Honeybee colony integration: worker-worker interactions mediate hormonally regulated plasticity in division of labor.
- 15 December 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 89 (24), 11726-11729
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.24.11726
Abstract
Adult workers in honeybee (Apis mellifera) colonies exhibit plasticity in hormonally regulated, age-based division of labor by altering their pattern of behavioral development in response to changes in colony conditions. One form of this plasticity is precocious development: levels of juvenile hormone increase prematurely and bees begin foraging as much as 2 weeks earlier than average. We used two experimental paradigms inspired by developmental biology to study how bees obtain information on changing colony needs that results in precocious foraging. An analog of "cell culture," with bees reared outside of colonies in different sized groups, revealed that worker-worker interactions exert quantitative effects on endocrine and behavioral development. "Transplants" of older bees to colonies otherwise lacking foragers demonstrated that worker-worker interactions also affect behavioral development in whole colonies. These results provide insights to a long-standing problem in the biology of social insects and further highlight similarities in the integration of activity that exist between individuals in insect colonies and cells in metazoans.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Conflict in single-queen hymenopteran societies: the structure of conflict and processes that reduce conflict in advanced eusocial speciesJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1992
- Regulation of Division of Labor in Insect SocietiesAnnual Review of Entomology, 1992
- The choice of cell fate in the epidermis of DrosophilaCell, 1991
- Differentiation requires continuous regulation.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Auditory Hair Cells: Structure, Function, Development, and RegenerationAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1991
- Hormonal and Genetic Control of Behavioral Integration in Honey Bee ColoniesScience, 1989
- Two different laminin domains mediate the differentiation of human endothelial cells into capillary-like structures in vitroCell, 1989
- Juvenile hormone titers in European and Africanized honey bees in BrazilGeneral and Comparative Endocrinology, 1987
- The Sociogenesis of Insect ColoniesScience, 1985
- Effects of a juvenile hormone analogue on honey bee foraging behaviour and alarm pheromone productionJournal of Insect Physiology, 1985