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G. DeGrandi-Hoffman, E. H.
Erickson Jr., D. Lusby, and E. Lusby
Carl Hayden Bee Research and Biological Control Center - Tucson
- Arizona - USA
Introduction
Thelytoky is a type of parthenogenetic reproduction where unfertilized
eggs develop into females (Suomalainen 1950). Thelytoky is common
in the Cape honeybee (Apis mellifera capensis Escholtz),
but it occurs with considerably lower frequency in European honey
bees (Apis mellifera L.) (Onions 1912; Jack 1917; Anderson
1963; Ruttner 1976). In colonies with queens most worker ovaries
are suppressed by the pheromone 9-oxo-decenoic acid and other
substances produced by the queen (Butler and Fairey 1963), or
by the presence of unsealed brood (Kropacova and Haslbachova
1971). However, ovaries can develop and workers can lay eggs
after the queen and brood are gone (Perepelova 1929; DeGroot
and Voogd 1954; Butler 1957; Butler and Fairey 1963; Jay 1970;
Kropacova and Hasibachova 1970, 1971 ). European workers generally
lay unfertilized haploid eggs that develop into males (drones).
In rare instances, virgin queens and laying workers produce diploid
eggs that develop into females (Mackensen 1943).
Given the high frequency of thelytoky in Cape bees, the relatively
rare occurrence in domestic stocks of European bees is unexpected,
since populations capable of thelytoky have an advantage over
those in which laying worker eggs develop exclusively into drones
(Ruttner 1977). Without thelytoky, the survival of a colony rests
completely on the successful mating of a single queen which must
leave the hive to mate. If this queen does not encounter drones
or does not return to the hive, a replacement cannot be produced
because female larvae of a suitable age for queen rearing no
longer exist, and because the first queen to emerge usually destroys
the other queen cells in the colony. However, if brood from laying
workers could be raised into queens the colony would have a facultative
survival mechanism in case the virgin queen is lost. Thelytoky
should occur with greater frequency in populations exposed to
conditions that reduce the chances of a queen either taking or
returning from a mating flight (Moritz 1984).
A strain of honey bees (hereafter referred to as LUS) has been
established from a breeding program in which virgin queens were
introduced into broodless colonies (i.e., eggs and larvae did
not exist in the colony) from November to March in southern Arizona.
The purpose of the breeding program was to select for bees that
would rear queens and drones at that time of year. Inclement
weather and limited numbers of drones can occur during Arizona
winters and prevent queens from successfully mating. Thus, introducing
virgin queens at this time of year exerts pressure that could
cause the frequency of thelytoky in the population to increase.
The purpose of this study was to test for the existence of thelytoky
in LUS and determine the frequency of this trait. In addition,
observations of worker bees in queenless LUS colonies were made
to compare their behavior with that reported to occur in Cape
bees.
Methods and Materials
Eighteen queenless four or five frame nucleus colonies of LUS
were established using two frames of brood (ranging in age from
eggs to pupae) from queenright LUS colonies and two to three
frames of honey and pollen. The adult bees covering these frames
were included. Different LUS colonies were used to establish
each nucleus colony. As controls, three queenless nucleus colonies
of a panmictic array of commercial bee lines maintained as a
closed population (CP) (Page and Laidlaw 1982; Severson et al.
1986) and six colonies of honey bees carrying the Cordovan (cd)
mutant color marker (Laidlaw and Page 1984) were established
using the procedure described above. Entrances of the queenless
colonies were covered with screen mesh for 24-48 hours after
being established to prevent bees from drifting back to their
parent colonies. All queenless colonies were examined three to
four times weekly while brood from the previous queen was present
so that queen cells from the brood could be destroyed. After
all the previous queens' brood had emerged, the colonies were
examined twice weekly to determine when workers began laying
eggs. When eggs from laying workers first appeared in the colonies
(i.e., when one or more eggs were seen), 10-20 workers were sampled
and dissected to determine the percentage with developed ovaries.
The first appearance of eggs was chosen as a means to standardize
the time when workers would be sampled, since the percentage
of workers with developed ovaries can change over time in queenless
colonies (Anderson 1963). Ovaries were considered to be developed
if developing eggs were visible in the ovarioles. The brood from
laying workers present in either worker or drone cells was sexed
while in the pupal stage by removing the cell's cap, and determining
gender by the morphology of the head capsule. The presence of
queen cells with larvae being actively tended by workers was
noted along with whether the cells had a queen emerge or were
destroyed by the workers.
