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{{Short description|European honey bee}}
{{Taxobox
{{Speciesbox
| name = Western honey bee (''Apis mellifera'')
| fossil_range = {{fossil range|Oligocene|Recent}}
| image = Honeybee landing on milkthistle02.jpg
| name = Western honey bee
| image_caption = Honey bee approaching a [[Milk Thistle]] flowerhead
| image = Apis mellifera Western honey bee.jpg
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
| status = DD
| phylum = [[Arthropod]]a
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| classis = [[Insect]]a
| status_ref = <ref name=iucn>{{cite iucn |author = De la Rúa, P., Paxton, R.J., Moritz, R.F.A., Roberts, S., Allen, D.J., Pinto, M.A., Cauia, E., Fontana, P., Kryger, P., Bouga, M., Buechler, R., Costa, C., Crailsheim, K., Meixner, M., Siceanu, A. & Kemp, J.R.| title = ''Apis mellifera'' | volume= 2014| page = e.T42463639A42463665 | year = 2014| url = http://iucnredlist.org/details/full/42463639/1| access-date = 23 July 2017}}</ref><ref name="red">{{cite iucn|url=https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/42463639/42463665|title=Western honey bee|issn=2307-8235|date=2019|access-date=1 May 2019}}</ref>
| ordo = [[Hymenoptera]]
| taxon = Apis mellifera
| subordo = [[Apocrita]]
| authority = [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], [[10th edition of Systema Naturae|1758]]
| superfamilia = [[Apoidea]]
| familia = [[Apidae]]
| synonyms =
*''Apis mellifica'' <small>Linnaeus, 1761</small>
| subfamilia = [[Apinae]]
*''Apis gregaria'' <small>Geoffroy, 1762</small>
| tribus = [[Apini]]
*''Apis cerifera'' <small>Scopoli, 1770</small>
| genus = ''[[Apis (genus)|Apis]]''
*''Apis daurica'' <small>Fischer von Waldheim, 1843</small>
| species = '''''A. mellifera'''''
*''Apis mellifica germanica'' <small>Pollmann, 1879</small>
| binomial = ''Apis mellifera''
*''Apis mellifica nigrita'' <small>Lucas, 1882</small>
| binomial_authority = [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]], 1758
*''Apis mellifica mellifica lehzeni'' <small>Buttel-Reepen, 1906 (Unav.)</small>
|synonyms =
''Apis mellifica'' <small>Linnaeus, 1761</small>
*''Apis mellifica mellifica silvarum'' <small>Goetze, 1964 (Unav.)</small>
| subdivision_ranks = Subspecies
| subdivision_ranks = Subspecies
| subdivision_ref = <ref name="Engel99">{{cite journal |last1=Michael S Engel |title=The taxonomy of recent and fossil honey bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae; Apis) |journal=Journal of Hymenoptera Research |date=1999 |volume=8 |issue=2 |pages=165–196 |url=https://archive.org/details/biostor-28973/mode/2up |access-date=20 January 2023}}</ref>
| subdivision =
| subdivision = [[List of Apis mellifera subspecies|31 currently recognized, see list]]
'''[[Europe|North-west of Europe]]'''
* [[Apis mellifera iberica|''A. m. iberica'']]
* [[Apis mellifera intermissa|''A. m. intermissa'']]
* [[Apis mellifera lihzeni|''A. m. lihzeni'']]
* [[Apis mellifera mellifera|''A. m. mellifera'']]
* [[Apis mellifera sahariensis|''A. m. sahariensis'']]
'''[[Europe|South-west of Europe]]'''
* [[Apis mellifera carnica|''A. m. carnica'']]
* [[Apis mellifera cecropia|''A. m. cecropia'']]
* [[Apis mellifera ligustica|''A. m. ligustica'']]
* [[Apis mellifera macedonica|''A. m. macedonica'']]
*[[Apis mellifera ruttneri|''A.m. ruttneri'']]
* [[Apis mellifera sicula|''A. m. sicula'']]
'''[[Middle East]]'''
* [[Apis mellifera adamii|''A. m. adamii'']]
* [[Apis mellifera anatoliaca|''A. m. anatoliaca'']]
* [[Apis mellifera armeniaca|''A. m. armeniaca'']]
* [[Apis mellifera caucasica|''A. m. caucasica'']]
* [[Apis mellifera cypria|''A. m. cypria'']]
* [[Apis mellifera meda|''A. m. meda'']]
'''[[Africa]]'''
* [[Apis mellifera adansonii|''A. m. adansonii'']]
* [[Apis mellifera capensis|''A. m. capensis'']]
* [[Apis mellifera intermissa|''A. m. intermissa'']]
* [[Apis mellifera lamarckii|''A. m. lamarckii'']]
* [[Apis mellifera litorea|''A. m. litorea'']]
* [[Apis mellifera major|''A. m. major'']]
* [[Apis mellifera monticola|''A. m. monticola'']]
* [[Apis mellifera sahariensis|''A. m. sahariensis'']]
* [[Apis mellifera scutellata|''A. m. scutellata'']]
* [[Apis mellifera unicolor|''A. m. unicolor'']]
* [[Apis mellifera jemenitica|''A. m. jemenitica'']]
}}
}}


The '''western honey bee''' or '''European honey bee''' ('''''Apis mellifera''''') is the most common of the 7–12 species of [[honey bee]]s worldwide.<ref name="Engel99"/><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lo |first1=N. |last2=Golag |first2=R.S. |last3=Anderson |first3=D.L. |last4=Oldroyd |first4=B.P. |title=A molecular phylogeny of the genus Apis suggests that the Giant Honey Bee of the Philippines, A. breviligula Maa, and the Plains Honey Bee of southern India, A. indica Fabricius, are valid species |journal=Systematic Entomology |date=2010 |volume=35 |issue=2 |pages=226–233 |doi=10.1111/j.1365-3113.2009.00504.x|bibcode=2010SysEn..35..226L |s2cid=84531938 }}</ref> The [[genus]] name ''Apis'' is [[Latin]] for 'bee', and ''mellifera'' is the Latin for 'honey-bearing' or 'honey-carrying', referring to the species' production of honey.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Western Honeybees: Facts, Prevention & Honey Bee Control |url=https://www.orkin.com/pests/stinging-pests/bees/western-honey-bees |access-date=2022-05-13 |website=www.orkin.com |language=en}}</ref>
The '''Western honey bee''' or '''European honey bee''' (''Apis mellifera'') is a species of [[honey bee]]. The [[genus]] ''Apis'' is [[Latin]] for "bee", and ''mellifera'' comes from the Latin ''meli-'' "honey" and ''ferre'' "to bear" — hence the scientific name means "honey-bearing bee". The name was coined in 1758 by [[Carolus Linnaeus]] who, realizing that the bees do not bear honey, but nectar, tried later to correct it to ''Apis mellifica'' ("honey-making bee") in a subsequent publication. However, according to the rules of [[Synonym (taxonomy)|synonymy]] in [[zoological nomenclature]], the older name has precedence. Some people who are unaware of this still [[hypercorrection|use]] the incorrect subsequent spelling. As of October 28, 2006, the [[Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium]] fully sequenced and analyzed the genome of ''Apis mellifera''.


Like all honey bee species, the western honey bee is [[Eusociality|eusocial]], creating [[Beehive|colonies]] with a single fertile female (or "[[Queen bee|queen]]"), many normally non-reproductive females or "workers", and a small proportion of fertile males or "[[Drone (bee)|drones]]". Individual colonies can house tens of thousands of bees. Colony activities are organized by [[Bee learning and communication|complex communication]] between individuals, through both [[pheromone]]s and the [[Bee learning and communication#Dance communication|dance language]].
In 2007 media attention focused on [[Colony Collapse Disorder]], a decline in Western honey bee colonies in a minority of regions of North America.


The western honey bee was one of the first [[Domestication|domesticated]] insects, and it is the primary species maintained by beekeepers to this day for both its honey production and [[pollination]] activities. With human assistance, the western honey bee now occupies every continent except Antarctica. Western honey bees are threatened by [[List of diseases of the honey bee|pests and diseases]], especially the [[Varroa destructor|''Varroa'' mite]] and [[colony collapse disorder]]. There are indications that the species is rare, if not extinct in the wild in Europe and as of 2014, the western honey bee was assessed as "Data Deficient" on the [[IUCN Red List]]. Numerous studies indicate that the species has undergone significant declines in Europe; however, it is not clear if they refer to population reduction of wild or managed colonies. Further research is required to enable differentiation between wild and non-wild colonies in order to determine the conservation status of the species in the wild, meaning self sustaining, without treatments or management.<ref>{{Cite iucn|url=https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/42463639/42463665|title=The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species|access-date=2019-05-11}}</ref>
==Geographic distribution==
===Subspecies originating in Europe===


Western honey bees are an important [[model organism]] in scientific studies, particularly in the fields of [[Sociobiology|social evolution]], learning, and memory; they are also used in studies of [[Pesticide toxicity to bees|pesticide toxicity]], especially via pollen, to assess non-target [[Environmental impact of pesticides|impacts of commercial pesticides]].
* ''[[Italian bee|Apis mellifera ligustica]]'' , classified by Spinola, 1806 - the Italian bee. The most commonly kept race in North America, South America and southern Europe. They are kept commercially all over the world. They are very gentle, not very likely to swarm, and produce a large surplus of honey. They have few undesirable characteristics. Colonies tend to maintain larger populations through winter, so they require more winter stores (or feeding) than other temperate zone subspecies. The Italian bee is light colored and mostly leather colored, but some strains are golden.


==Distribution and habitat==
* ''[[Carniolan honeybee|Apis mellifera carnica]]'', classified by Pollmann, 1879 - [[Carniola]] region of [[Slovenia]], the southern part of the [[Austria]]n [[Alps]], and northern [[Balkans]] - better known as the Carniolan honey bee - popular with beekeepers due to its extreme gentleness. The Carniolan tends to be quite dark in color, and the colonies are known to shrink to small populations over winter, and build very quickly in spring. It is a mountain bee in its native range, and is a good bee for colder climates.
[[File:Historical introductions of western honey bees, Apis mellifera, into the United States.svg|alt=The visualization shows the historical introductions of western honey bees, Apis mellifera, into the United States. In particular, the visualization takes into account four categories of data. The first is the country from which the bees were exported (on the left side of the diagram), then the state into which the bees were imported (on the right side of the diagram), the year in which the shipment took place (represented with a black dot aligned to the relative year on the bottom), and the subspecies of Apis mellifera shipped (represented with the respective color in the legend). A legend included in the visualization helps understand the meaning of the graphic elements.|left|thumb|256x256px|Visualization showing the various importations of the western honey bee into the United States.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last1=Marcelino |first1=Jose |last2=Braese |first2=Charles |last3=Christmon |first3=Krisztina |last4=Evans |first4=Jay D. |last5=Gilligan |first5=Todd |last6=Giray |first6=Tugrul |last7=Nearman |first7=Anthony |last8=Niño |first8=Elina L. |last9=Rose |first9=Robyn |last10=Sheppard |first10=Walter S. |last11=vanEngelsdorp |first11=Dennis |last12=Ellis |first12=James D. |date=2022 |title=The Movement of Western Honey Bees (Apis mellifera L.) Among U.S. States and Territories: History, Benefits, Risks, and Mitigation Strategies |journal=Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution |volume=10 |doi=10.3389/fevo.2022.850600.s001 |issn=2296-701X|doi-access=free }}</ref>]]
The western honey bee [[Cosmopolitan distribution|can be found on every continent except Antarctica]].<ref name="UnivFlorida">{{cite web |date=August 2013 |access-date=1 September 2018 |url=http://entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/MISC/BEES/euro_honey_bee.htm |title=European honey bee |work=Entomology and Nematology Department, University of Florida |first1=Ashley N. |last1=Mortensen |first2=Daniel R. |last2=Schmehl |first3=Jamie |last3=Ellis}}</ref> The species is believed to have originated in Africa<ref name="Charles W. Whitfield, Susanta K. Behura, Stewart H. Berlocher, Andrew G. Clark, J. Spencer Johnston, Walter S. Sheppard, Deborah R. Smith, Andrew V. Suarez, Daniel Weaver & Neil D. Tsutsui 2006 642–645">{{cite journal|author=Charles W. Whitfield, Susanta K. Behura, Stewart H. Berlocher, Andrew G. Clark, J. Spencer Johnston, Walter S. Sheppard, Deborah R. Smith, Andrew V. Suarez, Daniel Weaver & Neil D. Tsutsui |year=2006 |title=Thrice out of Africa: ancient and recent expansions of the honey bee, ''Apis mellifera'' |journal=[[Science (journal)|Science]] |volume=314 |issue=5799 |pages=642–645 |pmid=17068261 |doi=10.1126/science.1132772 |url=http://www.life.illinois.edu/suarez/Publications/Whitfield_etal2006Science.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150929070749/http://www.life.illinois.edu/suarez/publications/Whitfield_etal2006Science.pdf |archive-date=September 29, 2015 |bibcode=2006Sci...314..642W |s2cid=15967796 }}</ref> or Asia,<ref name=":2">{{cite journal|last1=Han|first1=Fan|last2=Wallberg|first2=Andreas|last3=Webster|first3=Matthew T|title=From where did the Western honeybee (Apis mellifera) originate?|journal=Ecology and Evolution|date=2012|volume=2|issue=8|pages=1949–1957|pmc=3433997|pmid=22957195|doi=10.1002/ece3.312|bibcode=2012EcoEv...2.1949H }}</ref> and it spread naturally through Africa, the Middle East and Europe.<ref name="UnivFlorida"/> Humans are responsible for its considerable additional range, introducing European subspecies into North America (early 1600s),<ref name=":3">{{cite news |url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/12/061211220927.htm |title=Research upsetting some notions about honey bees |publisher=[[ScienceDaily]] |date=December 29, 2006}}</ref> South America, Australia, New Zealand, and eastern Asia.<ref name=":4">{{cite journal|last1=Winston|first1=M.|last2=Dropkin|first2=J.|last3=Taylor|first3=O.|title=Demography and life history characteristics of two honey bee races (Apis mellifera)|journal=Oecologia|date=1981|volume=48|issue=3|pages=407–413|doi=10.1007/bf00346502|pmid=28309760|bibcode=1981Oecol..48..407W|s2cid=10088325}}</ref>


===Subspecies===
* ''[[Apis mellifera caucasica]]'', classified by Pollmann, 1889 - [[Caucasus Mountains]] - This sub-species is regarded as being very gentle and fairly industrious. Some strains are excessive propolizers. It is a large honeybee of medium, sometimes grayish color.
{{main|List of Apis mellifera subspecies}}
Western honey bees adapted to the local environments as they spread geographically.<ref name="Charles W. Whitfield, Susanta K. Behura, Stewart H. Berlocher, Andrew G. Clark, J. Spencer Johnston, Walter S. Sheppard, Deborah R. Smith, Andrew V. Suarez, Daniel Weaver & Neil D. Tsutsui 2006 642–645" /> These adaptations include synchronizing colony cycles to the timing of local flower resources, forming a [[winter cluster]] in colder climates, migratory [[swarming]] in Africa, and enhanced foraging behavior in desert areas. All together, these variations resulted in 31 recognized [[subspecies]].<ref name="Engel99"/>


Previously it was believed that the various subspecies were all [[Cross-fertilisation|cross-fertile]], but in 2013 it was found that the [[European dark bee|''A. m. mellifera'']] queens do not mate with non-''A. m. mellifera'' drones.<ref name=":5">{{cite journal |last1=Oleksa, A., Wilde, J., Tofilski, A. |title=Partial reproductive isolation between European subspecies of honey bees |journal=Apidologie |date=2013 |volume=44 |issue=5 |pages=611–619 |doi=10.1007/s13592-013-0212-y |s2cid=18576927 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
*''Apis mellifera remipes'', classified by [[Carl Eduard Adolph Gerstäcker|Gerstäcker]], 1862 - Caucasus, [[Iran]], [[Caspian Sea]].


The subspecies are divided into four major branches, based on work by Ruttner and confirmed by [[mitochondrial DNA]] analysis. African subspecies belong to branch A, northwestern European subspecies branch M, southwestern European subspecies branch C and Middle Eastern subspecies branch O.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}}
* ''[[European dark bee|Apis mellifera mellifera]]'', classified by Linnaeus, 1758 - the dark bee of northern [[Europe]] also called the German honey bee - domesticated in modern times, and taken to North America in colonial times. These small, dark-colored bees, are sometimes called the German black bee.
The hybrid populations of ''A. m. mellifera'' x ''A. m. ligustica'' , found in North America and Western Europe, have the reputation of stinging people (and other creatures) for no good reason. The near-extinct "pure" ''A. m. mellifera'' is not considered randomly aggressive.


{{anchor|Biology, life cycle}}
* ''Apis mellifera iberiensis'', classified by [[Michael S. Engel|Engel]], 1999 - the bee from the [[Iberian Peninsula|Iberian]] peninsula ([[Spain]] and [[Portugal]])


==Life cycle==
* ''Apis mellifera cecropia'', classified by Kiesenwetter, 1860 - Southern [[Greece]]
{{More citations needed section|date=December 2017}}
{{Main|Honey bee life cycle}}


===Colony life cycle===
* ''Apis mellifera cypria'', classified by Pollmann, 1879 - The island of [[Cyprus]] - This sub-species has the reputation of being very fierce compared to the neighboring Italian sub-species, from which it is isolated by the [[Mediterranean Sea]]
[[File:A swarm of Apis mellifera - 20051109.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Swarm of honey bees on a wooden fence rail|A bee swarm. Bees are unaggressive in this state, since they have no hive to protect.]]
Unlike most other bee species, western honey bees have [[perennial]] [[Colony (biology)|colonies]] which persist year after year. Because of this high degree of sociality and permanence, western honey bee colonies can be considered [[superorganism]]s. This means that reproduction of the colony, rather than individual bees, is the biologically significant unit. Western honey bee colonies reproduce through a process called "[[Swarming (honey bee)|swarming]]".<ref name="caron">{{Cite book|title=Honey bee biology and beekeeping|last=Caron, Dewey M. (Dewey Maurice)|date=2013|publisher=Wicas Press|others=Connor, Lawrence John.|isbn=9781878075291|edition= Revised |location=Kalamazoo, MI|oclc=869287399}}</ref>


In most climates, western honey bees swarm in the spring and early summer, when there is an abundance of blooming flowers from which to collect [[nectar]] and [[pollen]]. In response to these favorable conditions, the hive creates one to two dozen new queens. Just as the [[pupa]]l stages of these "daughter queens" are nearly complete, the old queen and approximately two-thirds of the adult workers leave the colony in a swarm, traveling some distance to find a new location suitable for building a hive (e.g., a hollow tree trunk). In the old colony, the daughter queens often start "piping", just prior to emerging as adults,<ref name=":6">{{YouTube|VBlI1sgczVY|Piping Queens After a Swarm}}</ref> and, when the daughter queens eventually emerge, they fight each other until only one remains; the survivor then becomes the new queen. If one of the sisters emerges before the others, she may kill her siblings while they are still pupae, before they have a chance to emerge as adults.
* ''[[Maltese honey bee|Apis mellifera ruttneri]]'', classified by Sheppard, Arias, Grech & Meixner in 1997- is a sub-species originating in the [[Malta|Maltese]] islands.


Once she has dispatched all of her rivals, the new queen, the only fertile [[female]], lays all the eggs for the old colony, which her mother has left. Virgin females are able to lay eggs, which develop into males (a trait found in bees, wasps, and ants because of [[haplodiploidy]]). However, she requires a mate to produce female offspring, which comprise 90% or more of bees in the colony at any given time. Thus, the new queen goes on one or more [[nuptial flight]]s, each time mating with 1–17 drones.<ref name=":7">{{cite journal|last1=Page|first1=Robert E.|title=The Evolution of Multiple Mating Behavior by Honey Bee Queens (Apis mellifera L.)|journal=Genetics|date=1980|pages=253–273|pmc=1214294|pmid=7203010|volume=96|issue=1|doi=10.1093/genetics/96.1.263}}</ref> Once she has finished mating, usually within two weeks of emerging, she remains in the hive, playing the primary role of laying eggs.
* ''Apis mellifera sicula'', classified by Montagano, 1911 - from the [[Trapani]] province and the island of [[Ustica]] of western [[Sicily]] (Italia)


Throughout the rest of the growing season, the colony produces many workers, who gather pollen and nectar as cold-season food; the average population of a healthy hive in midsummer may be as high as 40,000 to 80,000 bees. Nectar from flowers is processed by [[worker bee]]s, who evaporate it until the moisture content is low enough to discourage mold, transforming it into [[honey]], which can then be capped over with [[Beeswax|wax]] and stored almost indefinitely. In the temperate climates to which western honey bees are adapted, the bees gather in their hive and wait out the cold season, during which the queen may stop laying. During this time, activity is slow, and the colony consumes its stores of honey used for metabolic heat production in the cold season. In mid- through late winter, the queen starts laying again. This is probably triggered by [[day length]]. Depending on the subspecies, new queens (and swarms) may be produced every year, or less frequently, depending on local environmental conditions and a number of characteristics inside the hive.
===Subspecies originating in Africa===
Several researchers and beekeepers describe a general trait of the African subspecies which is absconding, where the Africanized honeybee colonies abscond the hive in times when food-stores are low, unlike the European colonies which tend to die in the hive.


===Individual bee life cycle===
* ''[[Apis mellifera scutellata]]'', classified by Lepeletier, 1836 - (African honey bee) Central and West Africa, now hybrids also in South America, Central America and the southern USA. In an effort to address concerns by Brazilian beekeepers and to increase honey production in Brazil, [[Warwick Kerr]], a Brazilian geneticist, was asked by Brazilian Federal and State authorities in 1956 to import several pure African queens from [[Tanzania]] to [[Piracicaba]]-[[São Paulo]] State in the south of [[Brazil]]. In a mishap some queens escaped. The African queens eventually mated with local drones and produced what are now known as [[Africanized bee|Africanized honey bees]] on the American continent. The intense struggle for survival of honey bees in sub-Saharan Africa is given as the reason that this sub-species is proactive in defending the hive, and also more likely to abandon an existing hive and swarm to a more secure location. They direct more of their energies to defensive behaviors and less of their energies to honey storage. African honey bees are leather colored, difficult to distinguish by eye from darker strains of Italian bees.
[[File:Bienenwabe mit Eiern und Brut 5.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Full (with larvae) and empty (with eggs) honeycomb cells|Larvae (''left'') and eggs (''right'')]]
Source: Abramsona, Charles I. ; Aquinob, Italo S. ; Brain, Behavior, Evolution 2002;59:68-86) [http://content.karger.com/ProdukteDB/produkte.asp?Aktion=ShowPDF&ProduktNr=223831&Ausgabe=228208&ArtikelNr=63734&filename=63734.pdf Behavioral Studies of Learning in the Africanized Honey Bee (Apis mellifera L.)] web accessed Nov. 2006
Like other insects that undergo [[holometabolism|complete metamorphosis]], the western honey bee has four distinct life stages: [[egg]], [[larva]], [[pupa]] and adult. The complex social structure of western honey bee hives means that all of these life stages occur simultaneously throughout much of the year. The queen deposits a single [[egg]] into each cell of a [[honeycomb]] prepared by worker bees. The egg hatches into a legless, eyeless larva fed by "nurse" bees (worker bees who maintain the interior of the colony). After about a week, the larva is sealed in its cell by the nurse bees and begins its pupal stage. After another week, it emerges as an adult bee. It is common for defined regions of the comb to be filled with young bees (also called "[[brood (honey bee)|brood]]"), while others are filled with pollen and honey stores.


