Maternal influence on the acceptance of virgin queens introduced into Africanized honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies

G. Moretto, J.C.V. Guerra, H. Kalvelage, E. Espindola
Published: September 30, 2004
Genet. Mol. Res. 3 (3) : 441-445
 
Cite this Article:
G. Moretto, J.C.V. Guerra, H. Kalvelage, E. Espindola (2004). Maternal influence on the acceptance of virgin queens introduced into Africanized honey bee (Apis mellifera) colonies. Genet. Mol. Res. 3(3): 441-445.
 
About the Authors 
G. Moretto, J.C.V. Guerra, H. Kalvelage, E. Espindola
 
Corresponding author
G. Moretto
E-mail: gmoretto@furb.br 
 
ABSTRACT

The oviposition potential of honey bee queens decreases with age, therefore it is important to replace old queens with younger ones on a periodic basis. However, queen replacement is problematic, especially in Africanized honey bee colonies, since many introduced queens are not accepted, and virgin queens are less easily accepted than are mated queens. We assessed the influence of genetic origin (queen mother) on the acceptance of queens, when they were introduced as virgins into Africanized honey bee colonies. For this purpose, 12 daughter queens from each of 11 mother queens with no degree of kinship among themselves were introduced. Introductions were made monthly, for 12 months, though the winter months of June and July were not included, as there is little brood and drones are rare in winter. There was some seasonal variation in the acceptance rates; generally there was greater acceptance in months with good honey flows. However, the acceptance of introduced queens was influenced by their origin. The rate of acceptance of daughter queens from the 11 different mother queens varied significantly, ranging from 33 to 75%. There appears to be a genetic influence of the mother queen on the introduced queen acceptance rate.

Key words: Africanized bees, Queen acceptance, Mother queen effect.

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