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Honey bee workers as mobile insulating units

Insectes Sociaux, 2005
Heat-shielding is a method used by honey bee workers to insulate temperature sensitive brood from localized heat stress during development. Due largely to data collection techniques, heat-shielding has been defined as stationary bees congregating with their ventral side facing the heat stress.
Philip T. Starks   +5 more
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The metabolic fate of nectar nicotine in worker honey bees

Journal of Insect Physiology, 2017
Honey bees (Apis mellifera) are generalist pollinators that forage for nectar and pollen of a very large variety of plant species, exposing them to a diverse range of secondary metabolites produced as chemical defences against herbivory. Honey bees can tolerate high levels of many of these toxic compounds, including the alkaloid nicotine, in their diet
Du Rand, Esther Elizabeth   +3 more
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When Workers Disunite: Intraspecific Parasitism by Eusocial Bees

Annual Review of Entomology, 2008
One of the most obvious characteristics of an insect society is reproductive cooperation. Yet insect colonies are vulnerable to reproductive parasitism, both by workers from their own colony and by workers from others. Little is known about the mechanisms insect societies have evolved to protect themselves from being exploited from within and outside ...
Benjamin P. Oldroyd, Madeleine Beekman
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Dancers, Workers and Bees in the Choreography of Doris Humphrey

Dance Research Journal, 1996
Doris Humphrey's deep humanistic concerns, as stated in dances such as New Dance and Passacaglia, and her dedication to the group as the most essential element of choreography might have allied her with those enthusiastic and vociferous dancers in the 1930s who were dedicated to effecting social change through movement.
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Laying Worker Honey Bee: Similarities to the Queen

Nature, 1965
IT is known that in the honey bee community the queen has an influence on the behaviour and the physiology of worker bees1–3. It has been shown that the presence of a queen in a group of worker bees inhibits the development of the ovaries in the workers3. The workers, showing a special behaviour (retinue behaviour) towards their queen, recognize her by
F. J. Verheijen   +2 more
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The influence of a queen on the ovary development in worker bees

Experientia, 1956
Unabhangig voneinander haben in den letzten Jahren einerseitsButler, andererseitsde Groot undVoogd gefunden, dass der Einfluss, den die Anwesenheit einer Konigin auf die Arbeiterinnen der Honigbiene ausubt, durch Aufnahme einer Substanz bedingt ist, die die Arbeiterinnen vom Korper der Konigin ablecken, und die vonButler als «queen substance ...
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How worker bees perceive the presence of their queen

Zeitschrift f�r Vergleichende Physiologie, 1959
1. Die Anwesenheit der Bienenkonigin ubt bekanntlich einen hemmenden Einflus aus auf die Ovarienentwicklung bei den Arbeiterinnen. Es werden einige Tatsachen angefuhrt, die darauf hindeuten, das der Entwicklungszustand der Ovarien bei Arbeiterinnen in normalen Bienenvolkern auserdem stark von den Wetter- und Trachtverhaltnissen abhangig ist.
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Worker honey bee pheromone regulation of foraging ontogeny

Naturwissenschaften, 2004
The evolution of sociality has configured communication chemicals, called primer pheromones, which play key roles in regulating the organization of social life. Primer pheromones exert relatively slow effects that fundamentally alter developmental, physiological, and neural systems.
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Phosphatase in the adult worker honey bee

Journal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1951
Morris Rockstein, Paul W. Herron
openaire   +3 more sources

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