Worker bees secrete the [[Beeswax|wax]] used to build the hive, clean, maintain and guard it, raise the young and forage for nectar and pollen; the nature of the worker's role varies with age. For the first 10 days of their lives, worker bees clean the hive and feed the larvae. After this, they begin building comb cells. On days 16 through 20, workers receive nectar and pollen from older workers and store it. After the 20th day, a worker leaves the hive and spends the remainder of its life as a forager. Although worker bees are usually infertile females, when some subspecies are stressed [[Laying worker bee|they may lay]] fertile eggs. Since workers are not fully sexually developed, they do not mate with [[Drone (bee)|drones]] and thus can only produce haploid (male) offspring.
* ''[[Apis mellifera capensis]]'', classified by Eschscholtz, 1822 - the Cape bee from [[South Africa]]


Queens and workers have a modified [[ovipositor]] called a ''[[Stinger (organ)|stinger]]'', with which they defend the hive. Unlike those of bees of any other genus and of the queens of their species, the stinger of worker western honey bees is barbed. Contrary to popular belief, a bee does not always die soon after stinging; this misconception is based on the fact that a bee will usually die after stinging a [[human]] or other [[mammal|mammals]]. The stinger and its [[venom sac]], with musculature and a ganglion allowing them to continue delivering [[venom]] after they are detached, are designed to [[Autotomy|pull free of the body]] when they lodge. This apparatus (including barbs on the stinger) is thought to have evolved in response to predation by vertebrates, since the barbs do not function (and the stinger apparatus does not detach) unless the stinger is embedded in elastic material. The barbs do not always "catch", so a bee may occasionally pull its stinger free and fly off unharmed (or sting again).<ref name=caron/>
* ''Apis mellifera monticola'', classified by Smith, 1961 - High altitude mountains at elevation between 1,500 and 3,100 metres of East Africa [[Mount Elgon|Mt. Elgon]], [[Mount Kilimanjaro|Mt. Kilimanjaro]], [[Mount Kenya|Mt.Kenya]], [[Mount Meru (Tanzania)|Mt.Meru]]


Although the [[Life expectancy|average lifespan]] of a queen in most subspecies is three to five years, reports from the [[European dark bee|German honey bee]] subspecies (''A. m. mellifera'') previously used for beekeeping indicate that a queen can live up to eight years.<ref name=":8">{{cite web |url=http://genomics.senescence.info/species/entry.php?species=Apis_mellifera |title=''Apis mellifera'' |work=AnAge database |publisher=Human Ageing Genomic Resources |access-date=June 2, 2011}}</ref> Because a queen's store of [[sperm]] is depleted near the end of her life, she begins laying more unfertilised eggs; for this reason, beekeepers often replace queens every year or two.
* ''Apis mellifera sahariensis'', classified by Baldensperger, 1932 - from the [[Morocco|Moroccan]] desert oases of Northwest Africa. This sub-species faces few predators other than humans and is therefore very gentle. Moreover, because of the low density of nectar-producing vegetation around the oases it colonizes, it forages up to five miles, much farther than sub-species from less [[arid]] regions. Other authorities say that while colonies of this species are not much inclined to sting when their hives are opened for inspection, they are, nevertheless, highly nervous.


The lifespan of workers varies considerably over the year in regions with long winters. Workers born in spring and summer work hard, and live only a few weeks, but those born in autumn remain inside for several months as the colony clusters. On average during the year, about 1% of a colony's worker bees die naturally per day.<ref>Tautz, J. [http://www.bienenforschung.biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de/fileadmin/99000011/Dateien/Populaere_Veroeffentlichungen/Tautz_Kapitel-2.pdf Phaenomen Honigbiene] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303225452/http://www.bienenforschung.biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de/fileadmin/99000011/Dateien/Populaere_Veroeffentlichungen/Tautz_Kapitel-2.pdf |date=2016-03-03 }} Springer 2003, 280 pages, pg 47</ref> Except for the queen, all of a colony's workers are replaced about every four months.
* ''Apis mellifera intermissa'', classified by von Buttel-Reepen, 1906; Maa, 1953 - Northern part of Africa in the general area of [[Morocco]], [[Libya]] and [[Tunisia]]. These bees are totally black. They are extremely fierce but do not attack without provocation. They are industrious and hardy, but have many negative qualities that argue against their being favored in the honey or pollination industry.


==Social caste==
* ''Apis mellifera major'', classified by Ruttner, 1978 - from the [[Rif]] mountains of Northwest [[Morocco]] - This bee may be a brown variety of the ''Apis mellifera intermissa'' but there are also anatomic differences.
[[File:Bee_on_Lavender_Blossom_2.jpg|thumb|Western honey bee on a lavender blossom]]
Behavioral and physiological differences between castes and subcastes arise from [[phenotypic plasticity]], which relies on [[gene expression]] rather than [[heritable]] genotypic differences.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Toth |first1=A. L. |last2=Robinson |first2=G. E. |date=2009 |title=Evo-Devo and the Evolution of Social Behavior: Brain Gene Expression Analyses in Social Insects |journal=Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology |volume=74 |pages=419–426 |doi=10.1101/sqb.2009.74.026 |pmid=19850850|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Yan |first1=Hua |last2=Bonasio |first2=Roberto |last3=Simola |first3=Daniel F. |last4=Liebig |first4=Jürgen |last5=Berger |first5=Shelley L. |last6=Reinberg |first6=Danny |date=2015 |title=DNA Methylation in Social Insects: How Epigenetics Can Control Behavior and Longevity |journal=Annual Review of Entomology |volume=60 |issue=1 |pages=435–452 |doi=10.1146/annurev-ento-010814-020803 |pmid=25341091|doi-access=free }}</ref>


===Queens===
* ''[[Apis mellifera adansonii]]'', classified by Latreille, 1804 - originates [[Nigeria]], [[Burkina Faso]]
{{Main |Queen bee}}


The queen bee is a fertile female, who, unlike workers (which are also female), has a fully developed [[reproductive system]]. She is larger than her workers, and has a characteristic rounder, longer abdomen. A female egg can become either a queen or a worker bee. Workers and queen larvae are both fed [[royal jelly]], which is high in protein and low in [[flavonoid]]s, during the first three days. After that, larval prospective workers are switched to a diet of mixed pollen and nectar (often called "bee bread"), while prospective queens continue to receive royal jelly. In the absence of flavonoids and the presence of a high-protein diet, female bees grow into queens by developing the vigorous reproductive system<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Mao |first1=Wenfu |last2=Schuler |first2=Mary A. |last3=Berenbaum |first3=May R. |title=A dietary phytochemical alters caste-associated gene expression in honey bees |journal=Science Advances |date=2015 |volume=1 |issue=7 |page=e1500795 |doi=10.1126/sciadv.1500795|pmid=26601244 |bibcode=2015SciA....1E0795M |pmc=4643792 }}</ref> necessary to maintain a colony of tens of thousands of daughter workers.
* ''Apis mellifera unicolor'', classified by Latreille, 1804 - [[Madagascar]]


Periodically, the colony determines that a new queen is needed. There are three general causes:
* ''[[Apis mellifera lamarckii]]'', classified by Cockerell, 1906 - (Lamarck's honey bee) of the [[Nile]] valley of [[Egypt]] and [[Sudan]]. This [[mitotype]] can also be identified in honey bees from California. [http://www.bioone.org/bioone/?request=get-abstract&issn=0013-8746&volume=093&issue=01&page=0001]
# The hive is filled with honey, leaving little room for new eggs. This will trigger a swarm, where the old queen will take about half the worker bees to establish a new colony, and leave a new queen with the other half of the workers to continue the old one.
# The old queen begins to fail, which is thought to be demonstrated by a decrease in [[List of honey bee pheromones|queen pheromones]] throughout the hive. This is known as supersedure, and at its end, the old queen is usually killed.
# The old queen dies suddenly, a situation known as emergency supersedure. The worker bees find several eggs (or larvae) of the appropriate age range and feed them royal jelly to try to develop them into new queens.


Emergency supersedure can generally be recognized because new queen cells are built out from comb cells, instead of hanging from the bottom of a frame. Regardless of the trigger, workers develop existing larvae into queens by continuing to feed them royal jelly, rather than switching them to bee bread, and by extending the selected larvae's cells to house the developing larger-bodied queens.
* ''Apis mellifera litorea'', classified by Smith, 1961 - Low elevations of east Africa


[[File:Queencell 0017.JPG |thumb|right |alt=See caption |Peanut-like queen brood cells extend outward from the brood comb]]
* ''Apis mellifera nubica'', (Nubian honey bee) of [[Sudan]]
Queens are not raised in the typical horizontal brood cells of the honeycomb. A queen cell is larger and oriented vertically. If workers sense that an old queen is weakening, they produce emergency cells (known as supersedure cells) from cells with eggs or young larvae and which protrude from the comb. When the queen finishes her larval feeding and pupates, she moves into a head-downward position and later chews her way out of the cell. At pupation, workers cap (seal) the cell. The queen asserts control over the worker bees by releasing a complex suite of pheromones, known as queen scent.


After several days of orientation in and around the hive, the young queen flies to a [[drone congregation area]] – a site near a clearing and generally about {{convert |30 |ft |m}} above the ground – where drones from different hives congregate. They detect the presence of a queen in their congregation area by her smell, find her by sight and mate with her in midair; drones can be induced to mate with "dummy" queens with the queen pheromone. A queen will mate multiple times, and may leave to mate several days in a row (weather permitting) until her [[spermatheca]] is full.
*''Apis mellifera jemenitica'', classified by Ruttner, 1976 - [[Somalia]], [[Uganda]], [[Sudan]], [[Yemen]]


The queen lays all the eggs in a healthy colony. The number and pace of egg-laying is controlled by weather, resource availability and specific racial characteristics. Queens generally begin to slow egg-laying in the early fall, and may stop during the winter. Egg-laying generally resumes in late winter when the days lengthen, peaking in the spring. At the height of the season, the queen may lay over 2,500 eggs per day (more than her body mass).
===Subspecies originating in the Middle East and Asia===


She fertilizes each egg (with stored sperm from the spermatheca) as it is laid in a worker-sized cell. Eggs laid in drone-sized (larger) cells are left unfertilized; these unfertilized eggs, with half as many genes as queen or worker eggs, develop into drones.
* ''[[Apis mellifera macedonica]]'', classified by Ruttner, 1988 - [[Republic of Macedonia]] and Northern [[Greece]]


=== Workers ===
* ''Apis mellifera meda'', classified by Skorikov, 1829 - [[Iraq]]
Workers are females produced by the queen that develop from fertilized, [[diploid]] eggs. Workers are essential for social structure and proper colony functioning. They carry out the main tasks of the colony, because the queen is occupied solely with reproducing. These females raise their sister workers and future queens that eventually leave the nest to start their own colony. They also forage and return to the nest with nectar and pollen to feed the young, and defend the colony.


===Drones===
* ''Apis mellifera adamii'', classified by Ruttner, 1977 - [[Crete]]


[[File:Drohnenpuppen 81b.jpg |thumb|right |alt=Top and bottom views of a developing pupa against a honeycomb |Development of a drone pupa]]
* ''Apis mellifera armeniaca'', Mid-East, [[Caucasus]], [[Armenia]]
[[File:Drohnenpuppen 79d.jpg |thumb|right |alt=White and brown pupae filling cells |Pupae of drones]]


{{Main |Drone (bee)}}
* ''Apis mellifera anatolica'', classified by Maa, 1953 - This race is typified by colonies in the central region of [[Anatolia]] in [[Turkey]] and Iraq (Range extends as far West as [[Armenia]]). It has many good characteristics but is rather unpleasant to deal with in and around the hive.


Drones are the colony's [[male]] bees. Since they do not have ovipositors, they do not have stingers. Drone honey bees do not forage for nectar or pollen. The primary purpose of a drone is to [[fertilization|fertilize]] a new queen. Many drones mate with a given queen in flight; each dies immediately after mating, since the process of [[insemination]] requires a lethally convulsive effort. Drone honey bees are [[haploid]] (single, unpaired chromosomes) in their genetic structure, and are descended only from their mother (the queen). In temperate regions, drones are generally expelled from the hive before winter, dying of cold and starvation since they cannot forage, produce honey or care for themselves. Given their larger size (1.5 times that of worker bees), inside the hive it is believed that drones may play a significant role in [[thermoregulation]]. Drones are typically located near the center of hive clusters for unclear reasons. It is postulated that it is to maintain [[sperm viability]], which may be compromised at cooler temperatures. Another possible explanation is that a more central location allows drones to contribute to warmth, since at temperatures below {{Convert|25|C|}} their ability to contribute declines.<ref name=Harrison>{{cite journal |last1=Harrison |first1=J H |title=Roles of individual honeybee workers and drones in colonial thermogenesis |journal=Journal of Experimental Biology |date=1 May 1987 |volume=129 |page=60 |doi=10.1242/jeb.129.1.53 |url=http://jeb.biologists.org/content/129/1/53.full.pdf |access-date=17 October 2014|pmid=3585245 }}</ref>
* ''Apis mellifera syriaca'', classified by Skorikov, 1829 - ([[Syria]]n honeybee) Near East and [[Israel (region)|Israel]]


==Queen–worker conflict==
* ''Apis mellifera pomonella'', classified by Sheppard & Meixner, 2003 - Endemic honey bees of the [[Tien Shan Mountain]]s in [[Central Asia]]. This sub-species of Apis mellifera has a range that is the farthest East.
{{Main|Worker policing}}
When a fertile female worker produces drones, a conflict arises between her interests and those of the queen. The worker shares one-half of her genes with the drone and one-quarter with her brothers, favouring her offspring over those of the queen. The queen shares one-half of her genes with her sons and one-quarter with the sons of fertile female workers.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Wenseleers | first1 = T. | last2 = Helanterä | first2 = H. | last3 = Hart | first3 = A. | last4 = Ratnieks | first4 = F. L. W. | year = 2004 | title = Worker reproduction and policing in insect societies: an ESS analysis | journal = Journal of Evolutionary Biology | volume = 17 | issue = 5| pages = 1035–1047 | doi = 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2004.00751.x | pmid = 15312076 | doi-access = free }}</ref> This pits the worker against the queen and other workers, who try to maximize their [[Fitness (biology)|reproductive fitness]] by rearing the offspring most related to them. This relationship leads to a phenomenon called "worker policing". In these rare situations, other worker bees in the hive, who are genetically more related to the queen's sons than those of the fertile workers, patrol the hive and remove worker-laid eggs.


Another form of worker policing is aggression toward fertile females.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Ratnieks | first1 = F. | last2 = Visscher | first2 = P. Kirk | year = 1989 | title = Worker policing in the honeybee | journal = Nature | volume = 342 | issue = 6251| pages = 796–797 | doi = 10.1038/342796a0 | bibcode=1989Natur.342..796R| s2cid = 4366903 }}</ref> Some studies suggest a queen pheromone which may help workers distinguish worker-laid and queen-laid eggs, but others indicate egg viability as the key factor in eliciting the behavior.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Pirk | first1 = C. | last2 = Neumann | first2 = P. | last3 = Hepburn | first3 = R. | last4 = Moritz | first4 = R. | last5 = Tautz | first5 = J. | year = 2003 | title = Egg viability and worker policing in honey bees | journal = PNAS | volume = 101 | issue = 23| pages = 8649–8651 | doi = 10.1073/pnas.0402506101 | pmid = 15169961 | pmc = 423249 | bibcode = 2004PNAS..101.8649P | doi-access = free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Oldroyd | first1 = B. | last2 = Ratnieks | first2 = Francis | year = 2002 | title = Egg-marking pheromones in honey-bees Apis mellifera | journal = Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | volume = 51 | issue = 6| pages = 590–591 | doi = 10.1007/s00265-002-0480-4 | s2cid = 30446742 }}</ref>
==Biology, life cycle==


Worker policing is an example of [[Coercion|forced altruism]], where the benefits of worker reproduction are minimized and that of rearing the queen's offspring maximized.
{{main|Honey bee life cycle}}


In very rare instances, workers subvert the policing mechanisms of the hive, laying eggs faster than other workers remove them; this is known as anarchic syndrome. Anarchic workers can activate their ovaries at a higher rate and contribute a greater proportion of males to the hive. Although an increase in the number of drones decreases the overall productivity of the hive, it increases the reproductive fitness of the drones' mother. Anarchic syndrome is an example of selection working in opposite directions at the [[Unit of selection|individual and group levels]] for the stability of the hive.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Barron | first1 = A. | last2 = Oldroyd | first2 = B | last3 = Ratnieks | first3 = F.L.W. | year = 2001 | title = Worker reproduction in honey-bees (Apis) and the anarchic syndrome: a review | journal = Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | volume = 50 | issue = 3| pages = 199–208 | doi = 10.1007/s002650100362 | s2cid = 17246102 }}</ref>
[[Image:Bienenwabe mit Eiern und Brut 5.jpg|thumb|Larvae to the left and eggs to the right]]


Under ordinary circumstances, if the queen dies or is removed, reproduction in workers increases because a significant proportion of workers then have activated ovaries. The workers produce a last batch of drones before the hive collapses. Although during this period worker policing is usually absent, in certain groups of bees it continues.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Châline | first1 = N. | last2 = Martin | first2 = S.J. | last3 = Ratnieks | first3 = F.L.W. | year = 2004 | title = Worker policing persists in a hopelessly queenless honey bee colony (Apis mellifera) | journal = Insectes Soc | volume = 51 | issue = 2| pages = 1–4 | doi = 10.1007/s00040-003-0708-y | s2cid = 11988371 }}</ref>
In the temperate zone, [[honey bee]]s survive winter as a colony, and the queen begins egg laying in mid to late winter, to prepare for spring. This is most likely triggered by longer day length. She is the only fertile [[female]], and deposits all the [[Egg (biology)|eggs]] from which the other bees are produced. Except a brief mating period when she may make several flights to mate with drones, or if she leaves in later life with a [[Swarming (honeybee)|swarm]] to establish a new [[Colony (biology)|colony]], the queen rarely leaves the hive after the [[larva]]e have become full grown bees. The queen deposits each egg in a cell prepared by the worker bees. The egg hatches into a small larva which is fed by ''nurse'' bees (worker bees who maintain the interior of the colony). After about a week, the larva is sealed up in its cell by the nurse bees and begins the pupal stage. After another week, it will emerge an adult bee.


According to the strategy of [[kin selection]], worker policing is not favored if a queen mates just once. In that case, workers are related by three-quarters of their genes, and the sons of workers are [[Coefficient of relationship|related]] more than usual to sons of the queen. Then the benefit of policing is negated. Experiments confirming this hypothesis have shown a correlation between higher mating rates and increased rates of worker policing in many species of social [[hymenoptera]].<ref>Davies, N.R., Krebs, J.R., and West, S.A. An Introduction to Behavioral Ecology. 4th ed. West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. Print. pp. 387–388</ref>
For the first ten days of their lives, the female worker bees clean the hive and feed the larvae. After this, they begin building comb cells. On days 16 through 20, a worker receives nectar and pollen from older workers and stores it. After the 20th day, a worker leaves the hive and spends the remainder of its life as a forager. The population of a healthy hive in mid-summer can average between 40,000 and 80,000 bees.
[[Image:Drohnenpuppen 79d.jpg|thumb|left|Pupae of drones]]


==Behavior==
The larvae and [[pupa]]e in a frame of honeycomb are referred to as frames of [[brood (honeybee)|brood]] and are often sold (with adhering bees) by beekeepers to other beekeepers to start new beehives.


===Thermoregulation===
[[Image:Drohnenpuppen_81b.jpg|thumb|Stages of development of the drone pupae]]
[[File:Apis mellifera Luc Viatour.jpg|thumb|left|Foraging honey bee]]


The western honey bee needs an internal body temperature of {{convert|35|C|F}} to fly; this temperature is maintained in the nest to develop the brood, and is the optimal temperature for the creation of wax. The temperature on the periphery of the cluster varies with outside air temperature, and the [[winter cluster]]'s internal temperature may be as low as {{convert|20|-|22|C|F}}.
Both workers and queens are fed "[[royal jelly]]" during the first three days of the larval stage. Then workers are switched to a diet of pollen and nectar or diluted honey, while those intended for queens will continue to receive royal jelly. This causes the larva to develop to the pupa stage more quickly, while being also larger and fully developed sexually. Queen breeders consider good nutrition during the larval stage to be of critical importance to the quality of the queens raised, good genetics and sufficient number of [[mating]]s also being factors. During the larval and pupal stages, various parasites can attack the pupa/larva and destroy or damage it.


Western honey bees can forage over a {{convert|30|C|F}} air-temperature range because of behavioral and physiological mechanisms for regulating the temperature of their flight muscles. From low to high air temperatures, the mechanisms are: shivering before flight and stopping flight for additional shivering, passive body-temperature regulation based on work, and [[evaporative cooling]] from regurgitated honey-sac contents. Body temperatures differ, depending on caste and expected foraging rewards.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Bernd Heinrich |year=1996 |title=How the honey bee regulates its body temperature |journal=[[Bee World]] |volume=77 |issue=3 |pages=130–137 |url=http://www.ibra.org.uk/articles/20100224_2 |doi=10.1080/0005772X.1996.11099304 |access-date=2011-06-02 |archive-date=2011-07-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723182940/http://www.ibra.org.uk/articles/20100224_2 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
Queens are not raised in the typical horizontal brood cells of the [[honeycomb]]. The typical queen cell is specially constructed to be much larger, and has a vertical orientation. However, should the workers sense that the old queen is weakening, they will produce emergency cells known as supersedure cells. These cells are made from a cell with an egg or very young larva. These cells protrude from the comb. As the queen finishes her larval feeding, and pupates, she moves into a head downward position, from which she will later chew her way out of the cell. At pupation the workers cap or seal the cell. Just prior to emerging from their cells, young queens can often be heard "piping." The purpose of this sound is not yet fully understood.