Observations of bees on the frames were made during colony inspections.
We avoided the use of smoke during these inspections whenever
possible to minimize disruption to the workers on the frames.
Sometimes during an inspection bees were seen biting each other,
or with their abdomens in the cell assuming an egg laying position.
We sampled LUS bees being bitten and dissected them to determine
if they had ovary development. Whether workers assuming the egg
laying position always deposited an egg in the cell also was
determined. To conduct more detailed observations of queenless
LUS colonies, two frame observation hives were established using
one frame of brood and another of pollen and honey along with
the adult bees on the frames. The activity of bees on the frames
was observed twice daily once in the morning and afternoon, for
30-60 mm. intervals. Observations were begun when all the brood
from the previous queen had emerged. The observation hives were
not included among the colonies used to test for thelytoky.
Results
Once all the brood emerged in queenless LUS, CP, or cd colonies,
worker bees were scattered over the frames giving the colony
the distinctive appearance associated with the queenless state.
Upon closer examination of bees from the 4-5 frame nucleus colonies
and in the observation hives sometimes workers were seen grasping
each other with their mandibles. In a LUS observation colony,
workers were seen pulling nestmates out of the cells in which
they had inserted their abdomens. On other occasions, in the
observation hives we saw eggs being eaten by nestmates immediately
after the laying worker removed her abdomen from the cell. In
the observation hives and the nucleus colonies some bees assumed
an egg laying position in a cell, but did not lay an egg. In
nucleus and observation colonies we observed bees remaining stationary
with their wings spread while nestmates bit them on the dorsal
surface of the abdomen and the thoracic area (particularly at
the points where the wings articulate). This behavior occurred
in LUS, CP, and cd colonies and has been previously described
in queenless colonies by Velthuis (1970). LUS from nucleus colonies
that were being bitten by other workers were examined for ovary
development; 26.7% of these bees had developed ovaries (colonies
sampled = 5, total bees examined = 15, SD= 11.4%). We attempted
to sample bees being bitten in CP and cd colonies and examine
them for ovary development, but sample sizes were too small to
obtain meaningful results. Dead bees on the bottom boards of
seven LUS colonies were examined and an average of 1.5% of
the dead bees per colony had developed ovaries (bees examined
= 65, SD = 1.5%). Examination of workers selected at random from
the queenless test colonies indicated that an average of 27.1%
of the LUS workers had developed ovaries when eggs first appeared
in the colony (Table 1). This was a significantly lower percentage
than either CP or cd (60.0% and 44.0% respectively).
| Table
1 |
| Types of progeny
reared from the eggs of laying workers in queenless colonies
of U.S. honey bees. Tucson, Arizona. |
Colony
type |
No.
of
colonies
observed |
%
workers
with
developed
ovaries
+/- sd |
%
colonies
rearing
drones - workers - queens |
No.
of
queen
emerged |
| CP |
3 |
60.0+_24.5a |
100.0 |
00.0 |
00.0 |
0 |
| cd |
6 |
44.0+3.3a |
100.0 |
00.0 |
20.0 |
0 |
| LUS |
18 |
27.1+15.0b |
100.0 |
55.6 |
50.0 |
9 |
| Means followed
by the same letter are not significantly different at the 0.05
level as determined by Duncan's [1951] multiple range test. |
Of the 18 colonies of LUS tested for thelytoky, 55.6% reared
worker brood from the eggs of laying workers, and 50% reared
queens. Queens from the brood of laying workers emerged only
in the 4-5 frame nucleus colonies, and never in the observation
hives. In the nucleus colonies, sometimes a patch of worker brood
was produced and the queen cell was constructed within that patch
(Fig 1.). A queen cell positioned among worker brood is commonly
seen in a colony that is requeening itself in the conventional
manner using brood from the previous queen. However, some queen
cells from thelytokous LUS colonies were located at the very
top of the frame. Neither CP or cd constructed queen cups in
this region. A queen produced from laying worker eggs successfully
mated and produced worker and drone brood. However, eight of
the nine queens produced from workers' brood either did not return
to the hive after a mating flight, or were critically injured
during artificial insemination.
