排序方式: 共有2条查询结果,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1
1.
H. Randall Hepburn Sarah E. Radloff Orawan Duangphakdee Mananya Phaincharoen 《Die Naturwissenschaften》2009,96(6):719-723
Beeswaxes of honeybee species share some homologous neutral lipids; but species-specific differences remain. We analysed behavioural
variation for wax choice in honeybees, calculated the Euclidean distances for different beeswaxes and assessed the relationship
of Euclidean distances to wax choice. We tested the beeswaxes of Apis mellifera capensis, Apis florea, Apis cerana and Apis dorsata and the plant and mineral waxes Japan, candelilla, bayberry and ozokerite as sheets placed in colonies of A. m. capensis, A. florea and A. cerana. A. m. capensis accepted the four beeswaxes but removed Japan and bayberry wax and ignored candelilla and ozokerite. A. cerana colonies accepted the wax of A. cerana, A. florea and A. dorsata but rejected or ignored that of A. m. capensis, the plant and mineral waxes. A. florea colonies accepted A. cerana, A. dorsata and A. florea wax but rejected that of A. m. capensis. The Euclidean distances for the beeswaxes are consistent with currently prevailing phylogenies for Apis. Despite post-speciation chemical differences in the beeswaxes, they remain largely acceptable interspecifically while the
plant and mineral waxes are not chemically close enough to beeswax for their acceptance. 相似文献
2.
During social evolution, the ovary size of reproductively specialized honey bee queens has dramatically increased while their
workers have evolved much smaller ovaries. However, worker division of labor and reproductive competition under queenless
conditions are influenced by worker ovary size. Little comparative information on ovary size exists in the different honey
bee species. Here, we report ovariole numbers of freshly dissected workers from six Apis species from two locations in Southeast Asia. The average number of worker ovarioles differs significantly among species.
It is strongly correlated with the average mating number of queens, irrespective of body size. Apis dorsata, in particular, is characterized by numerous matings and very large worker ovaries. The relation between queen mating number
and ovary size across the six species suggests that individual selection via reproductive competition plays a role in worker
ovary size evolution. This indicates that genetic diversity, generated by multiple mating, may bear a fitness cost at the
colony level. 相似文献
1