The optimal air temperature for [[Forage (honey bee)|foraging]] is {{convert|22|-|25|C|F}}. During flight, the bee's relatively large flight muscles create heat which must be dissipated. The honey bee uses evaporative cooling to release heat through its mouth. Under hot conditions, heat from the thorax is dissipated through the head; the bee regurgitates a droplet of warm internal fluid — a "honeycrop droplet" – which reduces the temperature of its head by {{convert|10|C-change|F-change|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Bernd Heinrich |year=1979 |title=Keeping a cool head: honeybee thermoregulation |journal=[[Science (journal)|Science]] |volume=205 |issue=4412 |pages=1269–1271 |pmid=17750151 |doi=10.1126/science.205.4412.1269 |bibcode=1979Sci...205.1269H |s2cid=40283909 }}</ref>
[[Image:Bee swarm.jpg|thumb|right|Bee Swarm- bees are remarkably non aggressive in this state as they have no hive to protect, and can be captured with ease]]


Below {{convert|7|-|10|C|F}} bees are immobile, and above {{convert|38|C|F}} their activity slows. Western honey bees can tolerate temperatures up to {{convert|50|C|F}} for short periods.{{citation needed|date=April 2024}}
Worker bees are infertile females; but in some circumstances, generally only in times of severe stress or with the loss or injury or declining health of the queen, they may lay infertile eggs, and in some subspecies these eggs may actually be fertile. However, since the worker bees are 'imperfect' (not fully sexually developed) females, they do not mate with drones. Any fertile eggs that they lay would be haploid, having only the genetic contribution of their mother, and in honey bees these haploid eggs will always develop into drones. Worker bees also secrete the [[Beeswax|wax]] used to build the hive, clean and maintain the hive, raise the young, guard the hive and forage for nectar and pollen.


They lack the [[Apis_cerana#Thermal_defense|thermal defense]] exhibited by ''[[Apis cerana]]'', but at least one subspecies, ''[[Apis mellifera cypria]]'', is capable of killing invading [[hornet]]s through [[asphyxiation]], despite not being able to attain lethal temperatures.<ref>{{Cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2007.07.033 |title=Smothered to death: Hornets asphyxiated by honeybees |date=2007 |last1=Papachristoforou |first1=Alexandros |last2=Rortais |first2=Agnès |last3=Zafeiridou |first3=Georgia |last4=Theophilidis |first4=George |last5=Garnery |first5=Lionel |last6=Thrasyvoulou |first6=Andreas |last7=Arnold |first7=Gérard |journal=Current Biology |volume=17 |issue=18 |pages=R795–R796 |pmid=17878045 |bibcode=2007CBio...17.R795P }}</ref>
In [[honey bee]]s, the worker bees have a modified [[ovipositor]] called a [[stinger (organ)|stinger]] with which they can sting to defend the hive, but unlike other bees of any other genus (and even unlike the queens of their own species), the stinger is barbed. Contrary to popular belief, the bee will ''not'' always die soon after stinging: this is a misconception based on the fact that a bee will ''usually'' die after stinging a [[human]] or other [[mammal]]. The sting and associated venom sac are modified so as to pull free of the body once lodged ([[autotomy]]), and the sting apparatus has its own musculature and ganglion which allow it to keep delivering venom once detached. It is presumed that this complex apparatus, including the barbs on the sting, evolved specifically in response to predation by vertebrates, as the barbs do not function (and the sting apparatus does not detach) unless the sting is embedded in elastic material. Even then, the barbs do not always "catch", so a bee may occasionally pull the sting free and either fly off unharmed, or sting again.


===Aging===
Drone bees are the [[male]] bees of the colony. Since they do not have ovipositors, they also do not have stingers. Drone honeybees do not forage for nectar or pollen. In some species, drones are suspected of playing a contributing role in the temperature regulation of the hive. The primary purpose of a drone bee is to [[fertilization|fertilize]] a new queen. Multiple drones will mate with any given queen in flight, and each drone will die immediately after mating; the process of insemination requires a lethally convulsive effort. Drone honey bees are haploid (having single, unpaired chromosomes) in their genetic structure and are descended only from their mother, the queen. They truly do not have a [[father]]. In essence, drones are the equivalent of flying [[gametes]]. In regions of temperate climate, the drones are generally expelled from the hive before winter and die of cold and starvation, since they are unable to forage or produce honey or take care of themselves.


''Apis mellifera'' honey bees with high amounts of flight experience exhibit increased [[DNA damage (naturally occurring)|DNA damage]] in flight muscle, as measured by elevated [[8-Oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine]], compared to bees with less flight experience.<ref name = Margotta2018>{{cite journal|pmid=29724776 |date=2018 |last1=Margotta |first1=J. W. |last2=Roberts |first2=S. P. |last3=Elekonich |first3=M. M. |title=Effects of flight activity and age on oxidative damage in the honey bee, Apis mellifera |journal=The Journal of Experimental Biology |volume=221 |issue=Pt 14 |doi=10.1242/jeb.183228 }}</ref> This increased DNA damage is likely due to an imbalance of pro- and anti-oxidants during flight-associated [[oxidative stress]]. Flight induced oxidative DNA damage appears to hasten senescence and limit lifespan in ''A. mellifera''.<ref name = Margotta2018/>
The average lifespan of the queen in most subspecies is three to four years. However, there are reports that in the German/European Black Bee subspecies that was previously used for beekeeping, the queen was said to live 7 to 8 years or more.{{fact|date=August 2007}} Because queens successively run out of sperm, towards the end of their life they start laying more and more unfertilized eggs. Beekeepers therefore frequently change queens every or every other year.


===Communication===
The lifespan of the workers vary drastically over the year in places with an extended winter. Workers born in the spring will work hard and live only a few weeks, whereas those born in the autumn will stay inside for several months as the colony hibernates.
{{Main|Bee learning and communication}}
[[File:Bee swarm on fallen tree03.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Bees completely covering the base of a fallen tree|A large honey bee swarm on a fallen tree trunk]]
Western honey bee behavior has been extensively studied. [[Karl von Frisch]], who received the 1973 [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] for his study of honey bee communication, noticed that bees communicate with dance. Through these dances, bees communicate information regarding the distance, the situation, and the direction of a food source by the dances of the returning (honey bee) worker bee on the vertical comb of the hive.<ref name="Capinera2008">{{cite book|author=John L. Capinera|title=Encyclopedia of Entomology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i9ITMiiohVQC&pg=PA1534|date=11 August 2008|publisher=Springer Science & Business Media|isbn=978-1-4020-6242-1|pages=1534–}}</ref> Honey bees direct other bees to food sources with the [[Round dance (honey bee)|round dance]] and the [[waggle dance]]. Although the round dance tells other foragers that food is within {{convert|50|m}} of the hive, it provides insufficient information about direction. The waggle dance, which may be vertical or horizontal, provides more detail about the distance and direction of a food source. Foragers are also thought to rely on their [[Olfaction|olfactory sense]] to help locate a food source after they are directed by the dances.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}}


Western honey bees also change the precision of the waggle dance to indicate the type of site that is set as a new goal. Their close relatives, [[Apis florea|dwarf honey bee]]s, do not.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Beekman|first=Madeleine|display-authors=etal|title=Dance Precision of Apis florea—Clues to the Evolution of the Honeybee Dance Language?|journal=Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology|volume=62|issue=8|year=2008|pages=1259–1265|doi=10.1007/s00265-008-0554-z|s2cid=7402446}}</ref> Therefore, western honey bees seem to have evolved a better means of conveying information than their common ancestors with the dwarf honey bee.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Biewer|first1=Matthias|last2=Schlesinger|first2=Francisca|last3=Hasselmann|first3=Martin|title=The evolutionary dynamics of major regulators for sexual development among Hymenoptera species|journal=Frontiers in Genetics|date=10 April 2015|volume=6|pages=124|doi=10.3389/fgene.2015.00124|pmc=4392698|pmid=25914717|doi-access=free}}</ref>
Honey bee queens release [[pheromone]]s to regulate hive activities, and worker bees also produce pheromones for various communications (below).


Another means of communication is the shaking signal, also known as the jerking dance, vibration dance or vibration signal. Although the shaking signal is most common in worker communication, it also appears in reproductive swarming. A worker bee vibrates its body [[Anatomical terms of location#Dorsal and ventral|dorsoventrally]] while holding another bee with its front legs. Jacobus Biesmeijer, who examined shaking signals in a forager's life and the conditions leading to its performance, found that experienced foragers executed 92% of observed shaking signals and 64% of these signals were made after the discovery of a food source. About 71% of shaking signals occurred before the first five successful foraging flights of the day; other communication signals, such as the waggle dance, were performed more often after the first five successes. Biesmeijer demonstrated that most shakers are foragers and the shaking signal is most often executed by foraging bees on pre-foraging bees, concluding that it is a transfer message for several activities (or activity levels). Sometimes the signal increases activity, as when active bees shake inactive ones. At other times, such as the end of the day, the signal is an inhibitory mechanism. However, the shaking signal is preferentially directed towards inactive bees. All three forms of communication among honey bees are effective in foraging and task management.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}}
[[Image:Bee1web.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Honey bee with tongue partly extended]]


====Pheromones====
Bees produce [[honey]] by collecting nectar, which is a clear liquid consisting of nearly 80% water with complex sugars. The collecting bees store the nectar in a second [[stomach]] and return to the hive where worker bees remove the nectar. The worker bees digest the raw nectar for about 30 minutes using [[enzyme]]s to break up the complex sugars into simpler ones. Raw honey is then spread out in empty honeycomb cells to dry, which reduces the water content to less than 20%. When nectar is being processed, honeybees create a draft through the hive by fanning with their [[insect wing|wings]]. Once dried, the cells of the honeycomb are sealed (capped) with wax to preserve the honey.
{{Main|Honey bee pheromones}}
Pheromones (substances involved in chemical communication) are essential to honey bee survival. Western honey bees rely on pheromones for nearly all behaviors, including [[mating]], alarm, [[Self-defense|defense]], orientation, [[Kinship|kin]] and [[Colony (biology)|colony]] recognition, food production and integrating colony activities.<ref name=free>Free, John B., ''Pheromones of social bees''. Ithaca, N.Y.: Comstock, 1987.</ref><ref name=blum>Blum, M.S. 1992. Honey bee pheromones in The Hive and the Honey Bee, revised edition (Dadant and Sons: Hamilton, Illinois), pages 385–389.</ref>


The alarm pheromone has shown to be attractive to the [[small hive beetle]]. Therefore, there is a tradeoff between recruiting guards bees to defend the invaders and attract more beetles. The small hive beetle has a lower sensing threshold for the honeybee pheromone, which exacerbates the damage to honeybee hive.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Torto |first1=Baldwyn |last2=Boucias |first2=Drion G. |last3=Arbogast |first3=Richard T. |last4=Tumlinson |first4=James H. |last5=Teal |first5=Peter E. A. |date=2007-05-15 |title=Multitrophic interaction facilitates parasite–host relationship between an invasive beetle and the honey bee |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |volume=104 |issue=20 |pages=8374–8378 |doi=10.1073/pnas.0702813104 |doi-access=free |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=1895957 |pmid=17483478}}</ref>
When a hive detects smoke, many bees become remarkably non aggressive. It is speculated that this is a defense mechanism; wild colonies generally live in hollow trees, and when bees detect smoke it is presumed that they prepare to evacuate from a forest fire, carrying as much food reserve as they can. In order to do this, they will go to the nearest honey storage cells and gorge on honey. In this state they are quite docile since defense from predation is relatively unimportant; saving as much as possible is the most important activity.


===Sociality===
===Thermal regulation of the Honey bee===
There is some degree of variability of sociality between individuals.<ref name="Choi-et-al-2020" /><ref name="Individual-differences-trophallaxis-duration-SciTechDaily" /> Like a great many other social insects, ''A. mellifera'' engages in [[trophallaxis]].<ref name="Choi-et-al-2020" /><ref name="Individual-differences-trophallaxis-duration-SciTechDaily" /> When the duration of trophallaxis pairings was measured, it was found that like human social interactions, there are durable long-term trends for each individual bee.<ref name="Choi-et-al-2020" /><ref name="Individual-differences-trophallaxis-duration-SciTechDaily" /> There is less inter-individual variation than found in humans however, possibly reflecting the higher genetic relatedness between hivemates.


== Domestication ==
The honey bee needs an internal body temperature of 35 °C to fly, which is also the temperature within the cluster. The brood nest needs the same temperature over a long period to develop the brood, and it is the optimal temperature for the creation of wax.


[[File:Cueva arana.svg|thumb|upright=0.6|A [[Honey hunting|honey hunter]] in a [[cave painting]] at [[Cuevas de la Araña]], Spain, c. 8,000–6,000 BC]]
The temperature on the periphery of the cluster varies with the outside air temperature. In the [[winter cluster]], the inside temperature is as low as 20 - 22 °C.


[[File:AncientEgyptianRelief-BeeHieroglyph-ROM.png|thumb|upright|Bee [[Egyptian hieroglyphs|hieroglyph]] from the tomb complex of [[Senusret I]] (d. 1,926 BC)]]
Honey bees are able to forage over a 30 °C range of air temperature largely because they have behavioural and physiological mechanisms for regulating the temperature of their flight muscles. From very low to very high air temperatures, the successive mechanisms are shivering before flight and stopping flight for additional shivering, passive body temperature in a comfort range that is a function of work effort, and finally active heat dissipation by evaporative cooling from regurgitated honey sac contents. The body temperatures maintained differ depending on expected foraging rewards and on caste.
<ref>Heinrich, Bernd; Bee World 77:130-137 (1996) </ref>
The optimal air temperature for [[Forage (honey bee)|foraging]] is 22 - 25 °C. During flight, the rather large flight muscles create heat, which must dissipate. The honeybee uses a form of evaporative cooling to release heat through its mouth. Under hot conditions, heat from the thorax is dissipated through the head. The bee regurgitates a droplet of hot internal fluid--a "honeycrop droplet"--which immediately cools the head temperature by 10 °C. <ref>Heinrich, Bernd; Science Vol 205 pages 1269-1271 (1979)</ref>


{{Further|Domestication}}
Below 7-10 °C, bees become immobile due to the cold and above 38 °C bee activity slows due to heat. Honey bees can tolerate temperatures up to 50 °C for short periods.


Humans have been collecting honey from western honey bees for thousands of years, with evidence in the form of [[rock art]] found in [[France]] and [[Spain]],<ref>{{cite journal |issue=9 |url=https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/97006/UMURJ-Issue09_2012-EWeber.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |page=21 |title=Apis mellifera: The Domestication and Spread of European Honey Bees for Agriculture in North America |journal=University of Michigan Undergraduate Research Journal |date=Spring 2012 |last=Weber |first=Ella}}</ref> dating to around 7,000 BCE.<ref>{{cite book |page=58 |title=Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tzU3RIV2BWIC&pg=PA58 |first1=J. P. |last1=Mallory |first2=Douglas Q. |last2=Adams |isbn=9781884964985 |year=1997 |publisher=Taylor & Francis}}</ref> The western honey bee is one of the few [[invertebrate]] animals to have been [[Domestication|domesticated]]. Bees were likely first domesticated in [[ancient Egypt]], where [[tomb]] paintings depict beekeeping, before 2600 BC.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.fondazioneslowfood.com/en/ark-of-taste-slow-food/egyptian-honeybee/|title=Egyptian honeybee – Ark of taste}}</ref> Europeans brought bees to North America in 1622.<ref name=Weber/><ref>{{cite book |author=Crane |first=Eva |title=Evolution of domesticated animals |date=1984 |publisher=Longman |editor=Mason |editor-first=Ian L. |pages=403–415 |chapter=Chapter 65 – Honeybees |chapter-url=https://www.evacranetrust.org/uploads/document/043ab9271b79510bb840281828f77a5c09d4da5c.pdf}}</ref>
=== Honey bee queens===


[[Beekeeper]]s have selected western honey bees for several desirable features:<ref name=Weber>{{cite journal |author= Weber, Ella |url= https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/97006/UMURJ-Issue09_2012-EWeber.pdf?sequence=1 |title= ''Apis mellifera'' The Domestication and Spread of European Honey Bees for Agriculture in North America |journal= University of Michigan Undergraduate Research Journal |issue= 9 |date= 2012 |access-date= 21 March 2017}}</ref>
{{main|Queen bee}}


* the ability of a colony to survive periods with little food<ref name=Weber/>
[[Image:Queencell_0017.JPG|thumb|Peanut-like queen brood cells are extended outward from the brood comb]]
* the ability of a colony to survive cold weather<ref name=Weber/>
Periodically, the colony determines that a new queen is needed. There are three general triggers.
* resistance to disease<ref name=Weber/>
# The colony becomes space-constrained because the hive is filled with honey, leaving little room for new eggs. This will trigger a swarm where the old queen will take about half the worker bees to found a new colony, leaving the new queen with the other half of worker bees to continue the old colony.
* increased honey production<ref name=Weber/>
# The old queen begins to fail. This is thought to be recognized by a decrease in queen pheromones throughout the hive. This situation is called supersedure. At the end of the supersedure, the old queen is generally killed.
* reduced aggressiveness<ref name=Weber/>
# The old queen dies suddenly. This is an emergency supersedure. The worker bees will find several eggs or larvae in the right age-range and attempt to develop them into queens. Emergency supersedure can generally be recognized because the queen cell is built out from a regular cell of the comb rather than hanging from the bottom of a frame.
* reduced tendency to swarm<ref name=Weber/>
Regardless of the trigger, the workers develop the larvae into queens by continuing to feed them royal jelly. This triggers an extended development as a pupa.
* reduced nest building<ref name=Weber/>
* easy pacification with smoke<ref name=Weber/>


These modifications, along with artificial change of location, have improved western honey bees from the point of view of the beekeeper, and simultaneously made them more dependent on beekeepers for their survival. In Europe, cold weather survival was likely selected for, consciously or not, while in Africa, selection probably favoured the ability to survive heat, drought, and heavy rain.<ref name=Weber/>
When the virgin queen emerges, she is commonly thought to seek out other queen cells and sting the infant queens within and that should two queens emerge simultaneously, they will fight to the death. Recent studies, however, have indicated that colonies of ''Apis mellifera'' may maintain two queens in as many as 10% of hives. The mechanism by which this occurs is not yet known, but it has been reported to occur more frequently in some South African subspecies of ''Apis mellifera''.{{fact|date=August 2007}} Regardless, the queen asserts her control over the worker bees through the release of a complex suite of pheromones called queen scent.


Authors do not agree on whether this degree of [[Selective breeding|artificial selection]] constitutes genuine domestication. In 1603, [[John Guillim]] wrote "The Bee I may well reckon a domestic insect, being so pliable to the benefit of the keeper."<ref>{{cite book |last1= Guillim |first1= John |title= A Display of Heraldry|date= 1603 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=4FwzAQAAMAAJ}}</ref> More recently, many biologists working on pollination take the domesticated status of western honey bees for granted.<ref>{{cite journal|last1= Aizen |first1= Marcelo A. |last2= Harder |first2= Lawrence D. |title= The Global Stock of Domesticated Honey Bees Is Growing Slower Than Agricultural Demand for Pollination |journal= Current Biology |date= 2009 |volume= 19 |issue= 11 |pages= 915–918 |doi= 10.1016/j.cub.2009.03.071|pmid= 19427214 |s2cid= 12353259 |doi-access= free |bibcode= 2009CBio...19..915A }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1= Potts |first1= Simon G.|display-authors=etal |title= Global pollinator declines: Trends, impacts and drivers |journal= Trends in Ecology & Evolution |date= 2010 |volume= 25 |issue= 6 |pages= 345–353 |doi= 10.1016/j.tree.2010.01.007 |url= https://www.researchgate.net/publication/41621021 |pmid= 20188434|citeseerx= 10.1.1.693.292 }}</ref> For example, Rachael Winfree and colleagues write "We used crop pollination as a model system, and investigated whether the loss of a domesticated pollinator (the honey bee) could be compensated for by native, wild bee species."<ref>{{cite journal |last1= Winfree|first1= Rachael|display-authors=etal |title= Native bees provide insurance against ongoing honey bee loss |journal= Ecology Letters |date= 2007 |volume= 10 |issue= 11 |pages= 1105–1113 |doi= 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2007.01110.x |pmid= 17877737 |bibcode= 2007EcolL..10.1105W|url= https://www.researchgate.net/publication/5964806}}</ref> Similarly, Brian Dennis and William Kemp write: "Although the domestication of the honey bee is closely connected to the evolution of food-based socio-economic systems in many cultures throughout the world, in current economic terms, and in the U.S. alone, the estimated wholesale value of honey, more than $317 million dollars in 2013, pales in comparison to aggregate estimated annual value of pollination services, variously valued at $11–15 billion."<ref>{{cite web |last1= Dennis |first1= Brian |last2= Kemp |first2= William |title= Allee effects and colony collapse disorder in honey bees |url= https://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publication/?seqNo115=311612|publisher= United States Department of Agriculture|access-date= 22 March 2017 |date= 1 October 2015}}</ref>
After several days of orientation within and around the hive, the young queen flies to a drone congregation point - a site near a clearing and generally about {{convert|30|ft|m}} above the ground where the drones from different hives tend to congregate in a swirling aerial mass. Drones detect the presence of a queen in their congregation area by her smell, and then find her by sight and mate with her in midair (drones can be induced to mate with "dummy" queens if they have the queen pheromone applied). A queen will mate multiple times and may leave to mate several days in a row, weather permitting, until her [[spermatheca]] is full.


On the other hand, P. R. Oxley and B. P. Oldroyd (2010) consider the domestication of western honey bees, at best, partial.<ref>{{cite book |author=Oxley, P.R. |title=The genetic architecture of bee breeding |author2=Oldroyd, B. P. |date=2010 |isbn=9780123813879 |series=Advances in Insect Physiology |volume=39 |pages=83–118 |doi=10.1016/B978-0-12-381387-9.00003-8}}</ref> Oldroyd observes that the lack of full domestication is somewhat surprising, given that people have kept bees for at least 7,000 years. Instead, beekeepers have found ways to manage bees using hives, while the bees remain "largely unchanged from their wild cousins".<ref>{{cite journal |last1= Oldroyd |first1= Benjamin P. |title= Domestication of honey bees was associated with expansion of genetic diversity |journal= Molecular Ecology |date= 2012 |volume= 21 |issue= 18 |pages= 4409–4411 |doi= 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2012.05641.x |pmid= 22967058 |bibcode= 2012MolEc..21.4409O |s2cid= 38988310 |url= https://www.researchgate.net/publication/230831542}}</ref>
The queen lays all the eggs in a healthy colony. The number and pace of egg-laying is controlled by weather and availability of resources and by the characteristics of the specific race of honeybee. Honey bee queens generally begin to slow egg-laying in the early-fall and may even stop during the winter. Egg-laying will generally resume in late winter as soon as the days begin to get longer. Egg-laying generally peaks in the spring. At the height of the season, she may lay over 2500 eggs per day - more than her own body mass.