Queenless CP colonies reared only drones, although queen cells
were constructed and eggs from laying workers were placed inside
them. The eggs did not hatch, and often were gone the next day.
Similarly, cd colonies produced only drones from laying worker
eggs, although some colonies reared larvae in queen cells. These
queen cells were larger and longer than those produced by LUS
or commonly seen in colonies rearing queens from a mated queen's
brood. During colony inspections the cd workers were observed
crawling over the capped queen cells just as the LUS bees did
in their colonies. However, within 3-5 days in the cd colonies
the queen cells were torn down by the workers.
Discussion
LUS were selected from commercial European honey bee stock, indicating
that thelytoky may exist as part of the overall Apis mellifera
gene pool. However, reports indicate that in managed colonies
thelytoky is expressed at a very low frequency (Mackensen 1943).
This may be because beekeeping practices inadvertently select
against thelytoky. For example, swarming and supercedure can
be minimized through various management techniques, and thus
the possibility of a colony becoming queenless due to the loss
of a virgin queen can be reduced. If colonies lose their queens
and do not have brood to produce replacements, the queens often
are replaced with new ones by beekeepers. Hence, there is no
selective pressure for thelytoky in colonies managed in this
manner. Conversely, the conditions under which the LUS strain
was derived may have inadvertently selected for thelytoky. Virgin
queens introduced into broodless colonies during the winter may
not have been accepted by the workers in some cases, while in
others the queens may not have mated or were lost on mating flights.
Some of the colonies that survived may have done so because they
requeened themselves with brood from laying workers. The winter
requeening procedure was repeated annually using queens produced
from brood of colonies that survived the previous year's winter
requeening. If thelytoky was at a low frequency in the LUS strain
at the beginning of the breeding program, the frequency possibly
was increased because of continued selection followed by the
production of new queens from brood of the survivors.
Unfortunately, all but one of the queens produced from laying
worker brood were lost before they could begin egg laying. Still,
queens reared from the brood of LUS laying workers apparently
have the potential to mate and produce worker and drone brood.
We stopped finding eggs in the colonies once the queen emerged
and was present in the hive. The colony whose queen successfully
mated, behaved like any other colony with a new queen. After
mating the queen began laying worker brood which was cared for
by the adult workers in the colony. The colonies that reared
queens but lost them did not rear others. The colonies subsequently
dwindled and died or were robbed by workers from other colonies
thus causing the LUS workers to abandon the hive. Colonies composed
of 4-5 frames of workers and brood apparently have only one chance
at rearing a queen from laying worker brood. If the queen is
lost, the workers will not produce another perhaps because the
workers are too old, the colony is too weak, or some combination
of both. Whether a colony that had a larger population at the
time of queen removal would have enough bees of the appropriate
age to rear another queen from laying worker brood if they lost
the first one needs to be tested.
When queenless nucleus colonies were inspected, the use of smoke
was minimized to limit the disruption of the bees. Still, opening
a colony is
disruptive because it changes colony temperature and perhaps
odor and pheromone levels within the hive's environment. We cannot
be sure of the repercussions of opening colonies on the workers'
behaviors we observed on the frames. Observation hives enabled
us to make more detailed behavioral observations of LUS workers
in queenless colonies without having to open the colony. However,
how well the results from the observation hives mirror the behaviors
of bees in the nucleus colonies is not known. Workers in observation
hives reared fewer larvae into adults compared to the nucleus
colonies, and never reared queens. Perhaps the populations were
too small or temperatures could not be properly maintained in
the observation hives for brood rearing to approach the levels
seen in the nucleus colonies.
