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Journal ArticleDOI

Ethology of hygienic behaviour in the honey bee Apis mellifera L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae): behavioural repertoire of hygienic bees.

H. S. Arathi, +2 more
- 01 Apr 2000 - 
- Vol. 106, Iss: 4, pp 365-379
TLDR
There is no evidence of task partitioning among bees performing the hygienic behaviour, and the results suggest that the segregation observed could, however, be based on their response thresholds to the stimulus and/or on their ability to discriminate the various cues emanating from the dead brood.
Abstract
Hygienic behaviour performed by middle-aged worker bees is an important intranidal task in colonies of the honey bee Apis mellifera (L.). It comprises detecting diseased brood in the larval and pupal stages and removing all such infected brood, thereby decreasing the incidence of infection. Hygienic behaviour consists of two task-components: uncapping cells and removing the cell contents. The aim of this study was to observe bees performing hygienic behaviour to determine their age at performance of the behaviour and to describe their behavioural repertoire. The bees performing hygienic behaviour were middle-aged bees, younger than foragers. In the colonies where the behaviours of individual bees were observed, all bees performing the hygienic behaviour were seen to exhibit both the components, though at different frequencies. One behavioural class performed the task of uncapping cells at higher frequencies than the task of removing cell contents, while another class performed both tasks to the same extent. While these two classes had higher frequencies of the tasks comprising the hygienic behaviour but lower frequencies of other common behaviours in their repertoire, a third class of bees included those that performed all behaviours in their repertoire at similar frequencies. There was no difference in the ages of the bees in these three behavioural classes. These results suggest that there is no evidence of task partitioning among bees performing the hygienic behaviour. The segregation observed could, however, be based on their response thresholds to the stimulus and/or on their ability to discriminate the various cues emanating from the dead brood.

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Citations
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Genetic, individual, and group facilitation of disease resistance in insect societies.

TL;DR: A significant component of this review focuses on Apis mellifera and its role as a model system for studies on social immunity and the models that have been applied to disease transmission in social insects.
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Socialized medicine: individual and communal disease barriers in honey bees.

TL;DR: This review briefly introduces the many pathogens and parasites afflicting honey bees, highlighting the biology of specific taxonomic groups mainly as they relate to virulence and possible defenses.
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Behavioural syndromes and social insects: personality at multiple levels

TL;DR: The goal of this review is to illustrate the ways in which both the study of social insects and of behavioural syndromes has overlapped, and to highlight ways inWhich both fields can move forward through the synergy of knowledge from each.
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The dynamics of virus epidemics in Varroa -infested honey bee colonies

TL;DR: Using a mathematical model parameterized by recently collected data on bee viruses, the relationship between the mite load in a colony and the possibility of a virus epidemic occurring within a bee colony is investigated and the evolutionary aspects of the new route of virus transmission are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hygienic behavior in the honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) and the modulatory role of octopamine.

TL;DR: Two lines of evidence are provided that OA has the potential to facilitate the detection and response of honey bees to diseased brood and its ability to bias the nervous system to express one form of behavior over another.
References
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Book

The wisdom of the hive: the social physiology of honey bee colonies

TL;DR: The Honey Bee Colony as a Unit of Function and how a Forager Determines the Profitability of a Nectar Source Summary and How a Colony Acts on Information about Food Sources are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response threshold reinforcements and division of labour in insect societies

TL;DR: In this article, a model of division of labour in insect societies, based on variable response thresholds, is introduced, where response thresholds refer to the likelihood of reacting to task-associated stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavior genetics of nest gleaning in honey bees. iv. responses of f1 and backcross generations to disease-killed brood

TL;DR: Honey-bee colonies are much more than aggregations, flocks, or herds, for the individuals within one are so dependent upon one another that no individual, nor even a group of a few hundred individuals, can survive and perpetuate the species in nature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behaviour genetics of nest cleaning in honey bees. I. Responses of four inbred lines to disease-killed brood ☆

TL;DR: Eleven colonies of honey bees representing four inbred lines were tested to learn their behaviour toward American foulbrood-killed larvae and pupae in their broodnests, and a striking difference in behaviour toward brood dead of American foul brokers was demonstrated.
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