Leslie Bailey and B. V. Ball, in their book ''Honey Bee Pathology'', call western honey bees "feral insects", in contrast to the [[Bombyx mori|domestic silk moth]] (''Bombyx mori'') which they call "the only insect that has been domesticated", and refer to the "popular belief among many biologists as well as beekeepers that bees are domesticated". They argue that western honey bees are able to survive without human help, and in fact require to "be left at liberty" to survive. Further, they argue that even if bees could be raised away from the wild, they would still have to fly freely to gather nectar and pollinate plants. Therefore, they argue, beekeeping is "the exploitation of colonies of a wild insect", with little more than the provision of a weatherproof cavity for them to nest in.<ref>{{cite book |last1= Bailey |first1= Leslie |last2= Ball |first2= B. V. |title= Honey Bee Pathology |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=JjfLBAAAQBAJ&pg=PP1 |year= 2013 |publisher= Elsevier |isbn= 978-1-4832-8809-3 |pages= 7–8}}</ref> Likewise, Pilar de la Rua and colleagues argue that western honey bees are not fully domesticated, because "endemic subspecies-specific genetic footprints can still be identified in Europe and Africa", making conservation of wild bee diversity important. Further, they argue that the difficulty of controlling drones for mating is a serious handicap and a sign that domestication is not complete, in particular as "extensive gene flow usually occurs between wild/feral and managed honeybee populations".<ref>
The queen fertilizes each egg as it is being laid using stored sperm from the spermatheca. The queen will occasionally not fertilize an egg. These eggs, having only half as many genes as the queen or the workers, develop into drones.
{{cite journal
|last1= De la Rua |first1= Pilar|display-authors=etal
|title= Conserving genetic diversity in the honeybee: Comments on Harpur et al. (2012)
|journal= Molecular Ecology |date= 2013 |volume= 22
|issue= 12|pages= 3208–3210 |doi= 10.1111/mec.12333
|pmid= 24433572
|s2cid= 23971180|doi-access= free|bibcode= 2013MolEc..22.3208D}}
</ref>


===Genome===
==Beekeeping==


{{Main|Beekeeping}}
The Western honey bee is the third insect, after the [[fruit fly]] and the [[mosquito]], to have its genome mapped. According to the scientists who analysed its genetic code, the honey bee originated in Africa and spread to Europe in two ancient migrations.<ref>{{cite journal | first = CW | last = Whitfield | coauthors = Behura SK, Berlocher SH, Clark AG, Johnston JS, Sheppard WS, Smith DR, Suarez AV, Weaver D, Tsutsui ND | year = 2006 | month = Oct 27 | title = Thrice out of Africa: ancient and recent expansions of the honey bee, Apis mellifera | journal = Science | volume = 314 | issue = 5799 | pages = 642-5 | id = PMID 17068261 | accessdate = 2006-12-01}}</ref> They have also discovered that the number of genes in the honey bees related to smell outnumber those for taste, and they have fewer genes for immunity than the fruit fly and the mosquito. <ref>{{cite journal | first = | last = Honeybee Genome Sequencing Consortium | authorlink =Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium | year = 2006 | month = Oct 26 | title = Insights into social insects from the genome of the honeybee Apis mellifera | journal = Nature | volume = 443 | issue = 7114 | pages = 931-49 | id = PMID 17073008 | accessdate = 2006-12-01}}</ref> The genome sequence revealed several groups of genes, particularly the genes related to [[circadian rhythms]], were closer to vertebrates than other insects. Genes related to enzymes that control other genes were also vertabratelike.<ref>{{cite journal | first = Y | last = Wang | coauthors = Jorda M, Jones PL, Maleszka R, Ling X, Robertson HM, Mizzen CA, Peinado MA, Robinson GE | year = 2006 | month = Oct 27 | title = Functional CpG methylation system in a social insect | journal = Science | volume = 314 | issue = 5799 | pages = 645-7 | id = PMID 17068262 | accessdate = 2006-12-01}}</ref>


{{More citations needed section|date=March 2017|talk=Talk:Western_honey_bee#Refimprove_section_tag}}
See also: [[Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium]]


[[File:Apis mellifera (queen and workers).jpg|thumb|right|upright|alt=Larger, solid-brown queen with striped workers|Queen bee with workers]]
===Honey bee pheromones===
Honey bees use [[pheromone (honey bee)|special pheromones]], or chemical communication, for almost all behaviors of life. Such uses include (but are not limited to): [[mating]], alarm, [[Self-defense|defense]], orientation, [[kin]] and [[colony]] recognition, food production, and integration of colony activities. Pheromones are thus essential to honey bees for their survival.


The western honey bee is a [[Colony (biology)|colonial]] [[insect]] which is housed, transported by and sometimes fed by beekeepers. Honey bees do not survive and reproduce individually, but as part of the colony (a [[superorganism]]).
===Honey bee communication===


Western honey bees collect flower nectar and convert it to [[honey]], which is stored in the hive. The nectar, transported in the bees' stomachs, is converted with the addition of [[digestive enzyme]]s and storage in a honey cell for partial dehydration. Nectar and honey provide the energy for the bees' flight muscles and for heating the hive during the winter. Western honey bees also collect [[pollen]] which, after being processed to [[Bee pollen|bee bread]], supplies protein and fat for the [[bee brood]] to grow. Centuries of [[selective breeding]] by humans have created western honey bees which produce far more honey than the colony needs, and beekeepers (also known as apiarists) harvest the surplus honey.
{{main|Bee learning and communication}}


[[File:Western Honey Bees and Honeycomb Closeup.JPG|thumb|left|alt=Many honey bees on a comb|Honey bees removed from the hive for inspection by a beekeeper]]
[[Image:Bee swarm on fallen tree03.jpg|thumb|250px|A large honey bee swarm on a fallen tree trunk]]


Beekeepers provide a place for the colony to live and store honey. There are seven basic types of [[beehive]]: [[Beehive#Skep|skeps]], [[Langstroth hive]]s, [[Horizontal top-bar hive|top-bar hives]], [[Beehive#Box hive|box hives]], [[Beehive#Log gum|log gums]], D. E. hives, and miller hives.<ref name=caron/> All U.S. states require beekeepers to use movable frames to allow bee inspectors to check the brood for disease. This allows beekeepers to keep Langstroth, top-bar and D.E. hives without special permission, granted for purposes such as museum use. Modern hives also enable beekeepers to transport bees, moving from field to field as crops require pollinating (a source of income for beekeepers).
Honey bees are an excellent animal to study with regards to behavior because they are abundant and familiar to most people. An animal that is disregarded every day has very specific behaviors that go unnoticed by the normal person. [[Karl von Frisch]] studied the behavior of honey bees with regards to communication and was awarded the [[Nobel Prize]] for physiology and medicine in 1973. Von Frisch noticed that honey bees communicate with the language of dance. Honey bees are able to direct other bees to food sources through the [[Round dance (honey bee)|round dance]] and the [[waggle dance]]. The round dance tells the other foragers that food is within 50 meters of the hive, but it does not provide much information regarding direction. The waggle dance, which may be vertical or horizontal, provides more detail about both the distance and the direction of the located food source. It is also hypothesized that the bees rely on their olfactory sense to help locate the food source once the foragers are given directions from the dances.


In cold climates, some beekeepers have kept colonies alive (with varying degrees of success) by moving them indoors for winter. While this can protect the colonies from extremes of temperature and make winter care and feeding more convenient for the beekeeper, it increases the risk of [[List of diseases of the honey bee|dysentery]] and causes an excessive buildup of [[carbon dioxide]] from the bees' [[Respiration (physiology)|respiration]]. Inside wintering has been refined by Canadian beekeepers, who use large barns solely for the wintering of bees; automated ventilation systems assist in carbon dioxide dispersal.
Another signal for communication is the shaking signal, also known as the jerking dance, vibration dance, or vibration signal. It is a modulatory communication signal because it appears to manipulate the overall arousal or activity of behaviors. The shaking signal is most common in worker communication, but it is also evident in reproductive swarming. A worker bee vibrates its body dorsoventrally while holding another honey bee with its front legs. Jacobus Biesmeijer examined the incidence of shaking signals in a forager’s life and the conditions that led to its performance to investigate why the shaking signal is used in communication for food sources. Biesmeijer found that the experienced foragers executed 92.1% of the observed shaking signals. He also observed that 64% of the shaking signals were executed by experienced foragers after they had discovered a food source. About 71% of the shaking signal sessions occurred after the first five foraging success within one day. Then other communication signals, such as the waggle dance, were performed more often after the first five successes. Biesmeijer proved that most shakers are foragers and that the shaking signal is most often executed by foraging bees over pre-foraging bees. Beismeijer concluded that the shaking signal presents the overall message of transfer work for various activities or activity levels. Sometimes the signal serves to increase activity, when bees shake inactive bees. At other times, the signal serves as an inhibitory mechanism such as the shaking signal at the end of the day. However, the shaking signal is preferentially directed towards inactive bees. All three types of communication between honey bees are effective in their jobs with regards to foraging and task managing.


=== Products ===
:"The general story of the communication of the distance, the situation, and the direction of a food source by the dances of the returning (honey bee) worker bee on the vertical comb of the hive, has been known in general outline from the work of [[Karl von Frisch]] in the middle 1950s."


[[File:Western honey bee (Apis mellifera).webm|thumb|Western honey bee in a park in Tokyo]]
For a discussion of bees' cognition, response to training, varieties of dance, and use of odors, see ''[[Bee learning and communication]]''.
[[File:Bear Branch Nature Center Beehives.JPG|thumb|alt=Beehives beside a field|Beehives set up for pollination]]
[[File:Bee on crocus.ogv|thumb|right|alt=Bee collecting pollen from a blue crocus|Video of western honey bee collecting pollen from blue crocuses]]
[[File:Apis mellifera flying.jpg|thumb|alt=Bee in flight, carrying pollen in a yellow container large for its size|Western honey bee carrying pollen in a [[Pollen basket|basket]] back to the hive]]


===Social choice lessons from honey bees===
=== Honey bees ===
Honey bees are one of the products of a beehive. They can be purchased as mated queens, in spring packages of a queen along with two to five pounds (0.91 to 2.27 kg) of honey bees, as nucleus colonies (which include frames of brood), or as full colonies. Commerce of western honey bees dates back to as early as 1622, when the first colonies of bees were shipped from [[England]] to [[Virginia]]. Modern methods of producing queens and dividing colonies for increase date back to the late 1800s. Honey was extracted by killing off the hive, and bees and bee products were mainly an object of local trade. The first commercial beekeeper in the [[United States]] is considered Moses Quinby of [[New York (state)|New York]], who experimented with movable box hives, which allow extraction without killing the hive. The improvements in roads and motor vehicles after World War I allowed commercial beekeepers to expand the size of their businesses.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://beesource.com/resources/usda/history-of-beekeeping-in-the-united-states/|title=History of Beekeeping in the United States {{!}} Beesource Beekeeping|date=24 February 2016 |language=en-US|access-date=2019-05-01}}</ref>
Honey bees have been shown to employ what in human terms would be called [[range voting]] to
make hive-relocation decisions, see Myerscough (2003), Lindauer (1971) and this
[http://www.rangevoting.org/ApisMellifera.html essay] at the
[http://www.rangevoting.org Center for Range Voting].


==Beekeeping==
=== Pollination ===
[[File:Méh (2).jpg|thumb|Western honey bee pollinating a flower]]
{{Main|Pollination management|List of crop plants pollinated by bees}}


The western honey bee is an important [[pollinator]] of crops; this service accounts for much of the species' commercial value. In 2005, the estimated commercial value of western honey bees was just under $200 billion worldwide.<ref>{{cite web |page=1 |url=http://cues.cfans.umn.edu/old/pollinators/pdf-value/EconomicValueCommercialBeekeeping.pdf |title=Economic Value of Commercial Beekeeping |work=Pesticide Action Network North America |access-date=9 May 2019}}</ref> A large number of the crop species farmed worldwide depend on it.<ref>{{cite web |page=1 |url=http://www.ecpa.eu/sites/default/files/Pollinators%20brochure_B%C3%A0T2.pdf |title=Pollinators and agriculture: Agricultural productivity and pollinator protection |work=European Crop Protection |access-date=1 September 2018}}</ref> Although orchards and fields have increased in size, [[Pollinator decline|wild pollinators have dwindled]]. In a number of regions the pollination shortage is addressed by migratory beekeepers, who supply hives during a crop bloom and move them after the blooming period. Commercial beekeepers plan their movements and wintering locations according to anticipated pollination services. At higher latitudes it is difficult (or impossible) to overwinter sufficient bees, or to have them ready for early blooming plants. Much migration is seasonal, with hives wintering in warmer climates and moving to follow the bloom at higher latitudes.
{{main|Beekeeping}}


In [[California]], [[almond]] pollination occurs in February, early in the [[growing season]] before local hives have built up their populations. Almond [[orchard]]s require two hives per acre, or {{Convert|2000|m2||abbr=on|adj=}} per hive, for maximum yield, and pollination is dependent on the importation of hives from warmer climates. Almond pollination (in February and March in the U.S.) is the largest [[Pollination management|managed pollination]] event in the world, requiring more than one-third of all managed honey bees in the country. Bees are also moved en masse for pollination of apples in [[New York (state)|New York]], [[Michigan]], and [[Washington (state)|Washington]]. Despite honey bees' inefficiency as blueberry pollinators,<ref>{{cite journal |author1=S. K. Javorekac |author2=K. E. Mackenziec |author3=S. P. Vander Kloetbc |year=2002 |title=Comparative pollination effectiveness among bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) on lowbush blueberry (Ericaceae: ''Vaccinium angustifolium'') |journal=[[Annals of the Entomological Society of America]] |volume=95 |issue=3 |pages=345–351 |doi=10.1603/0013-8746(2002)095[0345:CPEABH]2.0.CO;2|s2cid=86364277 |doi-access=free }}</ref> large numbers are moved to Maine because they are the only pollinators who can be easily moved and concentrated for this and other [[monoculture]] crops. Bees and other insects maintain [[flower constancy]] by transferring pollen to other [[Biological specificity|biologically specific]] plants;<ref name="Harder2001">{{cite book |author=Lawrence D. Harder, Neal M. Williams, Crispin Y. Jordan & William A. Nelson |year=2001 |chapter=The effects of floral design and display on pollinator economics and pollen dispersal |pages=[https://archive.org/details/cognitiveecology00chit/page/n312 297]–317 |editor1=Lars Chittka |editor2=James D. Thomson |title=Cognitive Ecology of Pollination: Animal Behaviour and Floral Evolution |url=https://archive.org/details/cognitiveecology00chit |url-access=limited |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |isbn=978-0-511-54226-8 |doi=10.1017/CBO9780511542268.016}}</ref> this prevents flower [[Stigma (botany)|stigmas]] from being clogged with pollen from other species.<ref name="Chittka1999" >{{cite journal |author=Lars Chittka, James D. Thomson & Nickolas M. Waser |year=1999 |title=Flower constancy, insect psychology, and plant evolution |journal=[[Naturwissenschaften]] |volume=86 |issue=8 |pages=361–377 |url=http://eebweb.arizona.edu/faculty/dornhaus/courses/materials/papers/Chittka%20Thomson%20Waser%20flower%20constancy%20neural%20limitations.pdf |doi=10.1007/s001140050636|bibcode=1999NW.....86..361C |s2cid=27377784 }}</ref> In 2000, Drs. [[Roger Morse]] and Nicholas Calderone of [[Cornell University]] attempted to quantify the effects of the western honey bee on American food crops. Their calculations came up with a figure of US$14.6 billion in food crop value.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.masterbeekeeper.org/pdf/pollination.pdf |title=The Value of Honey Bees As Pollinators of U.S. Crops in 2000 |author1=Roger Morse|author2=Nicholas Calderone|publisher=[[Cornell University]]|year=2000|access-date=2016-02-08 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140722231655/http://www.masterbeekeeper.org/pdf/pollination.pdf |archive-date=2014-07-22 |author1-link=Roger Morse }}</ref>
[[Image:Bienenkoenigin.JPG|frame|left|Queen (The yellow dot on the thorax was added by a beekeeper to aid in finding the queen. She was probably born in 1997 or 2002; see the [[Queen bee|Queen]] article for an explanation of the dot color conventions.)]]


=== Honey ===
The '''honey bee''' is a [[colony (biology)|colonial]] [[insect]] that is often maintained, fed, and transported by [[beekeeping|beekeepers]]. Honey bees do not survive individually, but rather as part of the colony. Reproduction is also accomplished at the colony level. Colonies are often referred to as [[superorganism]]s.
{{Main|Honey}}
Honey is the complex substance made from nectar and sweet deposits from plants and trees, which are gathered, modified and stored in the comb by honey bees.<ref name="Crane1990">{{cite journal | author= Crane E| title = Honey from honeybees and other insects | journal = Ethology Ecology & Evolution | volume = 3 | issue = sup1 | pages = 100–105 | year = 1990 | doi = 10.1080/03949370.1991.10721919| author-link = Eva Crane }}</ref> Honey is a biological mixture of inverted sugars, primarily [[glucose]] and [[fructose]]. It has antibacterial and anti-fungal properties. Honey from the western honey bee, along with the bee ''[[Tetragonisca angustula]]'', has specific antibacterial activity towards an infection-causing bacteria, ''[[Staphylococcus aureus]]''.<ref name="Miorin- Honey">{{cite journal |last1=Miorin |first1=P.L. |last2=Levy Junior |first2=N.C. |last3=Custodio |first3=A.R. |last4=Bretz |first4=W.A. |last5=Marcucci |first5=M.C. |title=Antibacterial activity of honey and propolis from Apis mellifera and Tetragonisca angustula against Staphylococcus aureus |journal=Journal of Applied Microbiology |date=November 2003 |volume=95 |issue=5 |pages=913–920 |doi=10.1046/j.1365-2672.2003.02050.x|pmid=14633019 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Berenbaum |first1=May R. |last2=Calla |first2=Bernarda |title=Honey as a Functional Food for Apis mellifera |journal=[[Annual Review of Entomology]] |date=2021 |volume=66 |issue=1 |pages=185–208 |doi=10.1146/annurev-ento-040320-074933 |doi-access=free|pmid=32806934 }}</ref> Honey will not rot or ferment when stored under normal conditions, but it will [[Crystallization|crystallize]] over time. Although crystallized honey is acceptable for human use, bees can only use liquid honey and will remove and discard any crystallized honey from the hive.


[[File:Bee1web.jpg|thumb|Western honey bee with its [[proboscis]] partially extended]]
Honey bees collect flower nectar and convert it to [[honey]] which is stored in their hives. The nectar is transported in the stomach of the bees, and is converted to honey through the addition of various digestive enzymes, and by being stored in a 'honey cell' and then partially dehydrated. Nectar and honey provide the energy for the bees' flight muscles and for heating the hive during the winter period. Honey bees also collect [[pollen]] which supplies protein and fat for [[brood (honeybee)|bee brood]] to grow. Centuries of selective breeding by humans have created honey bees that produce far more honey than the colony needs. [[Beekeeping|Beekeepers]], also known as "apiarists," harvest the honey.
[[File:Western honey bee on a honeycomb.jpg|thumb|Western honey bee on a honeycomb]]


Bees produce honey by collecting [[nectar]], a clear liquid consisting of nearly 80 percent water and complex sugars. The collecting bees store the nectar in a second [[stomach]] and return to the hive, where worker bees remove the nectar. The worker bees digest the raw nectar for about 30 minutes, using digestive enzymes to break down the complex sugars into simpler ones. Raw honey is then spread in empty honeycomb cells to dry, reducing its water content to less than 20 percent. When nectar is being processed, honey bees create a draft through the hive by fanning with their [[Insect wing|wings]]. When the honey has dried, the honeycomb cells are sealed (capped) with wax to preserve it.
Beekeepers often provide a place for the colony to live and to store honey. There are seven basic types of [[beehive (beekeeping)|beehive]]: [[skep]]s, [[Langstroth hive]]s, [[top-bar hive]]s, [[box hive]]s, [[log gum]]s, [[D.E. hive]]s and [[miller hive]]s. All U.S. states require beekeepers to use movable frames to allow bee inspectors to check the brood for disease. This allows beekeepers to keep the Langstroth, top-bar, and D.E. hives freely, but other types of hives require special permitting, such as for museum use. The type of beehive used significantly impacts colony health and wax and honey production.


=== Beeswax ===
Modern hives also enable beekeepers to transport bees, moving from field to field as the crop needs pollinating and allowing the beekeeper to charge for the pollination services they provide.
{{Main|Beeswax}}
Mature worker bees secrete beeswax from glands on their abdomen, using it to form the walls and caps of the comb.<ref name=Sanford>{{cite journal|last1=Sanford|first1=M.T.|last2=Dietz|first2=A.|year=1976|title=The fine structure of the wax gland of the honey bee (Apis mellifera L.).|journal=Apidologie|volume=7|issue=3|pages=197–207|doi=10.1051/apido:19760301|url=https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00890403/file/hal-00890403.pdf|doi-access=free}}</ref> When honey is harvested, the wax can be collected for use in products like [[candle]]s and [[Seal (device)|seals]].


=== Bee bread ===
In cold climates some beekeepers have kept colonies alive (with varying success) by moving them indoors for winter. While this can protect the colonies from extremes of temperature and make winter care and feeding more convenient for the beekeeper, it can increase the risk of [[dysentery]] (see the ''Nosema'' section of [[diseases of the honeybee|diseases of the honey bee]]) and can create an excessive buildup of [[carbon dioxide]] from the respiration of the bees. Recently, inside wintering has been refined by Canadian beekeepers, who build large barns just for wintering bees. Automated ventilation systems assist in the control of carbon dioxide build-up.
{{Further|Bee pollen}}
Bees collect [[pollen]] in a [[pollen basket]] and carry it back to the hive where, after undergoing [[fermentation]] and turning into [[Bee pollen|bee bread]], it becomes a [[protein]] source for brood-rearing.<ref>{{cite book |author=Gillott, Cedric |title=Entomology |publisher=Springer |year=1995 |page=79}}</ref> Excess pollen can be collected from the hive; although it is sometimes consumed as a dietary supplement by humans, bee pollen may cause an [[Allergy|allergic reaction]] in susceptible individuals.


===Ancient beekeeping===
=== Bee brood ===
{{Main|Bee brood#As food}}
Bee brood, the eggs, larvae, or pupae of honey bees, is edible and highly nutritious. Bee brood contains the same amount of protein that beef or poultry does. Bee brood is often harvested as a byproduct when the beekeeper has excess bees and does not wish to have any more.


