نتایج جستجو برای: bee nests

تعداد نتایج: 18837  

2004
Stephen C. PRATT

This review considers how a honey bee colony optimally controls the timing and type of new comb construction. Optimal timing requires bees to balance the energy costs of construction with the opportunity costs of lacking storage space during nectar flows. They do so by conditioning the start of building on (1) the attainment of a fullness threshold, and (2) the availability of nectar. A dynamic...

2010
JEROME G. ROZEN HIKMET ÖZBEK JOHN S. ASCHER CLAUDIO SEDIVY ALIREZA MONFARED ANDREAS MÜLLER

Herein we describe the nests (including construction, closure, orientation, and depth of cells) of the bee Osmia (Ozbekosmia) avosetta Warncke found nesting near Antalya, Turkey, and Sepidan, Iran. Cells are unusual in that they are lined by two layers of colorful flower petals that sandwich a thin middle layer of mud. Analyses of pollen taken from scopal hairs of specimens from the Turkish sit...

2013
Rute Magalhães Brito Flávio de Oliveira Francisco Elaine Françoso Leandro Rodrigues Santiago Maria Cristina Arias

Partamona mulata is a stingless bee species endemic to cerrado, a severely threatened phytogeographical domain. Clearing for pasture without proper soil treatment in the cerrado facilitates the proliferation of termite ground nests, which are the nesting sites for P. mulata. The genetic consequences of these changes in the cerrado environment for bee populations are still understudied. In this ...

2010
JEROME G. ROZEN HIKMET ÖZBEK JOHN S. ASCHER CLAUDIO SEDIVY CHRISTOPHE PRAZ ALIREZA MONFARED ANDREAS MÜLLER

Herein we describe the nests (including construction, closure, orientation, and depth of cells) of the bee Osmia (Ozbekosmia) avosetta Warncke found nesting near Antalya, Turkey, and Sepidan, Iran. Cells are unusual in that they are lined by two layers of colorful flower petals that sandwich a thin middle layer of mud. Analyses of pollen taken from scopal hairs of specimens from the Turkish sit...

Journal: :Journal of invertebrate pathology 2005
Steven M Valles Charles A Strong

We have cloned and sequenced a 2845 bp cDNA representing the 3'-end of either a new picorna-like virus species or genotype of Solenopsis invicta virus-1 (SINV-1). Analysis of the nucleotide sequence revealed 1 large open reading frame. The amino acid sequence of the translated open reading frame was most identical to structural proteins of SINV-1 (97%), followed by the Kashmir bee virus (KBV, 3...

Journal: :Ecology 2008
Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter Susanne Schiele

The relative importance of bottom-up or top-down forces has been mainly studied for herbivores but rarely for pollinators. Habitat fragmentation might change driving forces of population dynamics by reducing the area of resource-providing habitats, disrupting habitat connectivity, and affecting natural enemies more than their host species. We studied spatial and temporal population dynamics of ...

Journal: :Annual review of entomology 2011
Theresa L Pitts-Singer James H Cane

The alfalfa leafcutting bee (ALCB), Megachile rotundata F. (Megachildae), was accidentally introduced into the United States by the 1940s. Nest management of this Eurasian nonsocial pollinator transformed the alfalfa seed industry in North America, tripling seed production. The most common ALCB management practice is the loose cell system, in which cocooned bees are removed from nesting cavitie...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology ecology 2014
Quinn S McFrederick William T Wcislo Michael C Hout Ulrich G Mueller

Social transmission and host developmental stage are thought to profoundly affect the structure of bacterial communities associated with honey bees and bumble bees, but these ideas have not been explored in other bee species. The halictid bees Megalopta centralis and M. genalis exhibit intrapopulation social polymorphism, which we exploit to test whether bacterial communities differ by host soc...

Journal: :The Iowa Review 1983

Journal: :Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 2008
Gilton Mendes dos Santos Yasmine Antonini

BACKGROUND This paper presents the Enawene-Nawe Society's traditional knowledge about stingless bees. The Enawene-Nawe are an Aruak speaking people, indigenous to the Meridian Amazon. Specifically, they live in the Jurema River hydrological basin, located in the northwestern region of the Mato Grosso state. METHODS The stingless bees were sampled from two ecologically similar regions in the i...

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