Honey Bee Medicine for the Veterinary Practitioner. Группа авторов

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       Randy Oliver*

       ScientificBeekeeping.com

      The queen bee holds a special mystique to beekeepers. Although she is treated as royalty, she is not responsible for much decision making in the colony. From a biological standpoint there is actually nothing particularly exceptional about her – she's a relatively normal reproductive female insect.

      The queen is indeed the heart of the hive – not only due to her being the mother of all the other members of the colony, but also by secreting pheromones that induce colony cohesiveness, suppress ovary development in the rest of the females, and perhaps most importantly, to provide an “honest signal” as to her reproductive status (as opposed to merely suppressing competitive egg laying) (Niño et al. 2013). Queen pheromone (actually a variable mixture of several pheromones) appears to also suppress the feeding of most female larvae, thus epigenetically resulting in them becoming functionally‐sterile “workers” rather than reproductive queens.

       Practical application: Despite her royal treatment and being the mother of all the workers in the hive, the queen enjoys no particular fealty from her functionally‐sterile daughters. She is entirely fungible, and the colony will replace her at the drop of a hat should it sense, via pheromonal or other cues, that either she or the colony is failing.

      Queen Larval Development

      A queen is reared in large, vertical cell as opposed to the smaller horizontal cell of a worker. All female larvae are fed essentially the same diet for the first 24 hours, up to which point any could potentially become a queen. After that, developmental paths switch, with larvae chosen by the nurses to be a queen being fed to excess, with much of the jelly not being consumed until after her cell is “sealed.”

Photo depicts the queen functions not only as the ovary of the honey bee superorganism, but also as the pheromonal heart of the hive, critical for colony cohesiveness. In a rapidly-growing colony, roughly a thousand of her daughters die each day from natural aging and mortality.
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