=== Propolis ===
[[Archaeologist]] [[Amihai Mazar]] of [[Jerusalem]]'s [[Hebrew University]] said that findings in the [[ruins]] of the city of [[Rehov]] (with 2,000 residents at that time, [[Israelites]] and [[Canaanites]]) include 30 intact hives, 900 B.C., [[evidence]] that an advanced [[honey]] [[industry]] existed in the [[Holy Land]] at the time of the [[Bible]] or 3,000 years ago. The beehives, made of [[straw]] and unbaked [[clay]] were found in orderly rows, with 100 hives. Ezra Marcus, [[expert]] of [[Haifa University]], said the finding was a glimpse of [[ancient]] beekeeping seen in texts and ancient [[art]] from the [[Near East]]. [[Religious]] practice was evidenced by an [[altar]] decorated with [[fertility]] [[figurines]] found alongside the hives. Beekeeping as a practice is known to predate these ruins, but this is the oldest actual [[apiary]] ever found.<ref>[http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070905/ap_on_sc/ancient_honey;_ylt=ApX_cnDrIS2D05PENWgwNlOs0NUE Yahoo.com, Archaeologists discover ancient beehives]</ref>
{{Main|Propolis}}
Propolis is a resinous mixture collected by honey bees from tree buds, sap flows or other botanical sources, which is used as a sealant for unwanted open spaces in the hive.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Simone-Finstrom |first1=Michael |last2=Spivak |first2=Marla |doi=10.1051/apido/2010016 |title=Propolis and bee health: The natural history and significance of resin use by honey bees |journal=Apidologie |volume=41 |issue=3 |pages=295–311 |date=May–June 2010|doi-access=free |hdl=11299/182451 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> Although propolis is alleged to have health benefits (tincture of propolis is marketed as a cold and flu remedy), it may cause severe allergic reactions in some individuals.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginfo/natural/390.html|title=Propolis:MedlinePlus Supplements|publisher=U.S. National Library of Medicine |date= January 19, 2012}}</ref> Propolis is also used in wood finishes, and gives a [[Stradivarius]] violin its unique red color.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Gambichler T |author2=Boms S |author3=Freitag M |title=Contact dermatitis and other skin conditions in instrumental musicians |journal=BMC Dermatol. |volume=4|pages=3 |date=April 2004 |pmid=15090069 |pmc=416484 |doi=10.1186/1471-5945-4-3 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


=== Products of the honey bee ===
=== Royal jelly ===
{{Main|Royal jelly}}
====Pollination====
Royal jelly is a honey bee secretion used to nourish the larvae and queen.<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Jung-Hoffmann | first1=L | year=1966 | title=Die Determination von Königin und Arbeiterin der Honigbiene | journal=Z Bienenforsch | volume=8 | pages=296–322 }}</ref> It is marketed for its alleged but unsupported claims of health benefits.<ref>{{cite journal | journal = EFSA Journal | date = 2011 | volume = 9 | issue = 4| pages = 2083 | title = Scientific Opinion | doi = 10.2903/j.efsa.2011.2083 | doi-access = free }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = https://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm207416.htm | title = Federal Government Seizes Dozens of Misbranded Drug Products: FDA warned company about making medical claims for bee-derived products | date = Apr 5, 2010 | publisher = [[Food and Drug Administration]]}}</ref> On the other hand, it may cause severe allergic reactions in some individuals.<ref>{{cite journal | pmid = 9088660 | volume=27 | issue=3 | title=Royal jelly consumption and hypersensitivity in the community |date=March 1997 | journal=Clin. Exp. Allergy | pages=333–6 | doi = 10.1111/j.1365-2222.1997.tb00712.x | last1 = Leung | first1 = R | last2 = Ho | first2 = A | last3 = Chan | first3 = J | last4 = Choy | first4 = D | last5 = Lai | first5 = CK| s2cid=19626487 }}</ref>


==Genome==
{{main|Pollination management}}
{{See also|Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium|List of Apis mellifera subspecies}}{{Further|DNA methylation}}
{{main|List of plants pollinated by bees}}
Female bees are [[diploid]] and have 32 [[chromosomes]], whereas males are [[haploid]] and have only 16.


As of October 28, 2006, the [[Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium]] fully sequenced and analyzed the [[genome]] of ''Apis mellifera,'' the western honey bee. Since 2007, attention has been devoted to [[colony collapse disorder]], a decline in western honey bee colonies in a number of regions.
[[Image:Pumpkin_pollination4365.jpg|thumb|left|Beehives set up for pollination]]
The honey bee's primary commercial value is as a [[pollinator]] of crops. Orchards and fields have grown larger; at the same time [[pollinator decline|wild pollinators have dwindled]]. In several areas of the world the pollination shortage is compensated by migratory beekeeping, with beekeepers supplying the hives during the crop bloom and moving them after bloom is complete. In many higher latitude locations it is difficult or impossible to winter over enough bees, or at least to have them ready for early blooming plants, so much of the migration is seasonal, with many hives wintering in warmer climates and moving to follow the bloom to higher latitudes.


The western honey bee is the third insect, after the [[Drosophila melanogaster|fruit fly]] and the [[mosquito]], whose genome has been mapped. According to scientists who analyzed its genetic code, the honey bee originated in Africa and spread to Europe in two ancient migrations.<ref name="Charles W. Whitfield, Susanta K. Behura, Stewart H. Berlocher, Andrew G. Clark, J. Spencer Johnston, Walter S. Sheppard, Deborah R. Smith, Andrew V. Suarez, Daniel Weaver & Neil D. Tsutsui 2006 642–645" /> Scientists have found that [[gene]]s related to smell outnumber those for taste, and the European honey bee has fewer genes regulating [[Immunity (medical)|immunity]] than the fruit fly and the mosquito.<ref name="genome">{{cite journal |author=Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium | year = 2006 | title = Insights into social insects from the genome of the honeybee ''Apis mellifera'' | journal = [[Nature (journal)|Nature]] | volume = 443 | issue = 7114 | pages = 931–949 | pmid = 17073008 | doi = 10.1038/nature05260 | pmc = 2048586| bibcode = 2006Natur.443..931T | author-link = Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium }}</ref> The genome sequence also revealed that several groups of genes, particularly those related to [[circadian rhythm]], resembled those of vertebrates more than other insects. Another significant finding from the honey bee genome study was that the western honey bee was the first insect to be discovered with a functional [[DNA methylation]] system since functional key enzymes ([[DNA methyltransferase-1]] and [[DNA methyltransferase|-3]]) were identified in the genome. DNA methylation is one of the important mechanisms in [[epigenetics]] to study gene expression and [[Gene regulation|regulation]] without changing the DNA sequence, but modifications on DNA activity.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Ying Wang, Mireia Jorda, Peter L. Jones, Ryszard Maleszka, Xu Ling, Hugh M. Robertson, Craig A. Mizzen, Miguel A. Peinado & Gene E. Robinson | year = 2006 |title = Functional CpG methylation system in a social insect | journal = [[Science (journal)|Science]] | volume = 314 | issue = 5799 | pages = 645–647 | pmid = 17068262 | doi = 10.1126/science.1135213| bibcode = 2006Sci...314..645W | s2cid = 31709665 }}</ref> DNA methylation later was identified to play an important role in gene regulation and [[gene splicing]].<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Li-Byarlay | first1 = Hongmei | last2 = Li | first2 = Yang | last3 = Stroud | first3 = Hume | last4 = Feng | first4 = Suhua | last5 = Newman | first5 = Thomas C | last6 = Kaneda | first6 = Megan | last7 = Hou | first7 = Kirk K | last8 = Worley | first8 = Kim C | last9 = Elsik | first9 = Christine G | last10 = Wickline | first10 = Samuel A | last11 = Jacobsen | first11 = Steven E | last12 = Ma | first12 = Jian | last13 = Robinson | first13 = Gene E | year = 2013 | title = RNA interference knockdown of DNA methyl-transferase 3 affects gene alternative splicing in the honey bee | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume = 110 | issue = 31| pages = 12750–12755 | doi=10.1073/pnas.1310735110 | pmid=23852726 | pmc=3732956| bibcode = 2013PNAS..11012750L | doi-access = free }}</ref> The genome is unusual in having few [[transposable element]]s, although they were present in the evolutionary past (remains and fossils have been found) and evolved more slowly than those in fly species.<ref name="genome" />
As an example, in [[California]], the pollination of [[almond]]s occurs in February, early in the growing season, before local hives have built up their populations. Almond [[orchard]]s require two hives per [[acre]] (2,000 m² per hive) for maximum yield and so the pollination is highly dependent upon the importation of hives from warmer climates. Almond pollination, which occurs in February and March, is the largest managed pollination event in the world, requiring more than one third of all the managed honey bees in the United States. Massive movement of honey bee are also made for apples in [[New York]], [[Michigan]], and [[Washington]]. And despite the inefficiency of honey bees in pollinating blueberries<ref>Javorek SK, Mackenzie KE, Vander Kloet SP (2002) Comparative pollination effectiveness among bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) on Lowbush Blueberry (Ericaceae: ''[[Vaccinium angustifolium]]''). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 95: 345–351</ref>, huge numbers are also moved to Maine for blueberries, because they are the only pollinators that can be relatively easily moved and concentrated for this and other [[monoculture]] crops.


Since 2018 a new version of the honey bee genome is available on NCBI (Amel_HAv3.1, BioProject ID: PRJNA471592).<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Wallberg|first1=Andreas|last2=Bunikis|first2=Ignas|last3=Pettersson|first3=Olga Vinnere|last4=Mosbech|first4=Mai-Britt|last5=Childers|first5=Anna K.|last6=Evans|first6=Jay D.|last7=Mikheyev|first7=Alexander S.|last8=Robertson|first8=Hugh M.|last9=Robinson|first9=Gene E.|last10=Webster|first10=Matthew T.|date=2019-04-08|title=A hybrid de novo genome assembly of the honeybee, Apis mellifera, with chromosome-length scaffolds|journal=BMC Genomics|volume=20|issue=1|pages=275|doi=10.1186/s12864-019-5642-0|issn=1471-2164|pmc=6454739|pmid=30961563 |doi-access=free }}</ref> This assembly contains full chromosome length scaffolds, which means that the sequence data for each chromosome is contiguous, and not split between multiple pieces called scaffolds. The existence of a highly contiguous reference genome for a species enables more detailed investigations of evolutionary processes that affect the genome as well as more accurate estimations of for example differentiation between populations and diversity within populations.
Commercial beekeepers plan their movements and their wintering locations with prime reference to the pollination services they plan to perform.


An important process that shapes the honey bee genome is meiotic [[Genetic recombination|recombination]], the rate of which is strongly elevated in honey bees and other social insects of the [[Hymenoptera]] order compared to most other eukaryotic species except [[Fungus|fungi]] and [[protozoa]].<ref name="Wilfert-2007">{{Cite journal|last1=Wilfert|first1=L.|last2=Gadau|first2=J.|last3=Schmid-Hempel|first3=P.|date=April 2007|title=Variation in genomic recombination rates among animal taxa and the case of social insects|journal=Heredity|language=en|volume=98|issue=4|pages=189–197|doi=10.1038/sj.hdy.6800950|pmid=17389895 |issn=1365-2540|doi-access=free}}</ref> The reason for elevated recombination rates in social Hymenoptera is not fully understood, but one theory is that it is related to their social behaviour. The increased genetic diversity resulting from high recombination rates could make the workers less vulnerable to parasites and facilitate their specialisations to different tasks in the colony.<ref name="Wilfert-2007" />
====Honey====


==Hazards and survival==
{{main|Honey}}


===Parasites, diseases and pesticides===
Honey is the complex substance made when the nectar and sweet deposits from plants and trees are gathered, modified and stored in the honeycomb by honey bees. Honey is a complex biological mixture that consists mostly of inverted sugars, primarily glucose and fructose. It has antibacterial and antifungal properties and will not rot or ferment when stored under normal conditions. However, honey will crystallize with time. Crystallized honey is not damaged or defective in any way, for human use, but bees will automatically remove crystallized honey from their hive and discard it, since they can only use liquid honey.
[[File:Cape Honeybee death.jpg|thumb|Dead [[Cape honey bee]]s (Apis mellifera capensis) piled up outside the entrance of a hive.]]
Western honey bee populations face threats to their survival, increasing interests into other pollinator species, like the [[common eastern bumblebee]].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Petersen|first1=Jessica D.|last2=Reiners|first2=Stephen|last3=Nault|first3=Brian A.|last4=Ollerton|first4=Jeff|title=Pollination Services Provided by Bees in Pumpkin Fields Supplemented with Either Apis mellifera or Bombus impatiens or Not Supplemented|journal=[[PLoS ONE]]|date=24 July 2013|volume=8|issue=7|page=e69819|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0069819|pmc=3722171|pmid=23894544|bibcode=2013PLoSO...869819P|doi-access=free}}</ref> [[North America]]n and European populations were severely depleted by [[List of diseases of the honey bee#Varroa mites|''Varroa'' mite]] infestations during the early 1990s, and [[United States|U.S.]] beekeepers were further affected by [[colony collapse disorder]] in 2006 and 2007.<ref name="Lovgren">{{cite news |author=Stefan Lovgren |url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/070223-bees.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070226073915/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/070223-bees.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 26, 2007 |title=Mystery bee disappearances sweeping U.S. |publisher=[[National Geographic News]] |access-date=March 10, 2007 |date=February 23, 2007}}</ref> Some subspecies of ''Apis mellifera'' show naturally [[varroa sensitive hygiene]], for example ''[[Apis mellifera lamarckii]]''<ref>https://www.fondazioneslowfood.com/en/ark-of-taste-slow-food/egyptian-honeybee/ Egyptian honeybee Ark of taste</ref> and ''[[Carniolan honey bee|Apis mellifera carnica]]''.<ref name=Andonov2019>{{cite journal |first=S. |last=Andonov |title=Swarming, defensive and hygienic behaviour in honey bee colonies of different genetic origin in a pan-European experiment |journal=Journal of Apicultural Research |date=2014 |volume=53 |issue=2 |pages=248–260 |url=https://www.academia.edu/19071966 |access-date=10 October 2019 |doi=10.3896/IBRA.1.53.2.06|s2cid=56261380 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2014JApiR..53..248U }}</ref> Improved cultural practices and chemical treatments against ''Varroa'' mites saved most commercial operations; new bee breeds are beginning to reduce beekeeper dependence on [[acaricide]]s. Feral bee populations were greatly reduced during this period; they are slowly recovering, primarily in mild climates, due to [[natural selection]] for ''Varroa'' resistance and repopulation by resistant breeds. Although it is generally believed that [[Pesticide toxicity to bees|insecticides]] have also depleted bee populations, particularly when used in excess of label directions, as bee pests and diseases (including [[List of diseases of the honey bee#American foulbrood|American foulbrood]] and [[List of diseases of the honey bee#Acarine (tracheal) mites|tracheal mites]]) are becoming resistant to medications, research in this regard has not been conclusive. A 2012 study of the effect of [[neonicotinoid]]-based insecticides showed "no effects observed in field studies at field-realistic dosages."<ref name="Blacquiere 2012">{{cite journal |last1=Blacquière |first1=T. |last2=Smagghe |first2=G. |last3=van Gestel |first3=C.A. |last4=Mommaerts |first4=V. |title=Neonicotinoids in bees: a review on concentrations, side-effects and risk assessment. |journal=Ecotoxicology |date=May 2012 |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=973–92 |doi=10.1007/s10646-012-0863-x |pmid=22350105 |pmc=3338325|bibcode=2012Ecotx..21..973B }}</ref> A new study in 2020 found that neonicotinoid insecticides affected the developmental stability of honey bees, particularly haploid males were more susceptible to [[neonicotinoids]] than diploid females.<ref name="Friedli-2020">{{Cite journal|last1=Friedli|first1=Andrea|last2=Williams|first2=Geoffrey R.|last3=Bruckner|first3=Selina|last4=Neumann|first4=Peter|last5=Straub|first5=Lars|date=March 2020|title=The weakest link: Haploid honey bees are more susceptible to neonicotinoid insecticides|journal=Chemosphere|language=en|volume=242|pages=125145|doi=10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125145|pmid=31678852|bibcode=2020Chmsp.24225145F|doi-access=free}}</ref> The 2020 study also found that [[heterozygosity]] may play a key role in buffering insecticide exposure.<ref name="Friedli-2020" />


====Beeswax====
===Milkweed===
[[File:Honey bee killed by milkweed.jpg|thumb|A dead honey bee on a milkweed flower]]
In North America, various native [[Asclepias|milkweed]] species may be found with dead western honey bees stuck to their flowers. The non-native western honey bees are attracted to the flowers but are not adapted to their pollination mechanisms. The milkweed [[pollinium]] is collected when the [[Arthropod leg#Tarsus|tarsus]] (foot) of an insect falls into one of the flower's stigmatic slits as it obtains nectar from the flower's hood. If the insect is unable to remove its tarsus from the stigmatic slit it is likely to die due to predation or starvation/exhaustion. If the insect is able to escape with damaged or missing tarsi it may also be likely to die from its injuries. Western honey bees which escape with their tarsi intact may have their nectar gathering ability obstructed by parts of the pollinia being stuck to the bee's [[proboscis]], resulting in starvation. The pollinia may also stick to the bee's tarsal claws, causing a lack of climbing ability and honey gathering which may result in expulsion from the colony leading to death. Native butterflies, moths, flies, beetles, bees and wasps are common milkweed visitors which are often able to escape without issue, though some species of ''[[Megachile]]'', ''[[Halictus]]'', ''[[Astata]]'', ''[[Lucilia (fly)|Lucilia]]'', ''[[Trichius]]'', ''[[Pamphila (genus)|Pamphila]]'' and ''[[Scepsis (fly)|Scepsis]]'' have been found dead on the flowers. After removing over 140 dead bees from a patch of ''[[Asclepias sullivantii|A. sullivantii]]'', entomologist [[Charles Robertson (entomologist)|Charles Robertson]] quipped "... it seems that the flowers are better adapted to kill hive-bees than to produce fruit through their aid."<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Charles Robertson |title=Insect Relations of Certain Asclepiads. I. |journal=Botanical Gazette |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/2993383 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |access-date=26 November 2021 |date=September 1887|volume=12 |issue=9 |pages=207–216 |jstor=2993383 }}</ref>


===Predators===
{{main|Beeswax}}


Insect predators of western honey bees include the [[Asian giant hornet]] and other [[wasp]]s, [[Asilidae|robber flies]], [[Dragonfly|dragonflies]] such as the [[green darner]], some [[mantis]]es, [[Gerridae|water striders]] and the [[European beewolf]].
Worker bees of a certain age will secrete beeswax from a series of glands on their abdomen. They use the wax to form the walls and caps of the comb. When honey is harvested, the wax can be gathered to be used in various wax products like [[candle]]s and [[Seal (device)|seals]].


Arachnid predators of western honey bees include [[fishing spider]]s, [[lynx spider]]s, [[Misumena|goldenrod spiders]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.royalalbertamuseum.ca/natural/insects/bugsfaq/goldspd.htm |title=Goldenrod Spider (''Misumena vatia'') |publisher=[[Royal Alberta Museum]] |access-date=June 2, 2011 |date=August 31, 2004 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110511024618/http://www.royalalbertamuseum.ca/natural/insects/bugsfaq/goldspd.htm |archive-date=May 11, 2011 }}</ref> and [[Argiope (spider)|St. Andrew's cross spiders]].
====Pollen====
[[Image:Bee on crocus.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Media:Bee on crocus.ogg|See movie of bee at work collecting pollen.]] <small>Requires an [[Ogg]] [[Theora]] enabled player, such as [[VideoLAN]].</small>]]


Reptile and amphibian predators of western honey bees include the [[Cordylus niger|black girdled lizard]], [[Dactyloidae|anoles]], and other lizards, and various [[Anura (frog)|anuran]] [[amphibian]]s including the [[American toad]], the [[American bullfrog]] and the [[wood frog]].
{{main|Pollen}}


Specialist bird predators of western honey bees include the [[bee-eater]]s; other birds that may take western honey bees include [[grackle]]s, [[hummingbird]]s, [[tyrant flycatcher]]s and the [[summer tanager]]. Most birds that eat bees do so opportunistically; however, summer tanagers will sit on a limb and catch dozens of bees from the hive entrance as they emerge.<ref>{{cite web | url = https://nationalzoo.si.edu/migratory-birds/news/bird-loves-bees | title = The Bird that Loves the Bees | date = Jul 15, 1998 | publisher = Smithsonian National Zoo}}</ref>
Bees collect pollen in the [[pollen basket]] and carry it back to the hive. In the hive, pollen is used as a [[protein]] source necessary during brood-rearing. In certain environments, excess pollen can be collected from the hives. It is often eaten as a health supplement.


Mammals that sometimes take western honey bees include [[giant armadillo]]s, <ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Desbiez |first1=Arnaud L. |last2=Oliveira |first2=Bruna |last3=Labão Catapani |first3=Mariana |date=2020-12-22 |title=Bee careful! Conflict between beekeepers and giant armadillos (Priodontes maximus) and potential ways to coexist |url=https://www.xenarthrans.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Desbiez_et_al_Conflict_between_beekeepers_and_giant_armadillos.pdf |journal=Edentata: The Newsletter of the IUCN/SSC Anteater, Sloth and Armadillo Specialist Group |issue=21 |pages=1–12 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.CH.2020.Edentata-20-1.2.en|s2cid=231958749 }}</ref> [[opossum]]s, [[raccoon]]s, [[skunk]]s, the [[North American least shrew]] and the [[honey badger]].
[[Image:thebee.jpg|thumb|left|A bee collecting pollen. High res.]]


==Immune mechanisms==
====Propolis====


=== Innate immune mechanisms ===
{{main|Propolis}}
Humoral and cellular immune mechanisms of western honey bees are similar to those of other insects. Trans-generational immune priming (TGIP) is an approach that insects use to pass specific immunity from one generation to the next. The offspring are more likely to overcome pathogens that their parents have encountered. TGIP resembles adaptive immune responses but with different underlying mechanisms. TGIP against ''[[Paenibacillus larvae]]'', which causes American foulbrood, has been demonstrated. The egg-yolk protein Vitellogenin (Vg) plays an important role in TGIP in honey bees, as it participates in the information transmitted between queen and offspring.<ref name=":0" /> Immune elicitors such as fragments or microbes are considered pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). Vg can bind and deliver PAMPs to offspring and thereafter lead to the induction of immunity-related genes.<ref name=":1" /> In laboratory experiments, injecting heat-killed ''P. larvae'' into honey bee queens can prevent 26% of death in their offspring.<ref name=":2" /> Offspring produced by queens orally vaccinated in this way were 30%–50% more likely to survive infection. Immune priming in queens triples differentiated hemocytes in their offspring.<ref name=":3" />


=== Social immune mechanisms ===
[[Propolis]] (or bee glue) is created from resins, balsams and [[Sap (plant)|tree sap]]s. Honey bees use propolis to seal cracks in the hive. Propolis is also sold for its reported health benefits.


