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I. Bee Breeding and Animal Breeding
by William C. Roberts and
Otto Mackensen
U.S.D.A., Agr. Res. Adm., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine*
(*In cooperation with the
Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment Station and Louisiana State
University.)
Preface
Within recent years the technique
of artificial insemination has been improved and used successfully
in experiments on bee breeding. Thus a major barrier in our efforts
to produce better breeds of bees has been successfully hurdled.
Readers of the bee journals now find advertisements telling them
that improved hybrid bees are available. Since these are said
to be superior to existing races or strains, the wide-awake beekeeper
will want to know how they are produced.
This is the first of a series of articles on the use of controlled
breeding to improve honey bees. This article discusses the relationship
of bee breeding to animal breeding in general. Articles on heredity
and variation, sex determination and bee breeding, inbred and
hybrid bees, and production of hybrid queens will follow.
I - Bee Breeding and Animal
Breeding
Almost everything that we eat
or wear is the product of our domesticated plants and animals.
Most of these living forms have been cared for and propagated
by man since long before the beginning of written history. Domestication
implies several things, no one of which is sufficient to define
it completely. It usually means tameness; but individual bears,
lions, or even snakes can be tamed, and few of us would call
them domesticated animals. Domestication further implies bringing
the growth and reproduction of the plant or animal at least partly
under man's control, but certain pigeons and geese usually choose
their own mates and accept no others. Man uses domesticated animals
or their products for his own advantage, and he usually keeps
them in or near his dwelling. From the variable wild species
man has, by selection and reproduction, developed individuals
that suit his purpose.
Breeding and selection have therefore led to the establishment
of types or varieties useful to man. Selection for usefulness
and survival under man's care has frequently resuited in varieties
incapable of survival without man's care. Man did not create
these genetic forms. By controlled breeding and selection he
merely succeeded in putting together or fixing these varieties
from the genetic variability that existed in their wild ancestors.
The honey bee has a definite place in our modern world. Its products
of honey and wax are useful to man, although perhaps not essential
to all men. However, the pollination activities of bees affect
the lives of most of the people of the world. Although we may
never succeed in taming the honey bee or in getting it to change
its mating habits, it seems evident that the definition of domestication
is sufficiently broad to include this most useful insect. The
ways and means of improving the economic value of honey bees
by controlling their growth and reproduction will be discussed
in this artide.
The breeder of animals must decide which animals shall produce
the next generation. His choice is determined by his knowledge
of the variability that exists in the potential breeding population
and the usefulness that he desires in the succeeding generations.
The variability in the breeding population is due in part to
differences in inherited factors and also in part to differences
in environment. A knowledge of the science of heredity should
make it easier to choose intelligently among the many animals
in the potential breeding population.
Because of the social nature of the honey bee, the colony is
the unit upon which selection must be based for most economically
important characteristics. The individuals of a colony consist
of a queen and her worker and drone offspring. The queen is mated
before she begins egg laying, and her mate is thus the father
of the workers in the hive. She may have more than one mate,
and therefore the genetic variability of the colony may be due
to several individuals. Each of these individuals can be influenced
by environmental factors that are not always easy to evaluate.
The bee breeders' problems in properly evaluating the genetic
and environmental factors affecting each individual colony are
much more difficult than those of other animal or plant breeders.
Although honey bees have been propagated by man for 5,000 years
or more, there is little evidence that much progress in bee breeding
has been made. No superior breeds of bees have been established.
The species has been subdivided into races, and all these races
show considerable variability. Apparently they are the product
of many generations of random matings within populations that
have been partially isolated by geographic barriers. Man may
have had some influence in fixing these races by selection that
altered the frequency of certain inherited factors.
The aim of the bee breeder is to produce better or more profitable
bees. This may mean more honey per colony or it may mean more
efficient pollinators. The breeder must work with the reproductive
individuals that are available. Since colonies of bees differ
in many characteristics, the breeder has variability from which
to select. This variability may be due to both genetic and environmental
factors. The successful bee breeder must observe his colonies
closely so that he can make proper allowances for environmental
factors affecting the genetic variability in his breeding stocks.
His next problem is to mate the breeding individuals so
as to obtain genetic improvement. From the variable colonies
he attempts to unite the genes (the genetic factors) for good
qualities from many stocks into one line or breed while eliminating
inferior or less desirable qualities. In order to succeed he
must have some knowledge of the science of heredity. Geneticists
have accomplished this with many plants and animals, and therefore
it is possible with bees.
Since the honey bee is an animal, it would appear that animal
breeding methods should be used. The honey bee, however, is quite
different from the economically important animals. Its method
of reproduction is in a sense more like some plants. We shall
attempt to describe these differences and likenesses and show
how they affect methods of bee breeding.
