@phdthesis{Azzami2011, author = {Azzami, Klara}, title = {Antibakterielle und antivirale Abwehrreaktionen in unterschiedlichen Entwicklungsstadien der Honigbiene (Apis mellifera)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-66452}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Das angeborene Immunsystem von Insekten besteht aus einer humoralen Komponente, einer zellul{\"a}ren Komponente und dem Prophenoloxidase-aktivierenden System. Fast alle Erkenntnisse {\"u}ber das angeborene Immunsystem stammen von Arbeiten mit Modellorganismen wie z.B. Drosophila oder Anopheles gambiae. Wie genau das Immunsystem der Honigbiene (Apis mellifera) funktioniert, ist jedoch noch relativ unbekannt. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die unterschiedlichen Immunreaktionen aller drei Entwicklungsstadien der Honigbiene nach artifizieller Infektion mit Gram-negativen und Gram-positiven Bakterien (Escherichia coli und Micrococcus flavus) und dem Akuten Bienen Paralyse Virus (ABPV) untersucht und verglichen. Eine E. coli-Injektion zeigt bei Larven und adulten Arbeiterinnen nur wenig Auswirkung auf das {\"a}ußere Erscheinungsbild und die {\"U}berlebensrate. In beiden Entwicklungsstadien wird die humorale Immunantwort stark induziert, erkennbar an der Expression der antimikrobiellen Peptide (AMPs) Hymenoptaecin, Defensin1 und Abaecin. Zus{\"a}tzlich werden allein in Jungbienen nach bakterieller Infektion vier weitere immunspezifische Proteine exprimiert. Unter anderem eine Carboxylesterase (CE1) und das Immune-Responsive Protein 30 (IRp30). Die Expression von CE1 und IRp30 zeigt dabei den gleichen zeitlichen Verlauf wie die der AMPs. In Jungbienen kommt es zudem nach E. coli-Injektion zu einer raschen Abnahme an lebenden Bakterien in der H{\"a}molymphe, was auf eine Aktivierung der zellul{\"a}ren Immunantwort schließen l{\"a}sst. {\"A}ltere Bienen und Winterbienen zeigen eine st{\"a}rkere Immunkompetenz als Jungbienen. Selbst nicht-infizierte Winterbienen exprimieren geringe Mengen der immunspezifischen Proteine IRp30 und CE1. Die Expression von IRp30 kann dabei durch Verwundung oder Injektion von E. coli noch gesteigert werden. Eine weitere Besonderheit ist die im Vergleich zu Jungbienen raschere Abnahme an lebenden Bakterien in der H{\"a}molymphe bis hin zur vollst{\"a}ndigen Eliminierung. Die Reaktion von Puppen auf eine bakterielle Infektion war v{\"o}llig unerwartet. Nach Injektion von E. coli-Zellen kommt es innerhalb von 24 h p.i. zu einem t{\"o}dlichen Kollaps, der sich in einer Grauf{\"a}rbung des gesamten Puppenk{\"o}rpers {\"a}ußert. Da keine Expression von AMPs nachzuweisen war, wird die humorale Immunantwort offensichtlich nicht induziert. Auch die zellul{\"a}re Immunantwort scheint nicht aktiviert zu werden, denn es konnte keine Abnahme an lebenden E. coli-Zellen beobachtet werden. Aufgrund dieser fehlenden Immunreaktionen vermehrt sich E. coli im H{\"a}mocoel infizierter Puppen und scheint damit deren Tod herbeizuf{\"u}hren. Nach viraler Infektion wurden in allen drei Entwicklungsstadien der Honigbiene g{\"a}nzlich andere Reaktionen beobachtet als nach bakterieller Infektion. Bei dem verwendeten Akuten Bienen Paralyse Virus (ABPV) handelt es sich um ein Picorna-{\"a}hnliches Virus, dessen Vermehrung in der H{\"a}molymphe {\"u}ber die massive Synthese der Capsidproteine verfolgt werden kann. Eine Injektion von sehr wenigen ABPV-Partikeln ins H{\"a}mocoel hat dramatische Auswirkungen auf Larven. Nach Virusinjektion kommt es innerhalb weniger Stunden zu einer raschen Virusvermehrung und schon 24 h p.i. zum Tod, h{\"a}ufig begleitet von einer Schwarzf{\"a}rbung der gesamten Larve. Kurz vor dem Ableben kommt es neben dem Abbau hochmolekularer Speicherproteine zur Expression zahlreicher Proteine, die u.a. an der Translation oder dem Schutz vor oxidativem Stress beteiligt sind. Auf Jungbienen hat eine ABPV-Infektion keine so dramatischen Auswirkungen wie auf Larven. Sie zeigen lediglich Zeichen von Paralyse, zudem {\"u}berleben sie l{\"a}nger bei h{\"o}heren injizierten Partikelzahlen, die Virusvermehrung ist langsamer und es kommt zu keiner starken Ver{\"a}nderung des H{\"a}molymph-Proteinmusters. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass es in ABPV-infizierten Larven oder adulten Bienen zu keiner erkennbaren Aktivierung des humoralen Immunsystems in Form von exprimierten AMPs kommt. Zudem scheint die humorale Immunantwort auch nicht unterdr{\"u}ckt zu werden, denn nach gleichzeitiger Injektion von E. coli und ABPV kommt es neben der Expression viraler Capsidproteine auch zur Expression von AMPs. Zus{\"a}tzlich konnte in Jungbienen nach Infektion mit ABPV eine zellul{\"a}re Immunantwort in Form von Nodulation ausgeschlossen werden. {\"A}ltere Bienen scheinen nicht nur mit bakteriellen Infektionen, sondern auch mit einer ABPV-Infektion besser zurechtzukommen. Bei einer Menge an ABPV-Partikeln, die in Jungbienen sp{\"a}testens 72 h p.i. zum Tod f{\"u}hrt, ist in Winterbienen eine Virusvermehrung erst ab 96 h p.i. erkennbar und diese beeintr{\"a}chtigt die {\"U}berlebensrate kaum. Puppen sind einer Virusinfektion genauso schutzlos ausgeliefert wie einer Bakterieninfektion. Es kommt zwar zu keiner starken {\"A}nderung des {\"a}ußeren Erscheinungsbildes, jedoch bleiben Puppen in ihrer Entwicklung komplett stehen. Das Virus muss sich daher stark vermehren, allerdings nicht {\"u}berwiegend - wie bei Larven und adulten Bienen - in der H{\"a}molymphe.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Basile2009, author = {Basile, Rebecca}, title = {Thermoregulation and Resource Management in the Honeybee (Apis mellifera)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-39793}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Ein grundlegender Faktor, der f{\"u}r das {\"U}berleben einer Kolonie sozialer Insekten ausschlaggebend ist, liegt in der F{\"a}higkeit Nahrung durch sogenannte „Trophallaxis" auszutauschen. Diese F{\"u}tterungskontakte sorgen f{\"u}r die gleichm{\"a}ßige Verteilung der Nahrung innerhalb der Kolonie und werden als einer der Grundpfeiler der Sozialit{\"a}t der Staatenbildenden Insekten erachtet. Im Fall der Honigbienen finden diese Kontakte in vollkommener Dunkelheit statt. Damit es in dieser Situation {\"u}berhaupt zum Nahrungsaustausch kommen kann, sind die Antennen von großer Wichtigkeit. Ein erster Schritt in den Verhaltensweisen, die der Rezipient eines trophallaktischen Kontaktes zeigt, ist der Kontakt einer Antennenspitze mit den Mundwerkzeugen des Donoren, da sich dort die regurgitierte Nahrung befindet. Diese Ber{\"u}hrung hat aufgrund der gustatorischen Sensibilit{\"a}t der Antenne den Zweck, das angebotene Futter zu „erschmecken". Die rechte Antenne wird vom Rezipienten eines trophallaktischen Kontakts signifikant h{\"a}ufiger eingesetzt als die linke Antenne. Die Pr{\"a}ferenz f{\"u}r die rechte Antenne bleibt dabei auch erhalten, wenn ein Teil der Antennengeisel abgetrennt wurde, also die sensorischen F{\"a}higkeiten der rechten Antenne stark beeintr{\"a}chtigt wurden. Der Grund f{\"u}r die Pr{\"a}ferenz der rechten Antenne k{\"o}nnte ihrer erh{\"o}hten Sensibilit{\"a}t gegen{\"u}ber Zuckerwasser zugrunde liegen, da die rechte Antenne im Laborversuch signifikant st{\"a}rker auf Stimulationen mit Zuckerwasser verschiedener Konzentrationen reagierte als die linke. Trophallaktische Kontakte sichern Individuen innerhalb einer Kolonie den Zugang zur lebenswichtigen Nahrung. Im Beispiel der Honigbienen ist st{\"a}ndige Zugriff auf Nahrung besonders wichtig, da es sich um ein heterothermes Tier handelt, das die F{\"a}higkeit besitzt, aktiv seine K{\"o}rpertemperatur zu regulieren. Obgleich jedes Individuum in der Lage ist, seine K{\"o}rpertemperatur den eigenen Bed{\"u}rfnissen anzupassen, ist diese F{\"a}higkeit streng durch den in der