Trophallaxis in honey bees: Transfer delay and daily modulation

Trophallactic behaviour of donor honey bees, Apis mellifera ligustica Spinola, fed at two feeders with different volumes of a 50% weight/weight sucrose solution, at different flow rates, was studied in an experimental arena. Transfer delay (i.e. the time up to the first trophallactic contact between...

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Autor principal: Farina, W.M
Otros Autores: Núñez, J.A
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1993
Acceso en línea:Registro en Scopus
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Aporte de:Registro referencial: Solicitar el recurso aquí
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100 1 |a Farina, W.M. 
245 1 0 |a Trophallaxis in honey bees: Transfer delay and daily modulation 
260 |c 1993 
270 1 0 |m Farina, W.M.; Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Pab. II-Ciudad Universitaria, CP 1428, Buenos Aires, Argentina 
506 |2 openaire  |e Política editorial 
504 |a Boch, R., (1956) Physiol., 38 (1), pp. 36-167 
504 |a Farina, W.M., Nunez, J.A., Trophallaxis in the honeybee. Apis mellifera (L.) as related to the profitability of food sources. Anim (1991) Behav., 42, pp. 389-394 
504 |a Von Frisch, K., (1965) Tanzsprache Und Orienlierung Der Bienen, , Berlin: Springer Verlag 
504 |a Von Frisch, K., The roie of dances in recruiting bees to familiar sites. Anim (1968) Behav., 16, pp. 531-533 
504 |a Lindauer, M., (1948) Physiol., 31, pp. 348-412 
504 |a Lindauer, M., (1954) Physiol., 36, pp. 391-432 
504 |a Moore, D., Siegfried, D., Wilson, R., Rankin, M.A., The influence of time of day on the foraging behavior of the honeybee, Apis mellifera (1989) J. Biol. Rhythms., 4, pp. 205-325 
504 |a Nixon, H.L., Ribbands, C.R., Food transmission within the honeybee community (1952) Proc. R. Soc, Ser. B, 140, pp. 43-50 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., (1966) Physiol., 53, pp. 142-164 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., The relationship between sugar flow and foraging and recruiting behaviour of honey bees, Apis mellifera L. Anim (1970) Behav., 18, pp. 527-538 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., (1971) Tierpsychol., 28, pp. 1-18 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., Orcadian variation of flight activity in colonies ofApis mellifera Hgussìca. J- Insect (1977) Physiol., 23, pp. 387-392 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., Nectar flow by melliferous flora and gathering flow by Apis mellifera ligustica (1977) J. Insect. Physiol., 23, pp. 265-275 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., Comparative study of thermoregula- tion between European and africanized Apis mellifera in Brazil (1979) J. Apicult. Res., 18, pp. 116-121 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., Foraging pressure and its annual variation: A method of evaluation using artificial food sources (1982) J. Apicult. Res., 21, pp. 134-138 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., Honeybee foraging strategies at a food source in relation to its distance from the hive and the rate of sugar flow (1982) J. Apicult. Res., 21, pp. 139-150 
504 |a Seeley, T.D., Social foraging by honeybees: How colonies allocate foragers among patches of flowers. Behav. Ecol (1986) Sociobiol., 19, pp. 343-354 
504 |a Seeley, T.D., Social foraging in honey bees: How nectar foragers assess their colony’s nutritional status. Behav. Ecol (1989) Sociobiol., 24, pp. 181-199 
504 |a Seeley, T.D., Camazine, S., Sneyd, J., Collective decision-making in honey bees: How colonies choose among nectar sources. Behav. Ecol (1991) Sociobiol., 28, pp. 277-290 
504 |a Sokal, R., Rohlf, F., (1969) Biometry, , San Francisco: W. H. Freeman 
504 |a Vogel, S., Ecophysiology of zoophilic polinization (1983) Physiological Plant Ecology III, Encyclopedia of Plant Physiology, pp. 559-624. , (O. L. Lange, P. S. Nobel, C. B. Osmond, H. Ziegier, Berlin: Springer Verlag 
520 3 |a Trophallactic behaviour of donor honey bees, Apis mellifera ligustica Spinola, fed at two feeders with different volumes of a 50% weight/weight sucrose solution, at different flow rates, was studied in an experimental arena. Transfer delay (i.e. the time up to the first trophallactic contact between partners) decreased as the crop load of donor bees increased. Donor bees that attained the same final crop load but spent more or less time drinking at the feeder, because of differences in the flow rate, decreased the transfer delay when the flow rate of feeding increased. As crop load increases with the flow rate of the food source, donor foragers could indicate by their transfer delay how profitable a food source is. Transfer delays also varied throughout the day, being shortest in the morning (0800-1200 hours) for all crop loads tested. © 1993 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. All rights reserved.  |l eng 
593 |a Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Pab. II-Ciudad Universitaria, CP 1428, Buenos Aires, Argentina 
690 1 0 |a BEE 
690 1 0 |a HONEYBEE 
690 1 0 |a TROPHALLAXIS 
690 1 0 |a APINAE 
690 1 0 |a APIS 
690 1 0 |a APIS MELLIFERA 
690 1 0 |a APIS MELLIFERA LIGUSTICA 
690 1 0 |a APOIDEA 
700 1 |a Núñez, J.A. 
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