出超级姐妹的偏好,但是在孵化和振动信号活动过程中却表现出可变的或没有亲属歧视。因此,蜜蜂工可能会使用各种机制来影响女王的发育。但是,它们在与女王细胞互动时并没有表现出明显的种族或血统偏好,这表明女王的饲养过程并未对非洲蜜蜂在西半球的传播做出重大贡献。

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