Nahrung aufgenommenen Zucker reguliert. Im Gegensatz zu den S{\"a}ugetieren oder V{\"o}geln, die f{\"u}r eine Erh{\"o}hung des Blutzuckerspiegels auch auf Fett- oder Eiweißressourcen zur{\"u}ckgreifen k{\"o}nnen, ist die Honigbiene auf die Glucose aus der aufgenommenen Nahrung angewiesen. Die Ergebnisse dieser Untersuchung zeigen, dass der Zuckergehalt der aufgenommenen Nahrung positiv mit der Thoraxtemperatur der Bienen korreliert. Dieser Zusammenhang tritt auf, selbst wenn keine W{\"a}rmeerzeugung f{\"u}r die Brutpflege oder f{\"u}r das Erw{\"a}rmen der Wintertraube notwendig ist und die Tiere außerhalb des Stockes ohne eigentliche Notwendigkeit f{\"u}r die W{\"a}rmeerzeugung in einem K{\"a}fig gehalten werden. Die Ergebnisse der Untersuchung zeigen, dass die Rezipienten beim Nahrungsaustausch eine signifikant h{\"o}here Thoraxtemperatur haben als die Donoren. Außerdem zeigen die Rezipienten nach der F{\"u}tterung signifikant h{\"a}ufiger Brutw{\"a}rmeverhalten als die Donoren. Letztere haben eine signifikant niedrigere Thoraxtemperatur als die Rezipienten und zeigen eine Verhaltenstendenz, h{\"a}ufig zwischen Brutbereich und Honiglager hin- und her zu pendeln. Dabei nehmen sie im Honiglager Honig in ihren Kropf auf und f{\"u}ttern mit dieser Nahrung danach Bienen im Brutbereich. Außerdem zeigen die Ergebnisse, dass es einen w{\"a}rmegesteuerten Ausl{\"o}semechanismus gibt, der den Donoren und Rezipienten des trophallaktischen Kontakts dazu verhilft, trotz der Dunkelheit des Stocks praktisch verz{\"o}gerungsfreie Nahrungs{\"u}bertragung am Ort des h{\"o}chsten Energieverbrauchs zu gew{\"a}hrleisten. Das Hervorw{\"u}rgen von Nahrung angesichts einer W{\"a}rmequelle k{\"o}nnte seinen Ursprung in einer Beschwichtigungsgeste haben. Aggressive Tiere zeigen neben sichtbaren aggressiven Verhalten auch durch ihre erh{\"o}hte K{\"o}rpertemperatur, dass sie bereit sind sich auf einen Kampf einzulassen. Die Temperaturerh{\"o}hung eines aggressiven Tieres beruht dabei auf der erh{\"o}hten Muskelaktivit{\"a}t, die vor allem bei Insekten dazu n{\"o}tig ist, einen entsprechende Reaktion im Falle eines Kampfes oder der Flucht zeigen zu k{\"o}nnen. Wird ein Individuum mit Aggression konfrontiert, so bleibt ihm die Wahl sich auf einen Kampf einzulassen, zu fl{\"u}chten oder durch eine Beschwichtigungsgeste eine Deeskalation der Situation einzuleiten. Besonders h{\"a}ufig wird f{\"u}r diesen Zweck Nahrung regurgitiert und dem dominanteren Tier angeboten, um einem Konflikt aus dem Weg zu gehen. Die F{\"a}higkeit, Arbeiterinnen mit kleinen Portionen konzentrierter Nahrung zu versorgen tr{\"a}gt zu einer {\"o}konomischen Verteilung der Ressourcen bei, die mit den physiologischen Bed{\"u}rfnissen der Honigbienen konform geht und die {\"o}kologischen Erfordernisse des Stockes erf{\"u}llt. Das daraus resultierende Managementsystem, welches sparsam mit den Ressourcen haushaltet und auf die individuellen Bed{\"u}rfnisse jeder einzelnen Biene einzugehen vermag, k{\"o}nnte ein Grund f{\"u}r die F{\"a}higkeit der Honigbienen zur Entwicklung mehrj{\"a}hriger Kolonien sein, die, anders als Hummeln oder Wespen, auch den Winter in gem{\"a}ßigten Zonen als Gemeinschaft zu {\"u}berstehen verm{\"o}gen.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Blatt2001, author = {Blatt, Jasmina}, title = {Haemolymph sugar homeostasis and the control of the proventriculus in the honeybee (Apis mellifera carnica L.)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-880}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2001}, abstract = {The proventriculus regulates the food passage from crop to midgut. As the haemolymph provides a constantly updated indication of an insect's nutritional state, it is assumed that the factor controlling the proventri-culus activity is to be found in the haemolymph. The purpose of this doctoral thesis was to investigate how output (metabolic rate), input (food quality and food quantity) and internal state variables (haemolymph osmolarity and haemolymph sugar titer) affect each other and which of these factors controls the activity of the proventriculus in the honeybee. Therefore free-flying foragers were trained to collect con-trolled amounts of different sugar solutions. Immediately after feeding, metabolic rates were measured over different periods of time, then crop-emptying rates and haemolymph sugar titers were measured for the same individual bees. Under all investigated conditions, both the sugar transport rates through the proventriculus and the haemolyph sugar titers depended mainly on the metabolism. For bees collecting controlled amounts of 15 per cent, 30 per cent or 50 per cent sucrose solution haemolymph trehalose, glucose and fructose titers were constant for metabolic rates from 0 to 4.5 mlCO2/h. At higher metabolic rates, trehalose concentration decreased while that of glucose and fructose increased with the exception of bees fed 15 per cent sucrose solution. As the supply of sugar from the crop via the proventriculus was sufficient to support even the highest metabolic rates, the observed pattern must result from an upper limit in the capacity of the fat body to synthesise trehalose. The maximal rate of conversion of glucose to trehalose in the fat body was therefore calculated to average 92.4 µg glucose/min. However, for bees fed 15 per cent sucrose solution both the rate of conversion of glucose to trehalose and the rate of sugar transport from the crop to the midgut were limited, causing an overall decrease in total haemolymph sugar titers for metabolic rates higher than 5 mlCO2/h. Haemolymph sucrose titers were generally low but increased with increasing metabolic rates, even though sucrose was not always detected in bees with high metabolic rates. Though foragers were able to adjust their sugar transport rates precisely to their metabolic rates, a fixed surplus of sugars was transported through the proventriculus under specific feed-ing conditions. This fixed amount of sugars increased with increasing concentration and in-creasing quantity of fed sugar solution, but decreased with progressing time after feeding. This fixed amount of sugars was independent of the metabolic rates of the bees and of the molarity and viscosity of the fed sugar solution. As long as the bees did not exhaust their crop content, the haemolymph sugar titers were unaffected by the sugar surplus, by the time after feeding, by the concentration and by the viscosity of fed sugar solution. When bees were fed pure glucose (or fructose) solutions, un-usually little fructose (or glucose) was found in the haemolymph, leading to lower total haemolymph sugar titers, while the trehalose titer remained unaffected. In order to investigate the mechanisms underlying the regulation of the honeybee proven-triculus, foraging bees were injected either with metabolisable (glucose, fructose, trehalose), or non-metabolisable sugars (sorbose). Bees reacted to injections of metabolisable sugars with reduced crop-emptying rates, but injection of non-metabolisable sugars had no influence on crop emptying. Therefore it is concluded that the proventriculus regulation is controlled by the concentration of metabolisable compounds in the haemolymph, and not by the haemo-lymph osmolarity. A period of 10min was enough to observe reduced crop emptying rates after injections. It is suggested that glucose and fructose have an effect on the proventriculus activity only via their transformation to trehalose. However, when the bees were already in-jected 5min after feeding, no response was detectable. In addition it was investigated whether the overregulation is the result of feed-forward regulation for the imminent take-off and flight. In a first experiment, we investigated whether the bees release an extra amount of sugar solution