====Royal jelly====
====Grooming====
The behavior of bees using their legs and mandibles to remove parasites like mites and dust-like materials from their bodies is referred to as grooming. Grooming includes self-grooming (auto-grooming) and inter-grooming (allo-grooming) between nest mates.<ref name=":4" /> Self-grooming involves pulling on antennae, rubbing the head with the forelegs, and rubbing the thorax or abdomen with the middle or hind legs. Inter-grooming is a colony-level behavior, and individuals within the colony gain benefits from their nest mates in this manner. By exhibiting a grooming dance, other nest mates are attracted and assist to remove parasites via stroking with antennae or legs and licking. Grooming limits ectoparasite load within colonies, especially eliminating Varroa mites.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":6" />


====Hygienic behavior====
{{main|Royal jelly}}
Hygienic behavior targeting brood cells consists of three main steps: detection, uncapping and removal. Adults are able to identify the distinct odors associated with healthy or unhealthy broods and subsequently remove the unhealthy ones from the hive. Hygienic behavior effectively responds to Varroa mites, the fungus ''[[Ascosphaera apis]]'' which causes chalkbrood diseases, and the ''P. larvae''.<ref name=":8" /> Freeze-killed brood assay is a simple strategies to assess the hygienic behavior of honey bee colonies.<ref name=":7" />


==As an environmental threat==
[[Royal Jelly]] is a nutritional food product provided to larval bees, particularly those intended to become queens. It is also harvested and consumed by humans as a [[dietary supplement]], as it contains various [[vitamin]]s and [[amino acid]]s.
Some entomologists have observed that non-native, feral western honey bees can have negative impacts within their non-native environment. Imported bees may displace native bees, and may also promote reproduction of [[Invasive species|invasive plants]] ignored by native pollinators.<ref name="sciam">{{cite web |author1=Daniel Rubinoff |title=Bees gone wild |url=https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/bees-gone-wild/ |publisher=Scientific American |access-date=14 August 2019 |date=16 January 2018}}</ref>


Honey bees are not native to [[the Americas]], arriving with colonists in North America in the 18th century. [[Thomas Jefferson]] mentioned this in his ''[[Notes on the State of Virginia]]'':
==Hazards to honey bee survival==
{{cquote|The honey-bee is not a native of our continent. [[Georg Marcgrave|Marcgrave]] indeed mentions a species of honey-bee in Brasil. But this has no sting, and is therefore different from the one we have, which resembles perfectly that of Europe. The [[Native Americans in the United States|Indians]] concur with us in the tradition that it was brought from Europe; but, when, and by whom, we know not. The bees have generally extended themselves into the country, a little in advance of the white settlers. The Indians therefore call them the white man's fly, and consider their approach as indicating the approach of the settlements of the whites.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.monticello.org/site/research-and-collections/bees-and-honey|title=Bees and Honey|website=www.monticello.org}}</ref>}}
Western honey bee populations have recently faced threats to their survival. [[North America]]n and European honey bee populations were severely depleted by [[diseases of the honeybee#Varroa mites|varroa mite]] infestations in the early 1990s, and [[United States|US]] beekeepers were further affected by [[Colony Collapse Disorder]] in 2006 and 2007.<ref name="Lovgren">Lovgren, Stefan. "[http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/070223-bees.html Mystery Bee Disappearances Sweeping U.S.]" ''National Geographic News''. URL accessed [[March 10]] [[2007]].</ref> Chemical treatments against ''Varroa'' mites saved most commercial operations and improved cultural practices. New bee breeds are starting to reduce the dependency on miticides (acaracides) by beekeepers. Feral bee populations were greatly reduced during this period but now are slowly recovering, mostly in areas of mild climate, owing to [[natural selection]] for ''Varroa'' resistance and repopulation by resistant breeds. Further, [[pesticide (toxic to bees)|Insecticide]]s, particularly when used in violation of label directions, have also depleted bee populations{{Fact|date=March 2007}}, while various bee pests and diseases are becoming resistant to medications (e.g. [[diseases of the honeybee#American foulbrood|American Foul Brood]], [[diseases of the honeybee#Acarine mites (Tracheal mites)|Tracheal Mites]] and [[Varroa Mites]]).


Sources may claim that honey bees (Apis mellifera) have become an invasive species in the United States, outcompeting native pollinators for food.<ref>{{cite web | title=Honeybees Help Farmers, But They Don't Help the Environment | website=National Geographic Education Blog | date=29 January 2018 | url=https://blog.education.nationalgeographic.org/2018/01/29/honeybees-help-farmers-but-they-dont-help-the-environment/ | access-date=10 July 2020}}</ref> However, while the USDA lists Africanized honeybees (Apis mellifera scutellata) as an invasive species, it does not classify western honey bees as invasive.<ref>{{cite web | title=Terrestrial Invertebrates | website=USDA National Invasive Species Information Center | url=https://www.invasivespeciesinfo.gov/terrestrial/invertebrates | access-date=29 December 2023}}</ref>
===Environmental hazards===
In North America, [[Africanized bee]]s have spread across the southern [[United States]] where they pose a small danger to humans, although they may make beekeeping (particularly hobby beekeeping) difficult and potentially dangerous.


With an increased number of honey bees in a specific area due to beekeeping, domesticated bees and native wild bees often have to compete for the limited habitat and food sources available.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Hudewenz|first1=Anika|last2=Klein|first2=Alexandra-Maria|date=2013-12-01|title=Competition between honey bees and wild bees and the role of nesting resources in a nature reserve|journal=Journal of Insect Conservation|language=en|volume=17|issue=6|pages=1275–1283|doi=10.1007/s10841-013-9609-1|s2cid=16268870|issn=1366-638X}}</ref> Western honey bees may become defensive in response to the seasonal arrival of competition from other colonies, particularly Africanized bees which may be on the offence and defence year round due to their tropical origin.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Johnson|first1=Brian R.|last2=Nieh|first2=James C.|date=2010-11-01|title=Modeling the Adaptive Role of Negative Signaling in Honey Bee Intraspecific Competition|journal=Journal of Insect Behavior|language=en|volume=23|issue=6|pages=459–471|doi=10.1007/s10905-010-9229-5|issn=0892-7553|pmc=2955239|pmid=21037953|bibcode=2010JIBeh..23..459J }}</ref> In the [[United Kingdom]], honey bees are known to compete with native [[bumblebee]]s such as ''[[Bombus hortorum]]'', because they forage at the same sites. To resolve the issue and maximize both their total consumption during foraging, bumblebees forage early in the morning, while honey bees forage during the afternoon.<ref>{{Cite journal|title = Extrapolating from Honeybees to Bumblebees in Pesticide Risk Assessment|last1 = Thompson|first1 = Helen|date = 1999|journal = Ecotoxicology|doi = 10.1023/A:1026444029579|last2 = Hunt|first2 = Lynn|volume = 8|issue = 3|pages = 147–166|s2cid = 83289225}}</ref>
As an [[invasive species]], feral honey bees have become a significant environmental problem in places where they are not native. Imported bees may compete with and displace native bees and birds, and may also promote the reproduction of [[invasive species|invasive plants]] that native pollinators do not visit. Also, unlike native bees, they do not properly extract or transfer pollen from plants with [[stamen|poricidal anthers]] (anthers that only release pollen through tiny apical pores), as this requires [[buzz pollination]], a behavior which honey bees rarely exhibit. For example, Gross and Mackay (1998) found that honey bees reduce fruiting in ''[[Melastoma affine]]'' (a plant with poricidal anthers) by robbing stigmas of previously-deposited pollen.


A 2017 systematic review looked at the impacts of managed bees on wild bee populations. In addition to honey bees, this includes bumble bees and some solitary bees. The analysis looked at resource competition and changes in plant communities. It also discussed how managed bees may interact with wild bees by transmitting pathogens. It found an equal number of studies reporting both positive and negative effects on plant communities. Studies examining resource competition had significant variability in their results while most studies on pathogen transmission pointed to potentially detrimental impacts. The researchers noted that most studies documented the possibility of certain interactions without actually measuring the direct effects.<ref>[https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0189268 Do managed bees have negative effects on wild bees?: A systematic review of the literature]<br/>Our review found that the majority of studies reach the conclusion that managed bees negatively affect, or have the potential to negatively affect, wild bees through competition, changes in plant communities, or transmission of pathogens.</ref>
===Honey bee predators===
====Insects====
*[[Asilidae|Robber Flies]]
*[[Praying mantis|Chinese mantis]]
*[[Dragonfly]]
**[[Green Darner]]
*[[Asian giant hornet]] - [[Southeast Asia]]
**[[Bald-faced hornet]]
*[[Yellowjacket]]
*[[Water strider|Common Water Strider]]
*[[European beewolf]] - [[Europe]] and [[North Africa]]


The very generalized nature of the honey bee's nectar-gathering activities, potentially visiting dozens of different species in a single day, means that a flower visited by a honey bee will often get very little pollen from its species. This diminished pollination can reduce the plant's ability to produce seeds, especially when the honey bees are squeezing out the native pollinators for a species, a problem occurring all over the United States because of honey bees and other invasive species.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}}
====Spiders====
*[[Misumena|Goldenrod spider]] [http://www.royalalbertamuseum.ca/natural/insects/bugsfaq/goldspd.htm]
*[[Lynx spider|Green Lynx spider]]
*[[St Andrew's Cross spider|Black argiope]]
*[[Fishing spider|Six-spotted Fishing Spider]]


Most flowering plants depend on specialized pollinators to efficiently fertilize them. [[Cucurbitaceae|Cucurbits]], for example, are pollinated by [[squash bee]]s that specifically visit the early-blooming male flowers before sunrise, when honey bees are inactive, and then return to pollinate the female flowers later in the day. Such [[symbiosis|symbiotic relationships]] also mean that the specialized pollinator will be covered mainly in its host's specific pollen.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}} Unlike native bees, they do not properly extract or transfer pollen from plants with [[Stamen|pore anthers]] (anthers which only release pollen through tiny apical pores); this requires [[buzz pollination]], a behavior rarely exhibited by honey bees. Honey bees reduce fruiting in ''[[Melastoma affine]]'', a plant with pore anthers, by robbing its stigmas of previously deposited pollen.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=C. L. Gross |author2=D. Mackay |name-list-style=amp |year=1998 |title=Honeybees reduce fitness in the pioneer shrub ''Melastoma affine'' (Melastomataceae) |journal=[[Biological Conservation (journal)|Biological Conservation]] |volume=86 |issue=2 |pages=169–178 |doi=10.1016/S0006-3207(98)00010-X|bibcode=1998BCons..86..169G }}</ref>
====Reptiles and amphibians====
*[[Wood Frog]]
*[[Bullfrog]]
*[[American toad]]
*[[Anolis|Anoles]]


== Close relatives ==
====Birds====
Apart from ''Apis mellifera'', there are six other species in the genus ''Apis''. These are ''[[Apis andreniformis]]'', ''[[Apis cerana]]'', ''[[Apis dorsata]]'', ''[[Apis florea]]'', ''[[Apis koschevnikovi]]'', and ''[[Apis nigrocincta]]''.<ref>Winston, Mark L. The biology of the honey bee. Harvard University Press, 1991.</ref> These species all originated in southern and southeastern Asia. Only ''Apis mellifera'' is thought to have originated in Europe, Asia, and Africa.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Smith | first1 = Deborah R. | last2 = Villafuerte | first2 = Lynn | last3 = Otisc | first3 = Gard | last4 = Palmer | first4 = Michael R. | year = 2000 | title = Biogeography of ''Apis cerana'' F. and ''A. nigrocincta'' Smith: insights from mtDNA studies | journal = Apidologie | volume = 31 | issue = 2| pages = 265–279 | doi = 10.1051/apido:2000121 | doi-access = free }}</ref>
*[[Bee-eater]]
*[[Ruby-throated hummingbird]]
*[[Tyrant flycatcher]]
**[[Great Crested flycatcher]]
*[[Common Grackle]]


====Mammals====
==See also==
*[[Apitherapy]]
''Contrary to popular perception, bears and honey badgers are brood predators; honey is only of secondary interest.''
*[[Least shrew]]
*[[Bee bearding]]
*[[Beeline (beekeeping)|Beeline]]
*[[Skunk]]
*[[Characteristics of common wasps and bees]]
*[[Raccoon]]
*[[Ratel|Honey badger]]
*[[Worker policing]]
*[[Bear]]
*[[Human]]


==Trivia==
==References==
{{Reflist|32em|refs=
{{Trivia|date=July 2007}}
* Human encroachment into or adjacent to natural areas where [[African bush elephant]]s occur has led to recent research into methods of safely driving groups of elephants away from humans, including the discovery that playback of the recorded sounds of angry ''Apis mellifera'' colonies are remarkably effective at prompting elephants to flee an area.<ref>Lucy E. King, Iain Douglas-Hamilton, Fritz Vollrath (2007) African elephants run from the sound of disturbed bees. ''Current Biology'' 17: R832-R833</ref>
* They have a well developed sense of time ([[circadian rhythm]]). Honey bees are one of the very few invertebrates in which sleep-like behavior, similar in many respects to mammalian sleep, is known to exist.
* Honey, as well as [[propolis]], has antibiotic properties. Honey is so sweet that [[bacterium|bacteria]] cannot grow on it, and dry enough that it does not support [[yeast]]s. [[Anaerobic bacteria]] may be present and survive in ''[[spore]]'' form in honey, however, as well as anywhere else in common environments. Honey (or any other sweetener) which is diluted by the non-acidic digestive fluids of [[infant]]s, can support the transition of [[botulism]] bacteria from the spore form to the actively growing form which produces a [[toxin]]. When infants are weaned to solid foods, their [[digestive system]] becomes [[acid]]ic enough to prevent such growth and [[poison]]ing. No sweeteners should be given to infants prior to [[weaning]].
* Honey bees are one of the very few invertebrates that produce a sort of "milk" for their young, [[royal jelly]], which is the only food the larvae will eat early in development.
* Like other social insects, they have an advanced immune system.
* They have specially modified hairs on their body that develop a static electricity charge to attract pollen grains to their bodies.
* Honey bee foragers die usually when their wings are worn out after approximately {{convert|500|mi|km}} of flight.
* Honey bee wings beat at a constant rate of 230 beats per second or 13,800 beats/minute. The frequency of the wing beats was much higher than expected for an insect of this size. Honey bees make up for carrying heavier loads or for changes in [[air density]] by altering the amplitude of their wings and catching more air. This makes the wing muscles work harder, but it does not change the frequency of the wing beats. The science of bee flight remained an unsolved mystery until December of 2005. A study published in [[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences]] details the work supervised by Michael Dickinson from [[Caltech]].
* Bees are capable of perceiving the [[polarization]] of light. They use this information to orient their [[Bee learning and communication|communicative dances]].
* They navigate by using a combination of memory, visual landmarks, colors, the position of the sun, smell, polarized light and magnetic anomalies.
* Their aging is controlled by a hormone which regulates the production of a protein called [[vitellogenin]].
* The honey bee was a prominent political symbol in the empire of [[Napoleon Bonaparte]], representing the [[Bonapartist]] bureaucratic and political system. The main purpose of this symbolism was a reference to the [[Merovingian Dynasty]] given that about a century earlier, a series of golden honeybees had been discovered in the tomb of [[Childeric I]] (which had by then come into Napoleon's possession).
* Worker honey bees can reproduce by [[parthenogenesis]], but will necessarily produce only drones (though this is not true of all other subspecies). Worker bees are sexually underdeveloped females, and their ovulation is ordinarily inhibited by hormonal signals provided to all hive members by a functioning queen. Should the queen bee die and a replacement not be available, inhibition of egg laying behavior among the worker bees will end, but the eggs they lay will be unfertilized and therefore can produce only drones. Absent a virgin [[Queen bee|queen]], the colony will die out as the worker population dies out due to old age.
* Bee stings have also been reputed to help alleviate the associated symptoms of [[Multiple sclerosis]], [[arthritis]], and other [[autoimmune]] diseases. This is an area of ongoing research.


<ref name="Choi-et-al-2020">{{cite journal | last1=Choi | first1=Sang Hyun | last2=Rao | first2=Vikyath D. | last3=Gernat | first3=Tim | last4=Hamilton | first4=Adam R. | last5=Robinson | first5=Gene E. | last6=Goldenfeld | first6=Nigel | title=Individual variations lead to universal and cross-species patterns of social behavior | journal=[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences]] | publisher=[[National Academy of Sciences]] | volume=117 | issue=50 | date=2020-11-30 | issn=0027-8424 | doi=10.1073/pnas.2002013117 | pages=31754–31759| pmid=33257554 | pmc=7749354 | bibcode=2020PNAS..11731754C | doi-access=free }}</ref>
===Designated state insect===
<div style="-moz-column-count:3; column-count:3;">
*[[Arkansas]] (1973)
*[[North Carolina]] (1973)
*[[New Jersey]] (1974) - ''state bug''
*[[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] (1975)
*[[Maine]] (1975)
*[[Nebraska]] (1975)
*[[Kansas]] (1976)
*[[Louisiana]] (1977)
*[[Vermont]] (1977)
*[[Wisconsin]] (1977)
*[[South Dakota]] (1978)
*[[Mississippi]] (1980)
*[[Utah]] (1983)
*[[Missouri]] (1985)
*[[Tennessee]] (1990) - ''official agricultural insect''
*[[Oklahoma]] (1992)
*[[West Virginia]] (2002)
</div>


<ref name="Individual-differences-trophallaxis-duration-SciTechDaily">{{cite web | first=Carl R. | last=Woese | title=Unexpected Similarity Discovered Between Honey Bee and Human Social Life | website=SciTechDaily | date=2020-12-04 | url=http://scitechdaily.com/unexpected-similarity-discovered-between-honey-bee-and-human-social-life/ | access-date=2021-01-19}}</ref>
==Gallery==
{{cleanup-gallery}}
<Gallery>
Image:Australian_Bee.jpg|Bee Collecting Pollen
Image:Bees-wings.web.jpg|Bee's wings
Image:Bee mid air.jpg|Bee flying
Image:Bee taking off.jpg|Bee Taking off from flowers
Image:Bee on dandelion.JPG|A bee on a dandelion
Image:Bee flying to almond flower.jpg|Bee flying to [[almond]] flower
Image:Bee landing on rosemary02.jpg|Bee landing on rosemary bush
Image:Bee landing on rosemary.jpg|Bee landing on rosemary bush
Image:Rosemary with bee landing02.jpg|Bee landing on rosemary bush
Image:carnica_bee_on_solidago.jpg|<small>Carnica bee on goldenrod</small>
Image:Bee pollen lavender.JPG|Bee with pollen load on lavender, south east coast of Australia
Image:Plumpollen0060.jpg|Bee with load of plum pollen
Image:Honeybeeenter.jpg|Pollen-covered bee entering flower
Image:Bee on thistle 10.jpg|Pollen-covered bee on a thistle


}}
</gallery>

{{Commonscat|Apis mellifera}}


== References ==
===Bibliography===
{{Refbegin}}
<div class="references-small">
* A. I. Root's The ABC and XYZ of Beekeeping
* A. I. Root's The ABC and XYZ of Beekeeping
* [http://www.edpsciences.org/articles/apido/abs/2000/02/m0201/m0201.html Molecular confirmation of a fourth lineage in honeybees from the Near East] Apidologie 31 (2000) 167-180, accessed Oct 2005
* [http://www.edpsciences.org/articles/apido/abs/2000/02/m0201/m0201.html Molecular confirmation of a fourth lineage in honeybees from the Near East] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060308034039/http://www.edpsciences.org/articles/apido/abs/2000/02/m0201/m0201.html |date=2006-03-08 }} Apidologie 31 (2000) 167–180, accessed Oct 2005
*Biesmeijer, Jacobus. "The Occurrence and Context of the Shaking Signal in Honey Bees (''Apis mellifera'') Exploiting Natural Food Sources". ''[[Ethology]]''. 2003.
*Biesmeijer, Jacobus. "The Occurrence and Context of the Shaking Signal in Honey Bees (''Apis mellifera'') Exploiting Natural Food Sources". ''[[Ethology]]''. 2003.
*Collet, T., Ferreira, K.M., Arias, M.C., Soares, A.E.E. and Del Lama, M.A. (2006). Genetic structure of Africanized honeybee populations (''Apis mellifera'' L.) from Brazil and Uruguay viewed through mitochondrial DNA COI–COII patterns. ''Heredity'' '''97''', 329–335.
*{{cite journal | last1 = Collet | first1 = T. | last2 = Ferreira | first2 = K.M. | last3 = Arias | first3 = M.C. | last4 = Soares | first4 = A.E.E. | last5 = Del Lama | first5 = M.A. | year = 2006 | title = Genetic structure of Africanized honeybee populations (''Apis mellifera'' L.) from Brazil and Uruguay viewed through mitochondrial DNA COI–COII patterns | journal = Heredity | volume = 97 | issue = 5| pages = 329–335 | doi=10.1038/sj.hdy.6800875 | pmid = 16955114| doi-access = free }}
*Gross, C. L., Mackay, D. "Honeybees reduce fitness in the pioneer shrub ''Melastoma affine'' (Melastomataceae)". ''Biological Conservation'', November 1998.
*Lindauer, Martin. "Communication among social bees". Harvard University Press 1971.
*Lindauer, Martin. "Communication among social bees". Harvard University Press 1971.
*Myerscough, Mary R.: Dancing for a decision: a matrix model for nest-site choice by honeybees, Proc. Royal Soc. London B 270 (2003) 577-582.
*{{cite journal | last1 = Myerscough | first1 = Mary R | year = 2003 | title = Dancing for a decision: a matrix model for nest-site choice by honeybees | journal = Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B | volume = 270 | issue = 1515| pages = 577–582 | doi=10.1098/rspb.2002.2293| pmid = 12769456 | pmc = 1691286}}
*Schneider, S. S., P. K. Visscher, Camazine, S. "Vibration Signal Behavior of Waggle-dancers in Swarms of the Honey Bee, ''Apis mellifera'' (Hymenoptera: Apidae). ''Ethology''. 1998.
*Schneider, S. S., P. K. Visscher, Camazine, S. "Vibration Signal Behavior of Waggle-dancers in Swarms of the Honey Bee, ''Apis mellifera'' (Hymenoptera: Apidae). ''Ethology''. 1998.
{{Refend}}
* {{cite web | url = http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/StratfordLandingES/Ecology/mpages/honey_bee.htm | title = 'Honey Bee - Study of Northern Virginia Ecology' | accessdate = 2006-01-01}}
<references/>
</div>