The science of heredity is relatively new, having only become
recognized as a science in the 20th century. Yet a great amount
of real progress through selective breeding was accomplished
in most of our economically important plants and animals long
before Mendel, the father of genetics, was born. Most every breed
of horses, cattle, hogs and chickens used in the United States
today was established before the 20th century. Yet even today
there are no fixed breeds of bees - we still have only races.
Let us review a few of the methods employed in the establishment
of improved breeds of livestock. The fundamental biological principles
of inheritance are the same whether we are breeding plants or
animals. Therefore, much about bee genetics can be learned by
studying the genetics of other animals and plants.
All our domestic animals except the guinea and the turkey originated
and were domesticated in prehistoric times in the Old World.
Most domestication evidently occurred in central or western Asia,
although some is believed to have taken place in Europe, Egypt,
India and China. It is still disputed whether most animals descended
from a single wild species or from two or more species.
Early naturalists supposed that species were fixed and had no
genetic variability. However, modern geneticists have shown that
wild populations of one species of animal were not genetically
uniform. They have also shown that selected breeding within these
wild populations, with their existing genetic variability, can
produce distinctly contrasting races or breeds within a few generations.
It seems probable that all the races of bees, as we know them
today, developed from a single wild species of honey bee. In
time they became dispersed over a large part of the Old World
and were somewhat isolated into many small groups. There was,
of course, some interbreeding between groups, but geographical
barriers prevented a great many matings between groups. As a
result a certain amount of inbreeding took place within each
geographic group. By mutations, natural selection, and perhaps
some human intervention in selection, the bees within each geographic
area became different from those in other areas.
The bees from the various areas are called races. Probably the
most geographically isolated race of bees is the Caucasian. A
Russian author who studied this race in its native home divided
it into six separate varieties. These varieties ranged in color
from the banded appearance of the Italian to completely black.
Other genetic characteristics within this and other races of
bees are equally variable. The bees of one race are fertile when
crossed with those of another race.
Wild cattle, horses, and hogs were also variable animals. The
recognized breeds of these animals were developed by selected
breeding of outstanding individuals from variable populations.
The history of the formation of the beef breeds of cattle that
originated in the British Isles is typical of successful animal-breeding
methods.
History tells us that migrating people and invading armies usually
carried with them much livestock from their native lands. Migrations
were slow, and the stocks mingled with and interbred with stocks
present in the countries through which they passed. It is not
known just how many and what kinds of cattle were introduced
into the British Isles throughout the ages. However, it is known
that the Norsemen and the Dutch carried cattle into the British
Isles, and it is suspected that the Romans and the Normans also
brought in some cattle. These cattle interbred with the cattle
of the islands, and a great amount of genetic variability existed
in these stocks before the formation of the breeds that we know
today as Hereford, Shorthorn, and Aberdeen-Angus.
About the beginning of the 18th century the common lands of Great
Britain were enclosed so that the intermingling of stocks on
a wide scale was stopped. The cattle population was thus broken
up into small groups and inbreeding within groups was the result.
About this time the cities began to grow and a demand for meat
developed. Some types of cattle were more useful for this purpose
than others, and breeders attempted to produce these meat-type
cattle. A few breeders gathered together some of the best of
the desired type into one or a few herds. There followed years
of rather intense inbreeding between these selected animals and
their descendants. Very little outside breeding stock was permitted
to enter these herds. After several generations the cattle within
these herds were uniform and were distinct from the other animals
in the community. Every recognized breed of cattle has arisen
from the concentration of the genes (blood) of one or a few animals
of greater than ordinary merit.
Breeds have developed in a
similar manner among other types of livestock. The Poland China
hog was evolved or originated in Butler and Warren counties in
southwestern Ohio. The exact combination of breeds or types that
resulted in this hog is not clear. Prior to 1830 there existed
in this area a number of types, among which were the Bedfordshire,
Byfield, Russian, and Big China. Some Berkshire blood was introduced
in 1835 and some Irish Glazier blood in 1839. There was intermixing
of these breeds without a definite plan for 20 years or more.
In 1870 the Warren County hog was black and white spotted. It
was regarded as a breed in 1872 and was given the name "Poland
China." The diverse races of swine from which this breed
was found could hardly have come together anywhere on earth without
the aid of man. From this heterogeneous mixture the breed arose
by inbreeding of selected sires.
Why have not bee breeders done
the same thing with bees? Many diverse races and strains from
all areas of the world have been brought into the United States.
There is thus great genetic variability in our bees. When we
look around we find outstanding individuals (colonies). We have
seen that successful breeders of other animals succeeded in establishing
superior breeds of animals by inbreeding and selecting from among
outstanding individuals and their descendants.
Bee breeders did try methods used by breeders of other animals
but they did not succeed. It is true that they could not control
matings so successfully as other animal breeders, but this was
not the major cause
of their failure. Studies indicate that a major cause for this
failure was a lack of knowledge of sex determination in honey
bees. Its importance to bee breeding will be explained in a later
section.
Reprinted from AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL
Volume 91
No. 7, pages 292-294, July 1951
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