very shortly before leaving for the hive. In a second experiment, it was tested whether the distance covered by the bees might have an influence on the surplus amount released prior to the take-off. In a third experiment, it was investigated if walking bees fail to release this extra amount of sugars, as they do not have to fly. Though we were not able to demonstrate that the overregulation is the result of feed-forward regulation for the imminent take-off and flight, it is conceivable that this phenome-non is a fixed reaction in foragers that can not be modulated. To investigate whether regulated haemolymph sugar titers are also observed in honeybee foragers returning from natural food sources, their crop contents and haemolymph sugar titers were investigated. While the quantity of the collected nectar was without influence on the haemolymph sugar titers, foragers showed increasing haemolymph sugar titers of glucose, fructose and sucrose with increasing sugar concentration of the carried nectar. In contrast no relationship between crop nectar concentrations and haemolymph trehalose titers was observed. We are sure that the regulation of food passage from crop to midgut is controlled by the trehalose titer. However, under some conditions the balance between consumption and income is not numerically exact. This imprecision depends on the factors which have an impact on the foraging energetics of the bees but are independent of those without influence on the foraging energetics. Therefore we would assume that the proventriculus activity is modulated by the motivational state of the bees.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Bock2005, author = {Bock, Fiola}, title = {Untersuchungen zu nat{\"u}rlicher und manipulierter Aufzucht von Apis mellifera : Morphologie, Kognition und Verhalten}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-17801}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {3. Zusammenfassung Ein noch immer unvollst{\"a}ndig verstandenes Problem sind die exakten Mechanismen der Arbeitsteilung und Koordination innerhalb von Bienenv{\"o}lkern Apis mellifera. Auf der einen Seite muss die sensorische und neuronale Ausstattung jedes Individuums das Potential zur Kommunikation und Aufgabenbew{\"a}ltigung enthalten, zum anderen m{\"u}ssen jedem Bienenvolk Mechanismen zur Steuerung zur Verf{\"u}gung stehen, die auch so weit in die Zukunft reichenden Notwendigkeiten wie Wintervorbereitungen zuverl{\"a}ssig durchf{\"u}hren. Die vorliegende Arbeit beleuchtet daraus ausgew{\"a}hlte Aspekte. Zum einen werden Aspekte der kognitiven F{\"a}higkeiten der Einzelbienen untersucht, die im Hinblick auf ihre Rolle als sammelnde Arbeiterinnen eine wichtige Rolle spielen. Das Erkennen und Verarbeiten von Mustern spielt eine wichtige Rolle beim Auffinden von potentiellen Nahrungsquellen. Hier konnte mittels des DMTS - Paradigma ein hoher Abstraktionsgrad der Musterverarbeitung sowie eine Speicherung auch komplexer Muster gezeigt werden. Zum anderen wird die Bruttemperatur als ein Einfluss auf die Puppenentwicklung und dessen m{\"o}gliche Folgen auf kognitive F{\"a}higkeiten und Lebenshistorie untersucht. Variation der Bruttemperatur wurde in verschiedenen Zusammenh{\"a}ngen als starker Einfluss auf unterschiedliche Aspekte der Entwicklung gezeigt. In der vorliegenden Arbeit kann diese Bruttemperatur als m{\"o}glicher Faktor der nachfolgend unterschiedlichen Auspr{\"a}gung von Verhaltensmustern gezeigt werden. Dabei wird ebenso auf die Unterschiede im Verhaltensmuster von t{\"a}glichen Stockt{\"a}tigkeiten wie auf die resultierenden Unterschiede in der Lebensgeschichte und -spanne eingegangen, die aus unterschiedlichen Brutaufzuchtstemperaturen resultieren k{\"o}nnen. Als Aufzuchtstemperaturen werden dabei 32°C, 35°C sowie 36°C verwendet, um eine Vari ation zwischen der an anderer Stelle berichteten mittleren, der niedrigsten und der h{\"o}chsten Temperatur f{\"u}r morphologisch vollst{\"a}ndig entwickelte Bienen zu erreichen und die daraus resultierenden Arbeiterinnen zu untersuchen. Sowohl die Ergebnisse der Verhaltensuntersuchungen von Stockbienen wie auch der Vergleich von Lebensaktivit{\"a}t und -spanne zeigen dabei signifikante Unterschiede zwischen den bei unterschiedlichen Temperaturen aufgezogenen Arbeiterinnen in deren analysiertem Verhalten.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Bujok2005, author = {Bujok, Brigitte}, title = {Thermoregulation im Brutbereich der Honigbiene Apis mellifera carnica}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-15903}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {Honigbienen (Apis mellifera carnica) regulieren die Temperatur ihrer Brut in einem sehr engen Temperaturfenster, da vor allem die gedeckelte Brut sehr temperaturempfindlich reagiert (Groh et al. 2004). Die Thermoregulation ist nicht - wie lange angenommen - Beiprodukt von allt{\"a}glichen Arbeiten der Bienen im Brutbereich, sondern eine aktive und Energie- und Zeitaufw{\"a}ndige eigene T{\"a}tigkeit. Arbeiterinnen ziehen sich mit ihren Beinen an die Brutoberfl{\"a}che, dr{\"u}cken ihren warmen Thorax auf die Brutdeckel und verharren so f{\"u}r einige Minuten um mit der eigenen K{\"o}rperw{\"a}rme die Brut zu temperieren (Bujok et al. 2002). Wie erwartet korrelierte die Thoraxtemperatur einer Arbeiterin mit der Frequenz der abdominalen Atembewegungen, bei sehr hohen Thoraxtemperaturen ({\"u}ber 40°C) erreichten die Bienen Atemfrequenzen von {\"u}ber 8Hz. Eine weitere Methode die Brut effektiv zu w{\"a}rmen {\"u}bten Bienen aus, die leere Zellen im gedeckelten Brutbereich besuchen (Kleinhenz et al. 2003). Arbeiterinnen gingen dabei bevorzugt in Zellen, die von m{\"o}glichst vielen gedeckelten Zellen umgeben waren. Sowohl die Dauer der Zellbesuche, als auch die mittlere Thoraxtemperatur bei Ein- und Austritt der Zelle korrelierten mit der Anzahl der benachbarten Brutzellen - je mehr Brutzellen eine leere Zelle in ihrer direkten Nachbarschaft hatte umso l{\"a}nger dauerte der Besuch einer Biene und umso h{\"o}her ist die Ein- bzw. Austrittstemperatur der Biene. Mindestes 48 Stunden alte Bienen unterschieden sich signifikant in ihrem W{\"a}rmeverhalten von j{\"u}ngeren Bienen. Tote gedeckelte Brut wurde in manchen F{\"a}llen {\"u}ber viele Tage (durchgehend bis 10 Tage) gew{\"a}rmt, sie unterschied sich in ihrer Temperatur nicht von unbehandelter gedeckelter Brut. In weiteren Versuchen lag die Bruttemperatur von toter Brut zwar unter der eines Kontrollbereiches, die Temperatur lag aber weiterhin im optimalen Bereich von 33,5 bis 35°C (Groh et al. 2004). In diesen Versuchen wurde die tote Brut vor dem Einsetzen in den Beobachtungsstock wieder auf 35°C erw{\"a}rmt. Wachskegel in gedeckelten Zellen wurden erkannt und ausger{\"a}umt. Aktive Signale, die von der Brut ausgehen scheinen also nicht notwendig f{\"u}r die effektive Bruttemperaturregulierung zu sein. Untersuchungen mittels Laser-Doppler-Vibrometrie zeigten auch keine Hinweise auf eine mechanische Kommunikation zwischen den Puppen und den Arbeiterinnen. Das Brutw{\"a}rmen scheint eine Aktion zu sein, die von den Bienen nur in Gemeinschaft sinnvoll durchgef{\"u}hrt werden kann. In einigen F{\"a}llen kam es w{\"a}hrend der Puppenphase zu unerkl{\"a}rlichen Abf{\"a}llen in der Bruttemperatur, die nur durch einen positiven R{\"u}ckkopplungseffekt seitens der Arbeiterinnen erkl{\"a}rt werden kann. Beim Brutw{\"a}rmen spielen die Antennen der Arbeiterinnen wahrscheinlich eine wichtige Rolle. W{\"a}hrend sich die Bienen beim aktiven Brutw{\"a}rmen den Brutdeckel ann{\"a}hern sind die Antennenspitzen immer auf die Brutdeckel gerichtet. Fehlen den Arbeiterinnen die Antennen, dann ist die Thermoregulation eingeschr{\"a}nkt oder unzureichend. Die Bruttemperatur korreliert mit der Anzahl der abgetrennten Antennensegmente, je mehr Antennensegmente fehlen, desto weniger gut wird die Temperatur im Brutbereich hoch und konstant gehalten. Zus{\"a}tzlich scheint es eine Lateralit{\"a}t in der Antennenfunktion zu geben, wurde die rechte Antenne gek{\"u}rzt w{\"a}rmten die Bienen die Brut signifikant schlechter, als beim K{\"u}rzen der linken Antenne. Durch das K{\"u}rzen der Antennen {\"a}nderte sich auch das Verhalten der Tiere: Kontrollbienen verharrten ruhig im Brutbereich, w{\"a}hrend Bienen mit gek{\"u}rzten Antennen teilweise {\"a}hnlich warm waren, aber nicht mehr das oben beschriebene aktive Brutw{\"a}rmeverhalten zeigten.