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The African(ized)
Queen: New Twist Found To Hive Drama
Africanized honey bees have an unexpected advantage in the battle
to keep beekeepers from replacing highly defensive Africanized
queens with gentle, easily managed European ones.Within only
one week after their queen dies or is removed by beekeepers,
Africanized worker bees--which are female--are capable of activating
their ovaries to produce viable female eggs for re-queening the
hive. That's according to preliminary findings by Gloria DeGrandi-Hoffman
of the ARS Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, Tucson, Ariz., and
Stanley S. Schneider of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
European worker bees' ovaries can't start producing eggs until
the queen has been missing for at least three weeks. And, egg-laying
worker bees that are queenless typically produce male offspring.
In contrast, the Africanized workers' faster, one-week response
to queenlessness, and ability to produce a queen from their own
female eggs, could explain why many beekeepers' efforts to re-queen
an Africanized hive with a docile European queen haven't succeeded.
Queens introduced into colonies that have egg-laying workers
will be attacked and killed. Scientists already knew that some
kinds of African honey bees, such as the Cape bee of South Africa,
can lay viable female eggs within one week of becoming queenless,
and nurture them to become their queen. But the ARS and University
researchers are apparently the first to observe this phenomenon
in Africanized worker bees in the northern hemisphere. Migrating
from Brazil, Africanized bees are today found in Arizona, California,
Texas, New Mexico and Nevada. The scientists are developing new
tactics to foil the Africanized workers' ability to make their
own Africanized queen. DeGrandi-Hoffman reported the findings
at the Second International Conference on Africanized Honey Bees
and Bee Mites, held recently in Tucson. ARS, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture's chief research wing, was co-sponsor.
Kim Flottum
Editor, Bee Culture Magazine
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