There are both similarities and differences between laying workers
of Cape bees and LUS. Cape bees can have workers with developed
ovaries while brood is present (Anderson 1963). We have not found
this to occur in LUS (DeGrandi-Hoffman unpubl. data). Internal
fighting among nestmates following the removal of a queen and
a subsequent increase in the number of dead bees on the bottom
board occurs in Cape, LUS, CP, and cd bees. As in Cape bees,
most of the dead LUS bees did not have ovary development. In
Cape bees an average of 28% of the workers have developed ovaries
13 days after queen removal, and in LUS the average is 27% when
eggs from laying workers are first seen (Anderson 1963). Significantly
fewer workers in queenless LUS colonies have developed ovaries
compared to CP or cd, suggesting that worker ovaries might be
more effectively suppressed by the presence of laying workers
in LUS (Velthuis 1970). Cape bee workers lay unfertilized diploid
eggs because during ana-phase II the egg pronucleus and the central
descendent of the first polar body fuse to form a diploid zygote
nucleus (Verma and Ruttner 1983). Whether a similar cytological
mechanism exists in LUS is yet to be determined.
A honey bee colony's ability to requeen itself with the eggs
of laying workers requires not only that some workers can lay
diploid eggs, but that the workers can foster the cooperation
from nestmates needed to construct a queen cell and rear the
egg into a queen. When laying workers developed in CP or cd colonies,
often queen cells were constructed and sometimes eggs were deposited
inside them. However, the eggs were either cannibalized by other
workers or left unattended and did not hatch. Other than in LUS,
the greatest cooperation among individuals to rear a queen from
laying worker eggs was in cd bees where workers actively cared
for the larvae in the cells. Queen cells were capped in some
instances, but were destroyed soon afterwards. Our study indicates
that attempts at requeening occur in non-thelytokous lines of
honey bees, but apparently these bees lack some of the physiological
and behavioral attributes needed to rear a viable queen.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank H. H. Laidlaw, R. E. Page, and
A. Cohen for reviewing earlier versions of this manuscript.
Literature Cited
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BUTLER, C. G. and E. M. FAIREY 1963. The role of the queen
in preventing oogenesis in worker honeybees. J. Apic.
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DEGROOT, A. P. AND S. VOOGD 1954.
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JACK, R. W. 1917. Parthenogenesis amongst the workers
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JAY, S. C. 1970. The effects of various combinations of
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KROPACOVA, S. AND H. HASLBACHAVA 1970. The development
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KROPACOVA, S. AND H. HASLBACHAVA 1971. The
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Abstract
A strain of U.S. domestic honey bees (Apis mellifera L.)
with the ability to rear workers and queens using the eggs of
laying workers has been isolated. Previously, thelytoky was assumed
to occur rarely in honey bees with the exception of the South
African Cape bee (A. mellifera capensis). Our thelytokous
line, hereafter referred to as LUS, was developed from commercial
stocks of European honey bees. Comparisons of worker behavior
and ovarian development were made among queenless colonies of
LUS and two arrhenotokous lines hereafter referred to as CP and
cd. LUS had a significantly lower percentage of workers with
developed ovaries at the time when eggs from laying workers first
appeared in cells than either CP or cd. All three lines constructed
queen cells and deposited laying worker eggs in them, but viable
queens emerged only from LUS. The CP line did not rear larvae
in the queen cells but in some instances the cd line did. However,
the cd bees destroyed the queen cells either prior to or soon
after capping them. Comparisons between behaviors of queenless
LUS colonies and those reported to occur in queenless Cape bee
colonies also are discussed.
Contact Address: Drs.
DeGrandi-Hoffman and Erickson: Carl Hayden Bee Research and Biological
Control Center, U.S.D.A. -
A.R.S., 2000 East Allen Road, Tucson, AZ 85719; Mr. and Mrs.
Lusby: Rangeland Honey, 3832 Golf Links Road, Tucson, AZ 85713
Dr. Gloria DeGrandi-Hoffman
is a Research Entomologist at the U.S.D.A. - A.R.S. Carl Hayden Bee Research
Center in Tucson, AZ. Dr. Hoffman was a 1983 graduate of Michigan
State University under the direction of Dr. Roger Hoopingarner.
Her research efforts have been devoted to the construction and
validation of computer simulation models of biological systems.
Dr. Eric Erickson Jr. was a 1976 graduate of the University of
Arizona and is the Research Leader and Center Director of the
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center. Dr. Erickson's research has
focused on crop pollination and honey bee behavior and morphology.
Delores and Edward Lusby are commercial beekeepers in Tucson,
AZ.
Accepted for publication
on 29 January 1991
Key Words: parthenogenesis,
Cape honey bees, laying workers
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