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{DeğirmencineePoelloth2023, author = {Değirmenci [n{\´e}e P{\"o}lloth], Laura}, title = {Sugar perception and sugar receptor function in the honeybee (\(Apis\) \(mellifera\))}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-32187}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-321873}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {In the eusocial insect honeybee (Apis mellifera), many sterile worker bees live together with a reproductive queen in a colony. All tasks of the colony are performed by the workers, undergoing age-dependent division of labor. Beginning as hive bees, they take on tasks inside the hive such as cleaning or the producing of larval food, later developing into foragers. With that, the perception of sweetness plays a crucial role for all honeybees whether they are sitting on the honey stores in the hive or foraging for food. Their ability to sense sweetness is undoubtedly necessary to develop and evaluate food sources. Many of the behavioral decisions in honeybees are based on sugar perception, either on an individual level for ingestion, or for social behavior such as the impulse to collect or process nectar. In this context, honeybees show a complex spectrum of abilities to perceive sweetness on many levels. They are able to perceive at least seven types of sugars and decide to collect them for the colony. Further, they seem to distinguish between these sugars or at least show clear preferences when collecting them. Additionally, the perception of sugar is not rigid in honeybees. For instance, their responsiveness towards sugar changes during the transition from in-hive bees (e.g. nurses) to foraging and is linked to the division of labor. Other direct or immediate factors changing responsiveness to sugars are stress, starvation or underlying factors, such as genotype. Interestingly, the complexity in their sugar perception is in stark contrast to the fact that honeybees seem to have only three predicted sugar receptors. In this work, we were able to characterize the three known sugar receptors (AmGr1, AmGr2 and AmGr3) of the honeybee fully and comprehensively in oocytes (Manuscript II, Chapter 3 and Manuscript III, Chapter 4). We could show that AmGr1 is a broad sugar receptor reacting to sucrose, glucose, maltose, melezitose and trehalose (which is the honeybees' main blood sugar), but not fructose. AmGr2 acts as its co-receptor altering AmGr1's specificity, AmGr3 is a specific fructose receptor and we proved the heterodimerization of all receptors. With my studies, I was able to reproduce and compare the ligand specificity of the sugar receptors in vivo by generating receptor mutants with CRISPR/Cas9. With this thesis, I was able to define AmGr1 and AmGr3 as the honeybees' basis receptors already capable to detect all sugars of its known taste spectrum. In the expression analysis of my doctoral thesis (Manuscript I, Chapter 2) I demonstrated that both basis receptors are expressed in the antennae and the brain of nurse bees and foragers. This thesis assumes that AmGr3 (like the Drosophila homologue) functions as a sensor for fructose, which might be the satiety signal, while AmGr1 can sense trehalose as the main blood sugar in the brain. Both receptors show a reduced expression in the brain of foragers when compared with nurse bees. These results may reflect the higher concentrated diet of nurse bees in the hive. The higher number of receptors in the brain may allow nurse bees to perceive hunger earlier and to consume the food their sitting on. Forager bees have to be more persistent to hunger, when they are foraging, and food is not so accessible. The findings of reduced expression of the fructose receptor AmGr3 in the antennae of nurse bees are congruent with my other result that nurse bees are also less responsive to fructose at the antennae when compared to foragers (Manuscript I, Chapter 2). This is possible, since nurse bees sit more likely on ripe honey which contains not only higher levels of sugars but also monosaccharides (such as fructose), while foragers have to evaluate less-concentrated nectar. My investigations of the expression of AmGr1 in the antennae of honeybees found no differences between nurse bees and foragers, although foragers are more responsive to the respective sugar sucrose (Manuscript I, Chapter 2). Considering my finding that AmGr2 is the co-receptor of AmGr1, it can be assumed that AmGr1 and the mediated sucrose taste might not be directly controlled by its expression, but indirectly by its co-receptor. My thesis therefore clearly shows that sugar perception is associated with division of labor in honeybees and appears to be directly or indirectly regulated via expression. The comparison with a characterization study using other bee breeds and thus an alternative protein sequence of AmGr1 shows that co-expression of different AmGr1 versions with AmGr2 alters the sugar response differently. Therefore, this thesis provides first important indications that alternative splicing could also represent an important regulatory mechanism for sugar perception in honeybees. Further, I found out that the bitter compound quinine lowers the reward quality in learning experiments for honeybees (Manuscript IV, Chapter 5). So far, no bitter receptor has been found in the genome of honeybees and this thesis strongly assumes that bitter substances such as quinine inhibit sugar receptors in honeybees. With this finding, my work includes other molecules as possible regulatory mechanism in the honeybee sugar perception as well. We showed that the inhibitory effect is lower for fructose compared to sucrose. Considering that sugar signals might be processed as differently attractive in honeybees, this thesis concludes that the sugar receptor inhibition via quinine in honeybees might depend on the receptor (or its co-receptor), is concentration-dependent and based on the salience or attractiveness and concentration of the sugar present. With my thesis, I was able to expand the knowledge on honeybee's sugar perception and formulate a complex, comprehensive overview. Thereby, I demonstrated the multidimensional mechanism that regulates the sugar receptors and thus the sugar perception of honeybees. With this work, I defined AmGr1 and AmGr3 as the basis of sugar perception and enlarged these components to the co-receptor AmGr2 and the possible splice variants of AmGr1. I further demonstrated how those sugar receptor components function, interact and that they are clearly involved in the division of labor in honeybees. In summary, my thesis describes the mechanisms that enable honeybees to perceive sugar in a complex way, even though they inhere a limited number of sugar receptors. My data strongly suggest that honeybees overall might not only differentiate sugars and their diet by their general sweetness (as expected with only one main sugar receptor). The found sugar receptor mechanisms and their interplay further suggest that honeybees might be able to discriminate directly between monosaccharides and disaccharides or sugar molecules and with that their diet (honey and nectar).