== See also ==
==External links==
{{Commons category|Apis mellifera}}{{Wikispecies|Apis mellifera}}
*[[Bee sting therapy]]
*[http://www.fao.org/docrep/x0083e/X0083E06.htm FAO: Beekeeping explained]
*[[Beeline]]
*[http://www.fao.org/docrep/t0104e/T0104E06.htm#Chapter%203%20Anatomy%20of%20the%20honeybee FAO: Honeybee anatomy]
*[[Bee Bearding]]
* [http://entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/MISC/BEES/euro_honey_bee.htm IFAS: ''Apis mellifera'']
*[[Colony Collapse Disorder]]
* [http://bio.acousti.ca/taxonomy/term/153 Sound recordings of ''Apis mellifera'' at BioAcoustica]
* {{UCSC genomes|apiMel2}}


== External links ==
*[http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/060110_bee_fight.html Flight of Honey Bee finally understood]
*[http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/3294/pheromo.htm Honey Bee Pheromones]
*[http://www.cirrusimage.com/bees_honey.htm Honey Bee ''Apis mellifera'' diagnostic pictures, descriptions, natural history]
*[http://perso.fundp.ac.be/~jvandyck/homage/books/FrAdam/breeding/partIII85en.html Brother Adams On-line book]; accessed September 2005
*[http://www.bio.usyd.edu.au/Social_InsectsLab/BensPDFs/Clarke_et_al_Mol_Ecol_2001.pdf Origin of honeybees (''Apis mellifera'' L.) from the Yucatan peninsula inferred from mitochondrial DNA analysis; Molecular Ecology (2001)10, 1347-1355]; accessed Jan 2005
*[http://www.edpsciences.org/articles/apido/pdf/2003/04/M3412.pdf ''Apis mellifera pomonella'', a new honey bee subspecies from Central Asia; Apidologie 34 (2003) 367-375; Walter S. Sheppard and Marina D. Meixner]; accessed 2005
*[http://www.fao.org/docrep/x0083e/X0083E06.htm] Beekeeping explained by FAO
*[http://www.fao.org/documents/show_cdr.asp?url_file=/docrep/006/y5110e/y5110e0b.htm] Types of hives by FAO
*[http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/alienempire/multimedia/hive.html Interactive 3D flash presentation of Honey beehive] from PBS
*[http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000475FC-9CB6-1C5E-B882809EC588ED9F Brainy Bees Think Abstractly]
*[http://www.beesource.com BeeSource]
*[http://www.tumbledownfarm.com/texts/Cyclopedia/Cyclopedia_III_Bees.html Cyclopedia of American Agriculture] ed. by L. H. Bailey (1911), Vol. III--Animals, "Bees," including a history of the literature related to European honey bees in the United States.
*[http://www.culturaapicola.com.ar/wiki/index.php/Libros_de_apicultura Digital library of Beekeeping]
*[http://www.fao.org/docrep/t0104e/T0104E06.htm#Chapter%203%20Anatomy%20of%20the%20honeybee Anatomy of the honeybee] by the [[Food and Agriculture Organization | FAO]]
*[http://www.cornwallhoney.co.uk/bees.htm The 'Beepedia' of Information about Bees - How Honey Bees function within a Hive]
{{BeeColonyMemberTypes}}
{{BeeColonyMemberTypes}}
{{Insects in culture}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q30034}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Western Honey Bee}}
[[Category:Bees]]
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Latest revision as of 02:03, 24 December 2024

Western honey bee
Temporal range: Oligocene–Recent
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Apidae
Genus: Apis
Species:
A. mellifera
Binomial name
Apis mellifera
Subspecies[3]

31 currently recognized, see list

Synonyms
  • Apis mellifica Linnaeus, 1761
  • Apis gregaria Geoffroy, 1762
  • Apis cerifera Scopoli, 1770
  • Apis daurica Fischer von Waldheim, 1843
  • Apis mellifica germanica Pollmann, 1879
  • Apis mellifica nigrita Lucas, 1882
  • Apis mellifica mellifica lehzeni Buttel-Reepen, 1906 (Unav.)
  • Apis mellifica mellifica silvarum Goetze, 1964 (Unav.)

The western honey bee or European honey bee (Apis mellifera) is the most common of the 7–12 species of honey bees worldwide.[3][4] The genus name Apis is Latin for 'bee', and mellifera is the Latin for 'honey-bearing' or 'honey-carrying', referring to the species' production of honey.[5]

Like all honey bee species, the western honey bee is eusocial, creating colonies with a single fertile female (or "queen"), many normally non-reproductive females or "workers", and a small proportion of fertile males or "drones". Individual colonies can house tens of thousands of bees. Colony activities are organized by complex communication between individuals, through both pheromones and the dance language.

The western honey bee was one of the first domesticated insects, and it is the primary species maintained by beekeepers to this day for both its honey production and pollination activities. With human assistance, the western honey bee now occupies every continent except Antarctica. Western honey bees are threatened by pests and diseases, especially the Varroa mite and colony collapse disorder. There are indications that the species is rare, if not extinct in the wild in Europe and as of 2014, the western honey bee was assessed as "Data Deficient" on the IUCN Red List. Numerous studies indicate that the species has undergone significant declines in Europe; however, it is not clear if they refer to population reduction of wild or managed colonies. Further research is required to enable differentiation between wild and non-wild colonies in order to determine the conservation status of the species in the wild, meaning self sustaining, without treatments or management.[6]

Western honey bees are an important model organism in scientific studies, particularly in the fields of social evolution, learning, and memory; they are also used in studies of pesticide toxicity, especially via pollen, to assess non-target impacts of commercial pesticides.

Distribution and habitat

[edit]
The visualization shows the historical introductions of western honey bees, Apis mellifera, into the United States. In particular, the visualization takes into account four categories of data. The first is the country from which the bees were exported (on the left side of the diagram), then the state into which the bees were imported (on the right side of the diagram), the year in which the shipment took place (represented with a black dot aligned to the relative year on the bottom), and the subspecies of Apis mellifera shipped (represented with the respective color in the legend). A legend included in the visualization helps understand the meaning of the graphic elements.
Visualization showing the various importations of the western honey bee into the United States.[7]

The western honey bee can be found on every continent except Antarctica.[8] The species is believed to have originated in Africa[9] or Asia,[10] and it spread naturally through Africa, the Middle East and Europe.[8] Humans are responsible for its considerable additional range, introducing European subspecies into North America (early 1600s),[11] South America, Australia, New Zealand, and eastern Asia.[12]

Subspecies

[edit]

Western honey bees adapted to the local environments as they spread geographically.[9] These adaptations include synchronizing colony cycles to the timing of local flower resources, forming a winter cluster in colder climates, migratory swarming in Africa, and enhanced foraging behavior in desert areas. All together, these variations resulted in 31 recognized subspecies.[3]

Previously it was believed that the various subspecies were all cross-fertile, but in 2013 it was found that the A. m. mellifera queens do not mate with non-A. m. mellifera drones.[13]

The subspecies are divided into four major branches, based on work by Ruttner and confirmed by mitochondrial DNA analysis. African subspecies belong to branch A, northwestern European subspecies branch M, southwestern European subspecies branch C and Middle Eastern subspecies branch O.[citation needed]

Life cycle

[edit]

Colony life cycle

[edit]
Swarm of honey bees on a wooden fence rail
A bee swarm. Bees are unaggressive in this state, since they have no hive to protect.

Unlike most other bee species, western honey bees have perennial colonies which persist year after year. Because of this high degree of sociality and permanence, western honey bee colonies can be considered superorganisms. This means that reproduction of the colony, rather than individual bees, is the biologically significant unit. Western honey bee colonies reproduce through a process called "swarming".[14]

In most climates, western honey bees swarm in the spring and early summer, when there is an abundance of blooming flowers from which to collect nectar and pollen. In response to these favorable conditions, the hive creates one to two dozen new queens. Just as the pupal stages of these "daughter queens" are nearly complete, the old queen and approximately two-thirds of the adult workers leave the colony in a swarm, traveling some distance to find a new location suitable for building a hive (e.g., a hollow tree trunk). In the old colony, the daughter queens often start "piping", just prior to emerging as adults,[15] and, when the daughter queens eventually emerge, they fight each other until only one remains; the survivor then becomes the new queen. If one of the sisters emerges before the others, she may kill her siblings while they are still pupae, before they have a chance to emerge as adults.

Once she has dispatched all of her rivals, the new queen, the only fertile female, lays all the eggs for the old colony, which her mother has left. Virgin females are able to lay eggs, which develop into males (a trait found in bees, wasps, and ants because of haplodiploidy). However, she requires a mate to produce female offspring, which comprise 90% or more of bees in the colony at any given time. Thus, the new queen goes on one or more nuptial flights, each time mating with 1–17 drones.[16] Once she has finished mating, usually within two weeks of emerging, she remains in the hive, playing the primary role of laying eggs.

Throughout the rest of the growing season, the colony produces many workers, who gather pollen and nectar as cold-season food; the average population of a healthy hive in midsummer may be as high as 40,000 to 80,000 bees. Nectar from flowers is processed by worker bees, who evaporate it until the moisture content is low enough to discourage mold, transforming it into honey, which can then be capped over with wax and stored almost indefinitely. In the temperate climates to which western honey bees are adapted, the bees gather in their hive and wait out the cold season, during which the queen may stop laying. During this time, activity is slow, and the colony consumes its stores of honey used for metabolic heat production in the cold season. In mid- through late winter, the queen starts laying again. This is probably triggered by day length. Depending on the subspecies, new queens (and swarms) may be produced every year, or less frequently, depending on local environmental conditions and a number of characteristics inside the hive.

Individual bee life cycle

[edit]
Full (with larvae) and empty (with eggs) honeycomb cells
Larvae (left) and eggs (right)

Like other insects that undergo complete metamorphosis, the western honey bee has four distinct life stages: egg, larva, pupa and adult. The complex social structure of western honey bee hives means that all of these life stages occur simultaneously throughout much of the year. The queen deposits a single egg into each cell of a honeycomb prepared by worker bees. The egg hatches into a legless, eyeless larva fed by "nurse" bees (worker bees who maintain the interior of the colony). After about a week, the larva is sealed in its cell by the nurse bees and begins its pupal stage. After another week, it emerges as an adult bee. It is common for defined regions of the comb to be filled with young bees (also called "brood"), while others are filled with pollen and honey stores.

Worker bees secrete the wax used to build the hive, clean, maintain and guard it, raise the young and forage for nectar and pollen; the nature of the worker's role varies with age. For the first 10 days of their lives, worker bees clean the hive and feed the larvae. After this, they begin building comb cells. On days 16 through 20, workers receive nectar and pollen from older workers and store it. After the 20th day, a worker leaves the hive and spends the remainder of its life as a forager. Although worker bees are usually infertile females, when some subspecies are stressed they may lay fertile eggs. Since workers are not fully sexually developed, they do not mate with drones and thus can only produce haploid (male) offspring.

Queens and workers have a modified ovipositor called a stinger, with which they defend the hive. Unlike those of bees of any other genus and of the queens of their species, the stinger of worker western honey bees is barbed. Contrary to popular belief, a bee does not always die soon after stinging; this misconception is based on the fact that a bee will usually die after stinging a human or other mammals. The stinger and its venom sac, with musculature and a ganglion allowing them to continue delivering venom after they are detached, are designed to pull free of the body when they lodge. This apparatus (including barbs on the stinger) is thought to have evolved in response to predation by vertebrates, since the barbs do not function (and the stinger apparatus does not detach) unless the stinger is embedded in elastic material. The barbs do not always "catch", so a bee may occasionally pull its stinger free and fly off unharmed (or sting again).[14]

Although the average lifespan of a queen in most subspecies is three to five years, reports from the German honey bee subspecies (A. m. mellifera) previously used for beekeeping indicate that a queen can live up to eight years.[17] Because a queen's store of sperm is depleted near the end of her life, she begins laying more unfertilised eggs; for this reason, beekeepers often replace queens every year or two.

The lifespan of workers varies considerably over the year in regions with long winters. Workers born in spring and summer work hard, and live only a few weeks, but those born in autumn remain inside for several months as the colony clusters. On average during the year, about 1% of a colony's worker bees die naturally per day.[18] Except for the queen, all of a colony's workers are replaced about every four months.

Social caste

[edit]
Western honey bee on a lavender blossom

Behavioral and physiological differences between castes and subcastes arise from phenotypic plasticity, which relies on gene expression rather than heritable genotypic differences.[19][20]

Queens

[edit]

The queen bee is a fertile female, who, unlike workers (which are also female), has a fully developed reproductive system. She is larger than her workers, and has a characteristic rounder, longer abdomen. A female egg can become either a queen or a worker bee. Workers and queen larvae are both fed royal jelly, which is high in protein and low in flavonoids, during the first three days. After that, larval prospective workers are switched to a diet of mixed pollen and nectar (often called "bee bread"), while prospective queens continue to receive royal jelly. In the absence of flavonoids and the presence of a high-protein diet, female bees grow into queens by developing the vigorous reproductive system[21] necessary to maintain a colony of tens of thousands of daughter workers.

Periodically, the colony determines that a new queen is needed. There are three general causes:

  1. The hive is filled with honey, leaving little room for new eggs. This will trigger a swarm, where the old queen will take about half the worker bees to establish a new colony, and leave a new queen with the other half of the workers to continue the old one.
  2. The old queen begins to fail, which is thought to be demonstrated by a decrease in queen pheromones throughout the hive. This is known as supersedure, and at its end, the old queen is usually killed.
  3. The old queen dies suddenly, a situation known as emergency supersedure. The worker bees find several eggs (or larvae) of the appropriate age range and feed them royal jelly to try to develop them into new queens.

Emergency supersedure can generally be recognized because new queen cells are built out from comb cells, instead of hanging from the bottom of a frame. Regardless of the trigger, workers develop existing larvae into queens by continuing to feed them royal jelly, rather than switching them to bee bread, and by extending the selected larvae's cells to house the developing larger-bodied queens.

See caption
Peanut-like queen brood cells extend outward from the brood comb

Queens are not raised in the typical horizontal brood cells of the honeycomb. A queen cell is larger and oriented vertically. If workers sense that an old queen is weakening, they produce emergency cells (known as supersedure cells) from cells with eggs or young larvae and which protrude from the comb. When the queen finishes her larval feeding and pupates, she moves into a head-downward position and later chews her way out of the cell. At pupation, workers cap (seal) the cell. The queen asserts control over the worker bees by releasing a complex suite of pheromones, known as queen scent.

After several days of orientation in and around the hive, the young queen flies to a drone congregation area – a site near a clearing and generally about 30 feet (9.1 m) above the ground – where drones from different hives congregate. They detect the presence of a queen in their congregation area by her smell, find her by sight and mate with her in midair; drones can be induced to mate with "dummy" queens with the queen pheromone. A queen will mate multiple times, and may leave to mate several days in a row (weather permitting) until her spermatheca is full.

The queen lays all the eggs in a healthy colony. The number and pace of egg-laying is controlled by weather, resource availability and specific racial characteristics. Queens generally begin to slow egg-laying in the early fall, and may stop during the winter. Egg-laying generally resumes in late winter when the days lengthen, peaking in the spring. At the height of the season, the queen may lay over 2,500 eggs per day (more than her body mass).

She fertilizes each egg (with stored sperm from the spermatheca) as it is laid in a worker-sized cell. Eggs laid in drone-sized (larger) cells are left unfertilized; these unfertilized eggs, with half as many genes as queen or worker eggs, develop into drones.

Workers

[edit]

Workers are females produced by the queen that develop from fertilized, diploid eggs. Workers are essential for social structure and proper colony functioning. They carry out the main tasks of the colony, because the queen is occupied solely with reproducing. These females raise their sister workers and future queens that eventually leave the nest to start their own colony. They also forage and return to the nest with nectar and pollen to feed the young, and defend the colony.

Drones

[edit]
Top and bottom views of a developing pupa against a honeycomb
Development of a drone pupa
White and brown pupae filling cells
Pupae of drones

Drones are the colony's male bees. Since they do not have ovipositors, they do not have stingers. Drone honey bees do not forage for nectar or pollen. The primary purpose of a drone is to fertilize a new queen. Many drones mate with a given queen in flight; each dies immediately after mating, since the process of insemination requires a lethally convulsive effort. Drone honey bees are haploid (single, unpaired chromosomes) in their genetic structure, and are descended only from their mother (the queen). In temperate regions, drones are generally expelled from the hive before winter, dying of cold and starvation since they cannot forage, produce honey or care for themselves. Given their larger size (1.5 times that of worker bees), inside the hive it is believed that drones may play a significant role in thermoregulation. Drones are typically located near the center of hive clusters for unclear reasons. It is postulated that it is to maintain sperm viability, which may be compromised at cooler temperatures. Another possible explanation is that a more central location allows drones to contribute to warmth, since at temperatures below 25 °C (77 °F) their ability to contribute declines.[22]

Queen–worker conflict

[edit]

When a fertile female worker produces drones, a conflict arises between her interests and those of the queen. The worker shares one-half of her genes with the drone and one-quarter with her brothers, favouring her offspring over those of the queen. The queen shares one-half of her genes with her sons and one-quarter with the sons of fertile female workers.[23] This pits the worker against the queen and other workers, who try to maximize their reproductive fitness by rearing the offspring most related to them. This relationship leads to a phenomenon called "worker policing". In these rare situations, other worker bees in the hive, who are genetically more related to the queen's sons than those of the fertile workers, patrol the hive and remove worker-laid eggs.

Another form of worker policing is aggression toward fertile females.[24] Some studies suggest a queen pheromone which may help workers distinguish worker-laid and queen-laid eggs, but others indicate egg viability as the key factor in eliciting the behavior.[25][26]

Worker policing is an example of forced altruism, where the benefits of worker reproduction are minimized and that of rearing the queen's offspring maximized.

In very rare instances, workers subvert the policing mechanisms of the hive, laying eggs faster than other workers remove them; this is known as anarchic syndrome. Anarchic workers can activate their ovaries at a higher rate and contribute a greater proportion of males to the hive. Although an increase in the number of drones decreases the overall productivity of the hive, it increases the reproductive fitness of the drones' mother. Anarchic syndrome is an example of selection working in opposite directions at the individual and group levels for the stability of the hive.[27]

Under ordinary circumstances, if the queen dies or is removed, reproduction in workers increases because a significant proportion of workers then have activated ovaries. The workers produce a last batch of drones before the hive collapses. Although during this period worker policing is usually absent, in certain groups of bees it continues.[28]

According to the strategy of kin selection, worker policing is not favored if a queen mates just once. In that case, workers are related by three-quarters of their genes, and the sons of workers are related more than usual to sons of the queen. Then the benefit of policing is negated. Experiments confirming this hypothesis have shown a correlation between higher mating rates and increased rates of worker policing in many species of social hymenoptera.[29]

Behavior

[edit]

Thermoregulation

[edit]
Foraging honey bee

The western honey bee needs an internal body temperature of 35 °C (95 °F) to fly; this temperature is maintained in the nest to develop the brood, and is the optimal temperature for the creation of wax. The temperature on the periphery of the cluster varies with outside air temperature, and the winter cluster's internal temperature may be as low as 20–22 °C (68–72 °F).

Western honey bees can forage over a 30 °C (86 °F) air-temperature range because of behavioral and physiological mechanisms for regulating the temperature of their flight muscles. From low to high air temperatures, the mechanisms are: shivering before flight and stopping flight for additional shivering, passive body-temperature regulation based on work, and evaporative cooling from regurgitated honey-sac contents. Body temperatures differ, depending on caste and expected foraging rewards.[30]

The optimal air temperature for foraging is 22–25 °C (72–77 °F). During flight, the bee's relatively large flight muscles create heat which must be dissipated. The honey bee uses evaporative cooling to release heat through its mouth. Under hot conditions, heat from the thorax is dissipated through the head; the bee regurgitates a droplet of warm internal fluid — a "honeycrop droplet" – which reduces the temperature of its head by 10 °C (18 °F).[31]

Below 7–10 °C (45–50 °F) bees are immobile, and above 38 °C (100 °F) their activity slows. Western honey bees can tolerate temperatures up to 50 °C (122 °F) for short periods.[citation needed]

They lack the thermal defense exhibited by Apis cerana, but at least one subspecies, Apis mellifera cypria, is capable of killing invading hornets through asphyxiation, despite not being able to attain lethal temperatures.[32]

Aging

[edit]

Apis mellifera honey bees with high amounts of flight experience exhibit increased DNA damage in flight muscle, as measured by elevated 8-Oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine, compared to bees with less flight experience.[33] This increased DNA damage is likely due to an imbalance of pro- and anti-oxidants during flight-associated oxidative stress. Flight induced oxidative DNA damage appears to hasten senescence and limit lifespan in A. mellifera.[33]

Communication

[edit]
Bees completely covering the base of a fallen tree
A large honey bee swarm on a fallen tree trunk

Western honey bee behavior has been extensively studied. Karl von Frisch, who received the 1973 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his study of honey bee communication, noticed that bees communicate with dance. Through these dances, bees communicate information regarding the distance, the situation, and the direction of a food source by the dances of the returning (honey bee) worker bee on the vertical comb of the hive.[34] Honey bees direct other bees to food sources with the round dance and the waggle dance. Although the round dance tells other foragers that food is within 50 metres (160 ft) of the hive, it provides insufficient information about direction. The waggle dance, which may be vertical or horizontal, provides more detail about the distance and direction of a food source. Foragers are also thought to rely on their olfactory sense to help locate a food source after they are directed by the dances.[citation needed]

Western honey bees also change the precision of the waggle dance to indicate the type of site that is set as a new goal. Their close relatives, dwarf honey bees, do not.[35] Therefore, western honey bees seem to have evolved a better means of conveying information than their common ancestors with the dwarf honey bee.[36]

Another means of communication is the shaking signal, also known as the jerking dance, vibration dance or vibration signal. Although the shaking signal is most common in worker communication, it also appears in reproductive swarming. A worker bee vibrates its body dorsoventrally while holding another bee with its front legs. Jacobus Biesmeijer, who examined shaking signals in a forager's life and the conditions leading to its performance, found that experienced foragers executed 92% of observed shaking signals and 64% of these signals were made after the discovery of a food source. About 71% of shaking signals occurred before the first five successful foraging flights of the day; other communication signals, such as the waggle dance, were performed more often after the first five successes. Biesmeijer demonstrated that most shakers are foragers and the shaking signal is most often executed by foraging bees on pre-foraging bees, concluding that it is a transfer message for several activities (or activity levels). Sometimes the signal increases activity, as when active bees shake inactive ones. At other times, such as the end of the day, the signal is an inhibitory mechanism. However, the shaking signal is preferentially directed towards inactive bees. All three forms of communication among honey bees are effective in foraging and task management.[citation needed]

Pheromones

[edit]

Pheromones (substances involved in chemical communication) are essential to honey bee survival. Western honey bees rely on pheromones for nearly all behaviors, including mating, alarm, defense, orientation, kin and colony recognition, food production and integrating colony activities.[37][38]

The alarm pheromone has shown to be attractive to the small hive beetle. Therefore, there is a tradeoff between recruiting guards bees to defend the invaders and attract more beetles. The small hive beetle has a lower sensing threshold for the honeybee pheromone, which exacerbates the damage to honeybee hive.[39]

Sociality

[edit]

There is some degree of variability of sociality between individuals.[40][41] Like a great many other social insects, A. mellifera engages in trophallaxis.[40][41] When the duration of trophallaxis pairings was measured, it was found that like human social interactions, there are durable long-term trends for each individual bee.[40][41] There is less inter-individual variation than found in humans however, possibly reflecting the higher genetic relatedness between hivemates.

