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Alain Strambi

Researcher at Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Publications -  57
Citations -  2931

Alain Strambi is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mushroom bodies & Acheta. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 57 publications receiving 2825 citations. Previous affiliations of Alain Strambi include University of California, Davis & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Hormonal and Genetic Control of Behavioral Integration in Honey Bee Colonies

TL;DR: Measurements of juvenile hormone titers and allozyme analyses of worker honey bees suggest that two processes are involved in colony-level regulation of division of labor and support the emerging view that colony genetic structure affects behavioral organization.
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Caste and metamorphosis: hemolymph titers of juvenile hormone and ecdysteroids in last instar honeybee larvae.

TL;DR: Data show a caste-specific peak in queen larvae of the early fifth instar of the honeybee, and a second peak appears in prepupae of both castes which probably is responsible for the regulation of the pupal moult.
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Hormonal regulation of behavioural development in the honey bee is based on changes in the rate of juvenile hormone biosynthesis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that differences in juvenile hormone titres among bees performing different age-dependent tasks are a consequence of changes in rates of hormone synthesis by the corpora allata, and that the radiochemical assay will be useful in further studies of hormonal regulation of bee behaviour.
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Neurogenesis in an adult insect brain and its hormonal control

TL;DR: Undifferentiated cells are reported, located dorsally in mushroom bodies of the house cricket Acheta domesticus, that persist, divide and give rise to cortical interneurons during adult life and juvenile hormone, which induces oviposition behaviour in adult crickets, acts on neurogenesis in this cell cluster.
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Comparison of juvenile hormone and ecdysteroid haemolymph titres in adult worker and queen honey bees (Apis mellifera)

TL;DR: Comparison of juvenile hormone and edcysteroid titres suggests that ecdysteroids are not involved in the regulation of age polyethism but may play a role in theregulation of reproduction in honey bees.