}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Groh2005, author = {Groh, Claudia}, title = {Environmental influences on the development of the female honeybee brain Apis mellifera}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-17388}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2005}, abstract = {F{\"u}r die Honigbiene spielt der Geruchssinn eine entscheidende Rolle bei der Kommunikation innerhalb des Sozialstaates. Kastenspezifische, auf uweltbedingten Einfl{\"u}ssen basierende sowie altersbedingte Unterschiede im olfaktorisch gesteuerten Verhalten liefern ein hervorragendes Modellsystem f{\"u}r diese Studie, um die Entwicklung und Funktion neuronaler Plastizit{\"a}t im olfaktorischen System zu untersuchen. Diese Studie konzentriert sich auf Unterschiede zwischen K{\"o}niginnen und Arbeiterinnen, den beiden weiblichen Kasten innerhalb des Bienestaates, sowie auf umweltbedingte Plastizit{\"a}t. Diploide Eier, aus denen sich K{\"o}niginnen und Arbeiterinnen entwickeln, sind genetisch identisch. Dennoch entwickeln sich K{\"o}niginnen wesentlich schneller zum Adulttier als Arbeiterinnen, sind als Imago gr{\"o}ßer, leben wesentlich l{\"a}nger und zeigen andere Verhaltensweisen. Diese Unterschiede werden durch eine differentielle larvale F{\"u}tterung initiiert. Im Anschluss an das Larvenstadium und somit nach erfolgter Kastendetermination, entwickeln sich die Bienen {\"u}ber eine Puppenphase (verdeckelte Phase) zum Imago. Adulte Bienen klimatisieren das zentrale Brutareal auf einer mittleren Temperatur von 35°C konstant. Bienen, die bei niedrigeren Temperaturen innerhalb des physiologisch relevanten Bereichs aufwachsen, weisen Defizite im olfaktorischen Lernverhalten und in der Tanzkommunikation auf. M{\"o}gliche neuronale Korrelate f{\"u}r altersbedingte, temperatur- und kastenspezifische Unterschiede im olfaktorisch gesteuerten Verhalten sollten in dieser Arbeit betrachtet werden. Die strukturellen Analysen konzentrierten sich dabei auf prim{\"a}re (Antennalloben) und sekund{\"a}re (Pilzk{\"o}rper-Calyces)olfaktorische Verarbeitungszentren im Gehirn von sich entwickelnden und adulten Tieren beider Kasten. Synchron verdeckelte Brutzellen beider Kasten wurden unter kontrollierten Bedingungen im Inkubator herangezogen. Neuroanatomische Untersuchungen wurden an fixierten Gewebeschnitten mittels einer Doppelfluoreszenzf{\"a}rbung mit Fluor-Phalloidin und anti-Synapsin Immuncytochemie durchgef{\"u}hrt. Diese Doppelmarkierung erm{\"o}glichte die Visualisierung und Quantifizierung individueller Synapsenkomplexe (Microglomeruli) im Pilzk{\"o}rper-Calyx. Phalloidin bindet an verschiedene F-Aktin Isoformen und kann zum Nachweis von F-Aktin im Insektennervensystem verwendet werden. F-Aktin wird w{\"a}hrend der Entwicklung in Wachstumskegeln und in adulten Gehirnen in pr{\"a}synaptischen Endigungen und dendritischen Dornen exprimiert. Pr{\"a}synaptische Elemente wurden durch den Einsatz eines spezifischen Antik{\"o}rpers gegen das Drosophila-Vesikeltransportprotein Synapsin I charakterisiert. Mit Hilfe der konfokalen Laser-Scanning Mikroskopie wurde die exakte r{\"a}umliche Zuordnung der Fluoreszenzsignale anhand optischer Schnitte durch die Pr{\"a}parate realisiert. Anhand dieser Methodik konnten erstmals {\"u}ber reine Volumenanalysen hinausgehende Messungen zur synaptischen Strukturplastizit{\"a}t im Pilzk{\"o}rper-Calyx durchgef{\"u}hrt werden. Die Untersuchungen an Gehirnen in den verschiedenen Puppenstadien zeigten Unterschiede im Entwicklungsverlauf der Gehirne mit dem Fokus auf die Bildung antennaler Glomeruli und calycaler Microglomeruli. Unterschiede in der Gehirnentwicklung verdeutlichten die ontogenetische Plastizit{\"a}t des Gehirns der Honigbiene. Entsprechend der k{\"u}rzeren Puppenphase der K{\"o}niginnen bildeten sich sowohl antennale Glomeruli als auch alle Untereinheiten (Lippe, Collar, Basalring) des Calyx etwa drei Tage fr{\"u}her aus. Direkt nach dem Schlupf zeigten quantitative Analysen innerhalb der Pilzk{\"o}rper-Calyces eine signifikant geringere Anzahl an Microglomeruli bei K{\"o}niginnen. Diese neuronale Strukturplastizit{\"a}t auf verschiedenen Ebenen der olfaktorischen Informationsverarbeitung korreliert mit der kastenspezifischen Arbeitsteilung. Die Arbeit liefert Erkenntnisse {\"u}ber den Einfluss eines wichtigen kontrollierten Umweltparameters, der Bruttemperatur, w{\"a}hrend der Puppenphase auf die synaptische Organisation der adulten Pilzk{\"o}rper-Calyces. Bereits geringe Unterschiede in der Aufzuchtstemperatur (1°C) beeinflussten signifikant die Anzahl von Microglomeruli in der Lippenregion des Calyx beider weiblicher Kasten. Die maximale Anzahl an MG entwickelte sich bei Arbeiterinnen bei 34.5°C, bei K{\"o}niginnen aber bei 33.5°C. Neben dieser entwicklungsbedingten neuronalen Plastizit{\"a}t zeigt diese Studie eine starke altersbedingte Strukturplastizit{\"a}t der MG w{\"a}hrend der relativ langen Lebensdauer von Bienenk{\"o}niginnen. Hervorzuheben ist, dass die Anzahl an MG in der olfaktorischen Lippenregion mit dem Alter anstieg (~55\%), in der angrenzenden visuellen Collarregion jedoch abnahm (~33\%). Die in der vorliegenden Arbeite erstmals gezeigte umweltbedingte Entwicklungsplastizit{\"a}t sowie altersbedingte synaptische Strukturplastizit{\"a}t in den sensorischen Eingangsregionen der Pilzk{\"o}rper-Calyces k{\"o}nnte kasten- und altersspezifischen Anpassungen im Verhalten zugrunde liegen.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Gaetschenberger2012, author = {G{\"a}tschenberger, Heike}, title = {Die Expression humoraler und zellul{\"a}rer Immunreaktionen bei Drohnenlarven und adulten Drohnen der Honigbiene (Apis mellifera)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71960}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Soziale Insekten wie die Honigbiene (Apis mellifera) besitzen ein breites Spektrum an Abwehrmechanismen gegen Pathogenbefall, sowohl auf der Ebene der Kolonie (soziale Immunit{\"a}t) als auch auf der Stufe des Individuums (angeborenes Immunsystem). Die Hauptaufgabe der relativ kurzlebigen Drohnen besteht in der Begattung von Jungk{\"o}niginnen. Daher stellte sich die Frage, ob auch die Drohnen {\"a}hnlich den Arbeiterinnen mit energieaufwendigen Immunreaktionen auf Infektionen reagieren. Wie im Folgenden beschrieben, konnte ich nachweisen, dass Drohnen eine ausgepr{\"a}gte Immunkompetenz besitzen. Das angeborene Immunsystem setzt sich aus humoralen und zellul{\"a}ren Abwehrreaktionen zusammen. Bei der humoralen Immunantwort werden bestimmte evolution{\"a}r konservierte Signalkaskaden aktiviert, an deren Ende die Expression einer Vielzahl von antimikrobiellen Peptiden (AMPs) und immunspezifischen Proteinen (IRPs) steht. Zur Analyse der humoralen Immunantwort wurden von mir zum einen Hemmhoftests durchgef{\"u}hrt, um die gesamte antimikrobielle Aktivit{\"a}t der Haemolymphe nach artifizieller Infektion zu ermitteln und zum anderen spezifische AMPs bzw. IRPs identifiziert. Hierzu wurden die Haemolymphproteine in ein- oder zwei-dimensionalen Polyacrylamidgelen aufgetrennt und ausgew{\"a}hlte Proteinbanden bzw. -spots mittels nano HPLC/Massenspektrometrie analysiert. Die Hauptkomponenten des zellul{\"a}ren Immunsystems sind Wundheilung, Phagozytose, Einkapselung und Nodulation. In meiner Arbeit habe ich zum ersten Mal Noduli bei infizierten Drohnen nachweisen k{\"o}nnen. Frisch geschl{\"u}pfte adulte Drohnen (1d) weisen ein breites Spektrum an Immunreaktionen auf, das sowohl humorale als auch zellul{\"a}re Immunantworten umfasst. Nach Infektion mit dem Gram-negativen Bakterium E.coli und verschiedenen bakteriellen Zellwandbestandteilen wie Lipopolysaccharid (LPS), Peptidoglycan (PGN) und 1,3ß-Glucan (Bestandteil von Pilzzellw{\"a}nden), werden die AMPs Hymenoptaecin, Defensin 1 und Abaecin