Domestication

[edit]
A honey hunter in a cave painting at Cuevas de la Araña, Spain, c. 8,000–6,000 BC
Bee hieroglyph from the tomb complex of Senusret I (d. 1,926 BC)

Humans have been collecting honey from western honey bees for thousands of years, with evidence in the form of rock art found in France and Spain,[42] dating to around 7,000 BCE.[43] The western honey bee is one of the few invertebrate animals to have been domesticated. Bees were likely first domesticated in ancient Egypt, where tomb paintings depict beekeeping, before 2600 BC.[44] Europeans brought bees to North America in 1622.[45][46]

Beekeepers have selected western honey bees for several desirable features:[45]

  • the ability of a colony to survive periods with little food[45]
  • the ability of a colony to survive cold weather[45]
  • resistance to disease[45]
  • increased honey production[45]
  • reduced aggressiveness[45]
  • reduced tendency to swarm[45]
  • reduced nest building[45]
  • easy pacification with smoke[45]

These modifications, along with artificial change of location, have improved western honey bees from the point of view of the beekeeper, and simultaneously made them more dependent on beekeepers for their survival. In Europe, cold weather survival was likely selected for, consciously or not, while in Africa, selection probably favoured the ability to survive heat, drought, and heavy rain.[45]

Authors do not agree on whether this degree of artificial selection constitutes genuine domestication. In 1603, John Guillim wrote "The Bee I may well reckon a domestic insect, being so pliable to the benefit of the keeper."[47] More recently, many biologists working on pollination take the domesticated status of western honey bees for granted.[48][49] For example, Rachael Winfree and colleagues write "We used crop pollination as a model system, and investigated whether the loss of a domesticated pollinator (the honey bee) could be compensated for by native, wild bee species."[50] Similarly, Brian Dennis and William Kemp write: "Although the domestication of the honey bee is closely connected to the evolution of food-based socio-economic systems in many cultures throughout the world, in current economic terms, and in the U.S. alone, the estimated wholesale value of honey, more than $317 million dollars in 2013, pales in comparison to aggregate estimated annual value of pollination services, variously valued at $11–15 billion."[51]

On the other hand, P. R. Oxley and B. P. Oldroyd (2010) consider the domestication of western honey bees, at best, partial.[52] Oldroyd observes that the lack of full domestication is somewhat surprising, given that people have kept bees for at least 7,000 years. Instead, beekeepers have found ways to manage bees using hives, while the bees remain "largely unchanged from their wild cousins".[53]

Leslie Bailey and B. V. Ball, in their book Honey Bee Pathology, call western honey bees "feral insects", in contrast to the domestic silk moth (Bombyx mori) which they call "the only insect that has been domesticated", and refer to the "popular belief among many biologists as well as beekeepers that bees are domesticated". They argue that western honey bees are able to survive without human help, and in fact require to "be left at liberty" to survive. Further, they argue that even if bees could be raised away from the wild, they would still have to fly freely to gather nectar and pollinate plants. Therefore, they argue, beekeeping is "the exploitation of colonies of a wild insect", with little more than the provision of a weatherproof cavity for them to nest in.[54] Likewise, Pilar de la Rua and colleagues argue that western honey bees are not fully domesticated, because "endemic subspecies-specific genetic footprints can still be identified in Europe and Africa", making conservation of wild bee diversity important. Further, they argue that the difficulty of controlling drones for mating is a serious handicap and a sign that domestication is not complete, in particular as "extensive gene flow usually occurs between wild/feral and managed honeybee populations".[55]

Beekeeping

[edit]
Larger, solid-brown queen with striped workers
Queen bee with workers

The western honey bee is a colonial insect which is housed, transported by and sometimes fed by beekeepers. Honey bees do not survive and reproduce individually, but as part of the colony (a superorganism).

Western honey bees collect flower nectar and convert it to honey, which is stored in the hive. The nectar, transported in the bees' stomachs, is converted with the addition of digestive enzymes and storage in a honey cell for partial dehydration. Nectar and honey provide the energy for the bees' flight muscles and for heating the hive during the winter. Western honey bees also collect pollen which, after being processed to bee bread, supplies protein and fat for the bee brood to grow. Centuries of selective breeding by humans have created western honey bees which produce far more honey than the colony needs, and beekeepers (also known as apiarists) harvest the surplus honey.

Many honey bees on a comb
Honey bees removed from the hive for inspection by a beekeeper

Beekeepers provide a place for the colony to live and store honey. There are seven basic types of beehive: skeps, Langstroth hives, top-bar hives, box hives, log gums, D. E. hives, and miller hives.[14] All U.S. states require beekeepers to use movable frames to allow bee inspectors to check the brood for disease. This allows beekeepers to keep Langstroth, top-bar and D.E. hives without special permission, granted for purposes such as museum use. Modern hives also enable beekeepers to transport bees, moving from field to field as crops require pollinating (a source of income for beekeepers).

In cold climates, some beekeepers have kept colonies alive (with varying degrees of success) by moving them indoors for winter. While this can protect the colonies from extremes of temperature and make winter care and feeding more convenient for the beekeeper, it increases the risk of dysentery and causes an excessive buildup of carbon dioxide from the bees' respiration. Inside wintering has been refined by Canadian beekeepers, who use large barns solely for the wintering of bees; automated ventilation systems assist in carbon dioxide dispersal.

Products

[edit]
Western honey bee in a park in Tokyo
Beehives beside a field
Beehives set up for pollination
Video of western honey bee collecting pollen from blue crocuses
Bee in flight, carrying pollen in a yellow container large for its size
Western honey bee carrying pollen in a basket back to the hive

Honey bees

[edit]

Honey bees are one of the products of a beehive. They can be purchased as mated queens, in spring packages of a queen along with two to five pounds (0.91 to 2.27 kg) of honey bees, as nucleus colonies (which include frames of brood), or as full colonies. Commerce of western honey bees dates back to as early as 1622, when the first colonies of bees were shipped from England to Virginia. Modern methods of producing queens and dividing colonies for increase date back to the late 1800s. Honey was extracted by killing off the hive, and bees and bee products were mainly an object of local trade. The first commercial beekeeper in the United States is considered Moses Quinby of New York, who experimented with movable box hives, which allow extraction without killing the hive. The improvements in roads and motor vehicles after World War I allowed commercial beekeepers to expand the size of their businesses.[56]

Pollination

[edit]
Western honey bee pollinating a flower

The western honey bee is an important pollinator of crops; this service accounts for much of the species' commercial value. In 2005, the estimated commercial value of western honey bees was just under $200 billion worldwide.[57] A large number of the crop species farmed worldwide depend on it.[58] Although orchards and fields have increased in size, wild pollinators have dwindled. In a number of regions the pollination shortage is addressed by migratory beekeepers, who supply hives during a crop bloom and move them after the blooming period. Commercial beekeepers plan their movements and wintering locations according to anticipated pollination services. At higher latitudes it is difficult (or impossible) to overwinter sufficient bees, or to have them ready for early blooming plants. Much migration is seasonal, with hives wintering in warmer climates and moving to follow the bloom at higher latitudes.

In California, almond pollination occurs in February, early in the growing season before local hives have built up their populations. Almond orchards require two hives per acre, or 2,000 m2 (22,000 sq ft) per hive, for maximum yield, and pollination is dependent on the importation of hives from warmer climates. Almond pollination (in February and March in the U.S.) is the largest managed pollination event in the world, requiring more than one-third of all managed honey bees in the country. Bees are also moved en masse for pollination of apples in New York, Michigan, and Washington. Despite honey bees' inefficiency as blueberry pollinators,[59] large numbers are moved to Maine because they are the only pollinators who can be easily moved and concentrated for this and other monoculture crops. Bees and other insects maintain flower constancy by transferring pollen to other biologically specific plants;[60] this prevents flower stigmas from being clogged with pollen from other species.[61] In 2000, Drs. Roger Morse and Nicholas Calderone of Cornell University attempted to quantify the effects of the western honey bee on American food crops. Their calculations came up with a figure of US$14.6 billion in food crop value.[62]

Honey

[edit]

Honey is the complex substance made from nectar and sweet deposits from plants and trees, which are gathered, modified and stored in the comb by honey bees.[63] Honey is a biological mixture of inverted sugars, primarily glucose and fructose. It has antibacterial and anti-fungal properties. Honey from the western honey bee, along with the bee Tetragonisca angustula, has specific antibacterial activity towards an infection-causing bacteria, Staphylococcus aureus.[64][65] Honey will not rot or ferment when stored under normal conditions, but it will crystallize over time. Although crystallized honey is acceptable for human use, bees can only use liquid honey and will remove and discard any crystallized honey from the hive.

Western honey bee with its proboscis partially extended
Western honey bee on a honeycomb

Bees produce honey by collecting nectar, a clear liquid consisting of nearly 80 percent water and complex sugars. The collecting bees store the nectar in a second stomach and return to the hive, where worker bees remove the nectar. The worker bees digest the raw nectar for about 30 minutes, using digestive enzymes to break down the complex sugars into simpler ones. Raw honey is then spread in empty honeycomb cells to dry, reducing its water content to less than 20 percent. When nectar is being processed, honey bees create a draft through the hive by fanning with their wings. When the honey has dried, the honeycomb cells are sealed (capped) with wax to preserve it.

Beeswax

[edit]

Mature worker bees secrete beeswax from glands on their abdomen, using it to form the walls and caps of the comb.[66] When honey is harvested, the wax can be collected for use in products like candles and seals.

Bee bread

[edit]

Bees collect pollen in a pollen basket and carry it back to the hive where, after undergoing fermentation and turning into bee bread, it becomes a protein source for brood-rearing.[67] Excess pollen can be collected from the hive; although it is sometimes consumed as a dietary supplement by humans, bee pollen may cause an allergic reaction in susceptible individuals.

Bee brood

[edit]

Bee brood, the eggs, larvae, or pupae of honey bees, is edible and highly nutritious. Bee brood contains the same amount of protein that beef or poultry does. Bee brood is often harvested as a byproduct when the beekeeper has excess bees and does not wish to have any more.

Propolis

[edit]

Propolis is a resinous mixture collected by honey bees from tree buds, sap flows or other botanical sources, which is used as a sealant for unwanted open spaces in the hive.[68] Although propolis is alleged to have health benefits (tincture of propolis is marketed as a cold and flu remedy), it may cause severe allergic reactions in some individuals.[69] Propolis is also used in wood finishes, and gives a Stradivarius violin its unique red color.[70]

Royal jelly

[edit]

Royal jelly is a honey bee secretion used to nourish the larvae and queen.[71] It is marketed for its alleged but unsupported claims of health benefits.[72][73] On the other hand, it may cause severe allergic reactions in some individuals.[74]

Genome

[edit]

Female bees are diploid and have 32 chromosomes, whereas males are haploid and have only 16.

As of October 28, 2006, the Honey Bee Genome Sequencing Consortium fully sequenced and analyzed the genome of Apis mellifera, the western honey bee. Since 2007, attention has been devoted to colony collapse disorder, a decline in western honey bee colonies in a number of regions.

The western honey bee is the third insect, after the fruit fly and the mosquito, whose genome has been mapped. According to scientists who analyzed its genetic code, the honey bee originated in Africa and spread to Europe in two ancient migrations.[9] Scientists have found that genes related to smell outnumber those for taste, and the European honey bee has fewer genes regulating immunity than the fruit fly and the mosquito.[75] The genome sequence also revealed that several groups of genes, particularly those related to circadian rhythm, resembled those of vertebrates more than other insects. Another significant finding from the honey bee genome study was that the western honey bee was the first insect to be discovered with a functional DNA methylation system since functional key enzymes (DNA methyltransferase-1 and -3) were identified in the genome. DNA methylation is one of the important mechanisms in epigenetics to study gene expression and regulation without changing the DNA sequence, but modifications on DNA activity.[76] DNA methylation later was identified to play an important role in gene regulation and gene splicing.[77] The genome is unusual in having few transposable elements, although they were present in the evolutionary past (remains and fossils have been found) and evolved more slowly than those in fly species.[75]

Since 2018 a new version of the honey bee genome is available on NCBI (Amel_HAv3.1, BioProject ID: PRJNA471592).[78] This assembly contains full chromosome length scaffolds, which means that the sequence data for each chromosome is contiguous, and not split between multiple pieces called scaffolds. The existence of a highly contiguous reference genome for a species enables more detailed investigations of evolutionary processes that affect the genome as well as more accurate estimations of for example differentiation between populations and diversity within populations.

An important process that shapes the honey bee genome is meiotic recombination, the rate of which is strongly elevated in honey bees and other social insects of the Hymenoptera order compared to most other eukaryotic species except fungi and protozoa.[79] The reason for elevated recombination rates in social Hymenoptera is not fully understood, but one theory is that it is related to their social behaviour. The increased genetic diversity resulting from high recombination rates could make the workers less vulnerable to parasites and facilitate their specialisations to different tasks in the colony.[79]

Hazards and survival

[edit]

Parasites, diseases and pesticides

[edit]
Dead Cape honey bees (Apis mellifera capensis) piled up outside the entrance of a hive.

Western honey bee populations face threats to their survival, increasing interests into other pollinator species, like the common eastern bumblebee.[80] North American and European populations were severely depleted by Varroa mite infestations during the early 1990s, and U.S. beekeepers were further affected by colony collapse disorder in 2006 and 2007.[81] Some subspecies of Apis mellifera show naturally varroa sensitive hygiene, for example Apis mellifera lamarckii[82] and Apis mellifera carnica.[83] Improved cultural practices and chemical treatments against Varroa mites saved most commercial operations; new bee breeds are beginning to reduce beekeeper dependence on acaricides. Feral bee populations were greatly reduced during this period; they are slowly recovering, primarily in mild climates, due to natural selection for Varroa resistance and repopulation by resistant breeds. Although it is generally believed that insecticides have also depleted bee populations, particularly when used in excess of label directions, as bee pests and diseases (including American foulbrood and tracheal mites) are becoming resistant to medications, research in this regard has not been conclusive. A 2012 study of the effect of neonicotinoid-based insecticides showed "no effects observed in field studies at field-realistic dosages."[84] A new study in 2020 found that neonicotinoid insecticides affected the developmental stability of honey bees, particularly haploid males were more susceptible to neonicotinoids than diploid females.[85] The 2020 study also found that heterozygosity may play a key role in buffering insecticide exposure.[85]

Milkweed

[edit]
A dead honey bee on a milkweed flower

In North America, various native milkweed species may be found with dead western honey bees stuck to their flowers. The non-native western honey bees are attracted to the flowers but are not adapted to their pollination mechanisms. The milkweed pollinium is collected when the tarsus (foot) of an insect falls into one of the flower's stigmatic slits as it obtains nectar from the flower's hood. If the insect is unable to remove its tarsus from the stigmatic slit it is likely to die due to predation or starvation/exhaustion. If the insect is able to escape with damaged or missing tarsi it may also be likely to die from its injuries. Western honey bees which escape with their tarsi intact may have their nectar gathering ability obstructed by parts of the pollinia being stuck to the bee's proboscis, resulting in starvation. The pollinia may also stick to the bee's tarsal claws, causing a lack of climbing ability and honey gathering which may result in expulsion from the colony leading to death. Native butterflies, moths, flies, beetles, bees and wasps are common milkweed visitors which are often able to escape without issue, though some species of Megachile, Halictus, Astata, Lucilia, Trichius, Pamphila and Scepsis have been found dead on the flowers. After removing over 140 dead bees from a patch of A. sullivantii, entomologist Charles Robertson quipped "... it seems that the flowers are better adapted to kill hive-bees than to produce fruit through their aid."[86]

Predators

[edit]

Insect predators of western honey bees include the Asian giant hornet and other wasps, robber flies, dragonflies such as the green darner, some mantises, water striders and the European beewolf.

Arachnid predators of western honey bees include fishing spiders, lynx spiders, goldenrod spiders[87] and St. Andrew's cross spiders.

Reptile and amphibian predators of western honey bees include the black girdled lizard, anoles, and other lizards, and various anuran amphibians including the American toad, the American bullfrog and the wood frog.

Specialist bird predators of western honey bees include the bee-eaters; other birds that may take western honey bees include grackles, hummingbirds, tyrant flycatchers and the summer tanager. Most birds that eat bees do so opportunistically; however, summer tanagers will sit on a limb and catch dozens of bees from the hive entrance as they emerge.[88]

Mammals that sometimes take western honey bees include giant armadillos, [89] opossums, raccoons, skunks, the North American least shrew and the honey badger.

Immune mechanisms

[edit]

Innate immune mechanisms

[edit]

Humoral and cellular immune mechanisms of western honey bees are similar to those of other insects. Trans-generational immune priming (TGIP) is an approach that insects use to pass specific immunity from one generation to the next. The offspring are more likely to overcome pathogens that their parents have encountered. TGIP resembles adaptive immune responses but with different underlying mechanisms. TGIP against Paenibacillus larvae, which causes American foulbrood, has been demonstrated. The egg-yolk protein Vitellogenin (Vg) plays an important role in TGIP in honey bees, as it participates in the information transmitted between queen and offspring.[5] Immune elicitors such as fragments or microbes are considered pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). Vg can bind and deliver PAMPs to offspring and thereafter lead to the induction of immunity-related genes.[7] In laboratory experiments, injecting heat-killed P. larvae into honey bee queens can prevent 26% of death in their offspring.[10] Offspring produced by queens orally vaccinated in this way were 30%–50% more likely to survive infection. Immune priming in queens triples differentiated hemocytes in their offspring.[11]

Social immune mechanisms

[edit]

Grooming

[edit]

The behavior of bees using their legs and mandibles to remove parasites like mites and dust-like materials from their bodies is referred to as grooming. Grooming includes self-grooming (auto-grooming) and inter-grooming (allo-grooming) between nest mates.[12] Self-grooming involves pulling on antennae, rubbing the head with the forelegs, and rubbing the thorax or abdomen with the middle or hind legs. Inter-grooming is a colony-level behavior, and individuals within the colony gain benefits from their nest mates in this manner. By exhibiting a grooming dance, other nest mates are attracted and assist to remove parasites via stroking with antennae or legs and licking. Grooming limits ectoparasite load within colonies, especially eliminating Varroa mites.[13][15]

Hygienic behavior

[edit]

Hygienic behavior targeting brood cells consists of three main steps: detection, uncapping and removal. Adults are able to identify the distinct odors associated with healthy or unhealthy broods and subsequently remove the unhealthy ones from the hive. Hygienic behavior effectively responds to Varroa mites, the fungus Ascosphaera apis which causes chalkbrood diseases, and the P. larvae.[17] Freeze-killed brood assay is a simple strategies to assess the hygienic behavior of honey bee colonies.[16]

As an environmental threat

[edit]

Some entomologists have observed that non-native, feral western honey bees can have negative impacts within their non-native environment. Imported bees may displace native bees, and may also promote reproduction of invasive plants ignored by native pollinators.[90]

Honey bees are not native to the Americas, arriving with colonists in North America in the 18th century. Thomas Jefferson mentioned this in his Notes on the State of Virginia:

The honey-bee is not a native of our continent. Marcgrave indeed mentions a species of honey-bee in Brasil. But this has no sting, and is therefore different from the one we have, which resembles perfectly that of Europe. The Indians concur with us in the tradition that it was brought from Europe; but, when, and by whom, we know not. The bees have generally extended themselves into the country, a little in advance of the white settlers. The Indians therefore call them the white man's fly, and consider their approach as indicating the approach of the settlements of the whites.[91]

Sources may claim that honey bees (Apis mellifera) have become an invasive species in the United States, outcompeting native pollinators for food.[92] However, while the USDA lists Africanized honeybees (Apis mellifera scutellata) as an invasive species, it does not classify western honey bees as invasive.[93]

With an increased number of honey bees in a specific area due to beekeeping, domesticated bees and native wild bees often have to compete for the limited habitat and food sources available.[94] Western honey bees may become defensive in response to the seasonal arrival of competition from other colonies, particularly Africanized bees which may be on the offence and defence year round due to their tropical origin.[95] In the United Kingdom, honey bees are known to compete with native bumblebees such as Bombus hortorum, because they forage at the same sites. To resolve the issue and maximize both their total consumption during foraging, bumblebees forage early in the morning, while honey bees forage during the afternoon.[96]

A 2017 systematic review looked at the impacts of managed bees on wild bee populations. In addition to honey bees, this includes bumble bees and some solitary bees. The analysis looked at resource competition and changes in plant communities. It also discussed how managed bees may interact with wild bees by transmitting pathogens. It found an equal number of studies reporting both positive and negative effects on plant communities. Studies examining resource competition had significant variability in their results while most studies on pathogen transmission pointed to potentially detrimental impacts. The researchers noted that most studies documented the possibility of certain interactions without actually measuring the direct effects.[97]

The very generalized nature of the honey bee's nectar-gathering activities, potentially visiting dozens of different species in a single day, means that a flower visited by a honey bee will often get very little pollen from its species. This diminished pollination can reduce the plant's ability to produce seeds, especially when the honey bees are squeezing out the native pollinators for a species, a problem occurring all over the United States because of honey bees and other invasive species.[citation needed]

Most flowering plants depend on specialized pollinators to efficiently fertilize them. Cucurbits, for example, are pollinated by squash bees that specifically visit the early-blooming male flowers before sunrise, when honey bees are inactive, and then return to pollinate the female flowers later in the day. Such symbiotic relationships also mean that the specialized pollinator will be covered mainly in its host's specific pollen.[citation needed] Unlike native bees, they do not properly extract or transfer pollen from plants with pore anthers (anthers which only release pollen through tiny apical pores); this requires buzz pollination, a behavior rarely exhibited by honey bees. Honey bees reduce fruiting in Melastoma affine, a plant with pore anthers, by robbing its stigmas of previously deposited pollen.[98]

Close relatives

[edit]

Apart from Apis mellifera, there are six other species in the genus Apis. These are Apis andreniformis, Apis cerana, Apis dorsata, Apis florea, Apis koschevnikovi, and Apis nigrocincta.[99] These species all originated in southern and southeastern Asia. Only Apis mellifera is thought to have originated in Europe, Asia, and Africa.[100]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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