induziert. Desweiteren exprimieren junge adulte Drohnen eine Reihe hochmolekularer immunspezifischer Proteine (IRPs) wie z.B. Carboxylesterase (CE 1), eine Serinprotease, die m{\"o}glicherweise an der Prozessierung der Prophenoloxidase beteiligt ist, ein Peptidoglycan-interagierendes Protein (PGRP-S2) und zwei Proteine unbekannter Funktion, IRp42 und IRp30. Parallel zu bekannten bienenspezifischen AMPs wurde ein animales Peptidtoxin (APT) in Drohnenlarven, adulten Drohnen und adulten Hummeln nach E.coli Infektion in der Haemolymphe nachgewiesen. Von dem als OCLP 1 (ω-conotoxin-like protein 1) benannten Peptid war bereits bekannt, dass es in Fischen paralytische und damit toxische Effekte ausl{\"o}st. Meine Beobachtungen lassen vermuten, dass es sich bei OCLP 1 um ein Peptidtoxin mit antimikrobiellen Eigenschaften und damit um eine neue Klasse von AMPs handelt. Die allgemeine humorale Immunkompetenz scheint w{\"a}hrend der gesamten Lebensspanne adulter Drohnen (~ 7 Wochen) konstant zu bleiben, wie durch die gleichbleibende antimikrobielle Aktivit{\"a}t im Hemmhoftest gezeigt wurde. Junge Drohnen reagieren auf eine E.coli Infektion mit der Bildung zahlreicher Noduli (~1000 Noduli/Drohn), die vor allem entlang des Herzschlauches zu finden sind. Diese zellul{\"a}re Immunantwort nimmt mit dem Alter der Drohnen ab, so dass bei 18 d alten Drohnen nur noch rund 10 Noduli/Drohn gefunden werden. Auf der anderen Seite nimmt die phagozytotische Aktivit{\"a}t bei {\"a}lteren Drohnen scheinbar zu. In einer Reihe von parallel laufenden Versuchsreihen konnte ich eindrucksvoll zeigen, dass zellul{\"a}re Immunreaktionen wie Phagozytose und Nodulation unmittelbar nach bakterieller Infektion einsetzen. Hierbei erreicht die Nodulibildung 8-10 h p.i. eine Plateauphase, wohingegen die humorale Immunantwort erst 6 h p.i. schwach einsetzt, danach stetig zunimmt und noch 72 h p.i. nachweisbar ist. Es ist mir gelungen, eine Methode zur k{\"u}nstlichen Aufzucht von Drohnenlarven zu etablieren. Diese erm{\"o}glichte konstante und sterile Versuchsbedingungen zur Untersuchung der Immunreaktionen von Larven. Nach Infektion mit E.coli reagieren Drohnenlarven mit einer starken Aktivierung ihrer humoralen Immunantwort durch die Expression von AMPs, jedoch werden keine hochmolekularen IRPs wie in adulten Drohnen hochreguliert. Zudem ist die Nodulibildung in Larven nur schwach ausgepr{\"a}gt. V{\"o}llig unerwartete Beobachtungen wurden beim Studium der Immunkompetenz von Drohnenpuppen gemacht. Nach Injektion lebender E.coli Zellen in Drohnenpuppen stellte ich eine dramatische Ver{\"a}nderung im Aussehen der Puppen fest. Die Puppen verf{\"a}rbten sich gr{\"a}ulich schwarz. Genauere Untersuchungen haben dann gezeigt, dass die Drohnenpuppen, wie auch die der Arbeiterinnen, offensichtlich keine zellul{\"a}re Abwehrreaktion aktivieren k{\"o}nnen und die humorale Immunantwort nur sehr schwach ausf{\"a}llt und viel zu sp{\"a}t einsetzt.}, subject = {Humorale Immunit{\"a}t}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Hendriksma2011, author = {Hendriksma, Harmen P.}, title = {Non-target effects of a multiple insect resistant Bt-maize on the honey bee (Apis mellifera L.)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-70304}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Neue methodische Entwicklungen zur Untersuchung der Ursachen des weltweit beobachteten Bienensterbens sind n{\"o}tig, um die lebenswichtige {\"O}kosystemdienstleistung der Best{\"a}ubung zu gew{\"a}hrleisten. Die {\"o}kologisch und wirtschaftlich bedeutsame Honigbiene (Apis mellifera) ist ein wichtiger Nichtziel-Organismus im Zulassungsverfahren f{\"u}r gentechnisch ver{\"a}nderte Pflanzen. Bisher sind vor allem Methoden zur Testung erwachsener Bienen unter Laborbedingungen verwendet worden, aber f{\"u}r eine Risikobewertung mit Hilfe von standardisierten Bienenkolonien oder in vitro gez{\"u}chteten Honigbienenlarven sind keine robusten Methoden oder standardisierte Protokolle vorhanden. In dieser Arbeit wurde eine Vielzahl an neuen methodischen Ans{\"a}tzen f{\"u}r die Biosicherheitsforschung entwickelt: eine Mortalit{\"a}ts-Falle (Kapitel II), ein "Full-Life-Cycle" Test (III), eine robuste in vitro Aufzucht-Methodik (IV), ein standardisierter in vitro Test f{\"u}r Bt-Pollen (V), eine gemischte Toxizit{\"a}tspr{\"u}fung f{\"u}r transgene Reinproteine (VI) und eine {\"U}berpr{\"u}fung der Darmmikroflora sowie der Pollenverdauungrate (VII). Die Ergebnisse dieser Studien zeigten keine nachteiligen Wirkungen von Bt-Maispollen oder Bt-Reinproteinen im "Worst-Case" Szenario auf Honigbienen. In Anbetracht der Datenlage ist eine Sch{\"a}digung der Honigbiene durch den getesteten Bt-Mais Mon89034xMon88017 unwahrscheinlich. Die Anwendung der Untersuchungsmethoden in zuk{\"u}nftigen Biosicherheitsstudien f{\"u}r transgene Pflanzen wird empfohlen.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{KayaZeeb2023, author = {Kaya-Zeeb, Sinan David}, title = {Octopaminergic Signaling in the Honeybee Flight Muscles : A Requirement for Thermogenesis}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-31408}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-314089}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {For all animals the cold represents a dreadful danger. In the event of severe heat loss, animals fall into a chill coma. If this state persists, it is inevitably followed by death. In poikilotherms (e.g. insects), the optimal temperature range is narrow compared to homeotherms (e.g. mammals), resulting in a critical core temperature being reached more quickly. As a consequence, poikilotherms either had to develop survival strategies, migrate or die. Unlike the majority of insects, the Western honeybee (Apis mellifera) is able to organize itself into a superorganism. In this process, worker bees warm and cool the colony by coordinated use of their flight muscles. This enables precise control of the core temperature in the hive, analogous to the core body temperature in homeothermic animals. However, to survive the harsh temperatures in the northern hemisphere, the thermogenic mechanism of honeybees must be in constant readiness. This mechanism is called shivering thermogenesis, in which honeybees generate heat using their flight muscles. My thesis presents the molecular and neurochemical background underlying shivering thermogenesis in worker honeybees. In this context, I investigated biogenic amine signaling. I found that the depletion of vesicular monoamines impairs thermogenesis, resulting in a decrease in thoracic temperature. Subsequent investigations involving various biogenic amines showed that octopamine can reverse this effect. This clearly indicates the involvement of the octopaminergic system. Proceeding from these results, the next step was to elucidate the honeybee thoracic octopaminergic system. This required a multidisciplinary approach to ultimately provide profound insights into the function and action of octopamine at the flight muscles. This led to the identification of octopaminergic flight muscle controlling neurons, which presumably transport octopamine to the flight muscle release sites. These neurons most likely innervate octopamine β receptors and their activation may stimulate intracellular glycolytic pathways, which ensure sufficient energy supply to the muscles. Next, I examined the response of the thoracic octopaminergic system to cold stress conditions. I found that the thoracic octopaminergic system tends towards an equilibrium, even though the initial stress response leads to fluctuations of octopamine signaling. My results indicate the importance of the neuro-muscular octopaminergic system and thus the need for its robustness. Moreover, cold sensitivity was observed for the expression of one transcript of the octopamine receptor gene AmOARβ2. Furthermore, I found that honeybees without colony context show a physiological disruption within the octopaminergic system. This disruption has profound effects on the honeybees protection against the cold. I could show how important the neuro-muscular octopaminergic system is for thermogenesis in honeybees. In this context, the previously unknown neurochemical modulation of the honeybee thorax has now been revealed. I also provide a broad basis to conduct further experiments regarding honeybee thermogenesis and muscle physiology.}, subject = {Octopamin}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Kleinhenz2008, author = {Kleinhenz, Marco}, title = {W{\"a}rme{\"u}bertragung im Brutbereich der Honigbiene (Apis mellifera)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-26866}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2008}, abstract = {In dieser Arbeit untersuche ich das Verhalten von Arbeiterbienen beim Brutw{\"a}rmen, die W{\"a}rme{\"u}bertragung von den Bienen auf die gedeckelte Brut, die thermophysikalischen Eigenschaften des Brutnests und spezielle Aspekte des Brutnestaufbaus, die f{\"u}r dieses Thema relevant sind und bisher nicht untersucht wurden. Meine Arbeit umfasst Verhaltensbeobachtungen und thermografische Messungen an individuellen Bienen, die Simulation des Heizverhaltens von Arbeiterinnen und das Messen der Temperatur{\"a}nderungen in der Wabe, die Messung der thermophysikalischen Eigenschaften der Brutwabe und der Zellw{\"a}nde (W{\"a}rmeleitf{\"a}higkeit und Durchl{\"a}ssigkeit f{\"u}r W{\"a}rmestrahlung), die Auswertung von Brutzelltemperaturen als Ergebnis des Verhaltens von Arbeiterbienen, die Analyse der Anzahl und der r{\"a}umlichen Verteilung von Brutl{\"u}cken (Auswertung in 2-D und 3-D bez{\"u}glich beider Wabenseiten) und die Entwicklung spezifischer Computersoftware, die zur Erarbeitung dieser Ergebnisse unverzichtbar ist. Ein wichtiges Ergebnis dieser Arbeit ist die Entdeckung und Beschreibung eines bemerkenswerten, bislang unbekannten Verhaltens der Honigbiene: Die Aufrechterhaltung hoher Thoraxtemperaturen (TTh) bei Langzeitbesuchen in offenen Zellen („L{\"u}cken") die verstreut in der gedeckelten Brutfl{\"a}che vorkommen. Hier zeige ich, dass die Aufrechterhaltung der hohen TTh nicht auf den Zellinhalt (z. B. offene Brut) bezogen ist - in den meisten F{\"a}llen waren die besuchten Zellen ohnehin leer - sondern auf die direkt benachbarte gedeckelte Brut, mit der diese Zellen {\"u}ber gemeinsame Zellw{\"a}nde in Kontakt stehen. Dieses Verhalten liefert eine Erkl{\"a}rung f{\"u}r Langzeitzellbesuche von sehr langer Dauer ohne erkennbare Aktivit{\"a}t, die in fr{\"u}heren Arbeiten beschrieben aber nicht v{\"o}llig verstanden wurden, und es rehabilitiert die scheinbar „faulen" Bienen im Zellinnern. Diesem Verhalten kommt eine große Bedeutung f{\"u}r das Brutw{\"a}rmen zu, da sich der aufgeheizte Thorax tief in der Wabe (fast an der Mittelwand) befindet wo der W{\"a}rmeverlust an die Luft minimiert ist und von wo bis zu 6 umliegende Puppenzellen gleichzeitig gew{\"a}rmt werden k{\"o}nnen. Im Vergleich zum Brutw{\"a}rmeverhalten an der Wabenoberfl{\"a}che (Andr{\"u}cken des Thorax an die Brutdeckel), wo nur 1 oder Teile von 3 Brutdeckeln mit dem Thorax in Ber{\"u}hrung stehen, ist das W{\"a}rmen im Zellinnern mit derselben TTh bis zu 2,6-fach effizienter. Die Messung der thermophysikalischen Eigenschaften der Brutwabe und die Simulation des Brutw{\"a}rmeverhaltens unter kontrollierten Bedingungen zeigen, dass sich die Wabe langsam aufw{\"a}rmt und eher ein lokal begrenztes W{\"a}rmen als eine rasche W{\"a}rmeausbreitung {\"u}ber eine große Fl{\"a}che beg{\"u}nstigt. Der Einflussbereich eines einzelnen Zellbesuchers h{\"a}ngt von seiner TTh und der Dauer des Zellbesuchs ab. Anstiege der Bruttemperatur in bis zu 3 Zellen Abstand zum Zellbesucher sind nachweisbar. Das hier beschriebene Brutw{\"a}rmeverhalten im Innern von L{\"u}cken (offenen Zellen) bietet nicht nur neue Einsichten in das Bienenverhalten. Es erm{\"o}glicht auch eine Neubewertung der L{\"u}cken und ihrer N{\"u}tzlichkeit f{\"u}r die Bienen. Eine von mir entwickelte Computersoftware („CombUse 2.0") erm{\"o}glicht es, das Vorkommen und die r{\"a}umliche Verteilung von L{\"u}cken mit hoher Genauigkeit auf der Ebene einzelner Zellen zu erfassen und auszuwerten. Die r{\"a}umliche Verteilung der L{\"u}cken in der gedeckelten Brutfl{\"a}che zeigt, dass schon bei geringen L{\"u}ckenh{\"a}ufigkeiten von ca. 4 bis 10 \%, die in gesunden Kolonien normal sind, eine {\"u}berraschend große Zahl gedeckelter Brutzellen (88 \% bis 99 \%, wenn die dreidimensionale Verteilung ber{\"u}cksichtigt wird) im Einflussbereich von Brut w{\"a}rmenden Zellbesuchern sind. Obwohl das Brutw{\"a}rmeverhalten im Zellinnern schwer zu entdecken und zu beobachten ist, f{\"u}hren die in dieser Arbeit pr{\"a}sentierten Daten zu dem Schluss, dass es sich dabei um einen wichtigen Bestandteil der Nestklimatisierung bei Honigbienen handelt.}, subject = {Biene }, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Kropf2018, author = {Kropf, Jan}, title = {The Dual Olfactory Pathway in the Honeybee Brain: Sensory Supply and Electrophysiological Properties}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-108369}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The olfactory sense is of utmost importance for honeybees, Apis mellifera. Honeybees use olfaction for communication within the hive, for the identification of nest mates and non-nest mates, the localization of food sources, and in case of drones (males), for the detection of the queen and mating. Honeybees, therefore, can serve as excellent model systems for an integrative analysis of an elaborated olfactory system. To efficiently filter odorants out of the air with their antennae, honeybees possess a multitude of sensilla that contain the olfactory sensory neurons (OSN). Three types of olfactory sensilla are known from honeybee worker antennae: Sensilla trichoidea, Sensilla basiconica and Sensilla placodea. In the sensilla, odorant receptors that are located in the dendritic arborizations of the OSNs transduce the odorant information into electrical information. Approximately 60.000 OSN axons project in two parallel bundles along the antenna into the brain. Before they enter the primary olfactory brain center, the antennal lobe (AL), they diverge into four distinct tracts (T1-T4). OSNs relay onto ~3.000-4.000 local interneurons (LN) and ~900 projection neurons (PN), the output neurons of the AL. The axons of the OSNs together with neurites from LNs and PNs form spheroidal neuropil units, the so-called glomeruli. OSN axons from the four AL input tracts (T1-T4) project into four glomerular clusters. LNs interconnect the AL glomeruli, whereas PNs relay the information to the next brain centers, the mushroom body (MB) - associated with sensory integration, learning and memory - and the lateral horn (LH). In honeybees, PNs project to the MBs and the LH via two separate tracts, the medial and the lateral antennal-lobe tract (m/lALT) which run in parallel in opposing directions. The mALT runs first to the MB and then to the LH, the lALT runs first to the LH and then to the MB. This dual olfactory pathway represents a feature unique to Hymenoptera. Interestingly, both tracts were shown to process information about similar sets of odorants by extracting different features. Individual mALT PNs are more odor specific than lALT PNs. On the other hand, lALT PNs have higher spontaneous and higher odor response action potential (AP) frequencies than mALT PNs. In the MBs, PNs form synapses with ~184.000 Kenyon cells (KC), which are the MB intrinsic neurons. KCs, in contrast to PNs, show almost no spontaneous activity and employ a spatially and temporally sparse code for odor coding. In manuscript I of my thesis, I investigated whether the differences in specificity of odor responses between m- and lALT are due to differences in the synaptic input. Therefore, I investigated the axonal projection patterns of OSNs housed in S. basiconica in honeybee workers and compared them with S. trichoidea and S. placodea using selective anterograde labeling with fluorescent tracers and confocal- microscopy analyses of axonal projections in AL glomeruli. Axons of S. basiconica-associated OSNs preferentially projected into the T3 input-tract cluster in the AL, whereas the two other types of sensilla did not show a preference for a specific glomerular cluster. T3- associated glomeruli had previously been shown to be innervated by mALT PNs. Interestingly, S. basiconica as well as a number of T3 glomeruli lack in drones. Therefore I set out to determine whether this was associated with the reduction of glomeruli innervated by mALT PNs. Retrograde tracing of mALT PNs in drones and counting of innervated glomeruli showed that the number of mALT-associated glomeruli was strongly reduced in drones compared to workers. The preferential projections of S. basiconica-associated OSNs into T3 glomeruli in female workers together with the reduction of mALT-associated glomeruli in drones support the presence of a female-specific olfactory subsystem that is partly innervated by OSNs from S. basiconica and is associated with mALT projection neurons. As mALT PNs were shown to be more odor specific, I suppose that already the OSNs in this subsystem are more odor specific than lALT associated OSNs. I conclude that this female-specific subsystem allows the worker honeybees to respond adequately to the enormous variety of odorants they experience during their lifetime. In manuscript II, I investigated the ion channel composition of mALT and lALT PNs and KCs in situ. This approach represents the first study dealing with the honeybee PN and KC ion channel composition under standard conditions in an intact brain preparation. With these recordings I set out to investigate the potential impact of intrinsic neuronal properties on the differences between m- and lALT PNs and on the sparse odor coding properties of KCs. In PNs, I identified a set of Na+ currents and diverse K+ currents depending on voltage and Na+ or Ca2+ that support relatively high spontaneous and odor response AP frequencies. This set of currents did not significantly differ between mALT and lALT PNs, but targets for potential modulation of currents leading to differences in AP frequencies were found between both types of PNs. In contrast to PNs, KCs have very prominent K+ currents, which are likely to contribute to the sparse response fashion observed in KCs. Furthermore, Ca2+ dependent K+ currents were found, which may be of importance for coincidence detection, learning and memory formation. Finally, I conclude that the differences in odor specificity between m- and lALT PNs are due to their synaptic input from different sets of OSNs and potential processing by LNs. The differences in spontaneous activity between the two tracts may be caused by different neuronal modulation or, in addition, also by interaction with LNs. The temporally sparse representation of odors in KCs is very likely based on the intrinsic KC properties, whereas general excitability and spatial sparseness are likely to be regulated through GABAergic feedback neurons.}, subject = {Voltage-Clamp-Methode}, language = {en} } @article{Linsenmair1991, author = {Linsenmair, Karl Eduard}, title = {Allokation elterlicher Investition beim Bienenwolf Philantus triangulum (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-78191}, year = {1991}, abstract = {No abstract available}, subject = {Zoologie}, language = {de} } @phdthesis{Muenz2015, author = {M{\"u}nz, Thomas Sebastian}, title = {Aspects of neuronal plasticity in the mushroom body calyx during adult maturation in the honeybee Apis mellifera}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-111611}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Division of labor represents a major advantage of social insect communities that accounts for their enormous ecological success. In colonies of the honeybee, Apis mellifera, division of labor comprises different tasks of fertile queens and drones (males) and, in general, sterile female workers. Division of labor also occurs among workers in form of an age-related polyethism. This helps them to deal with the great variety of tasks within the colony. After adult eclosion, workers spend around three weeks with various duties inside the hive such as tending the brood or cleaning and building cells. After this period workers switch to outdoor tasks and become foragers collecting nectar, pollen and water. With this behavioral transition, workers face tremendous changes in their sensory environment. In particular, visual sensory stimuli become important, but also the olfactory world changes. Foragers have to perform a completely new behavioral repertoire ranging from long distance navigation based on landmark orientation and polarized-skylight information to learning and memory tasks associated with finding profitable food sources. However, behavioral maturation is not a purely age-related internal program associated with a change, for example, in juvenile hormone titers. External factors such as primer pheromones like the brood pheromone or queen mandibular pheromone can modulate the timing of this transition. In this way colonies are able to flexibly adjust their work force distribution between indoor and outdoor tasks depending on the actual needs of the colony. Besides certain physiological changes, mainly affecting glandular tissue, the transition from indoor to outdoor tasks requires significant adaptations in sensory and higher-order integration centers of the brain. The mushroom bodies integrate olfactory, visual, gustatory and mechanosensory information. Furthermore, they play important roles in learning and memory processes. It is therefore not surprising that the mushroom bodies, in particular their main input region, the calyx, undergo volumetric neuronal plasticity. Similar to behavioral maturation, plastic changes of the mushroom bodies are associated with age, but are also to be affected by modulating factors such as task and experience. In my thesis, I analyzed in detail the neuronal processes underlying volumetric plasticity in the mushroom body. Immunohistochemical labeling of synaptic proteins combined with quantitative 3D confocal imaging revealed that the volume increase of the mushroom body calyx is largely caused by the growth of the Kenyon cell dendritic network. This outgrowth is accompanied by changes in the synaptic architecture of the mushroom body calyx, which is organized in a distinct pattern of synaptic complexes, so called microglomeruli. During the first week of natural adult maturation microglomeruli remain constant in total number. With subsequent behavioral transition from indoor duties to foraging, microglomeruli are pruned while the Kenyon cell dendritic network is still growing. As a result of these processes, the mushroom body calyx neuropil volume enlarges while the total number of microgloumeruli becomes reduced in foragers compared to indoor workers. In the visual subcompartments (calyx collar) this process is induced by visual sensory stimuli as the beginning of pruning correlates with the time window when workers start their first orientation flights. The high level of analysis of cellular and subcellular process underlying structural plasticity of the mushroom body calyx during natural maturation will serve as a framework for future investigations of behavioral plasticity in the honeybee. The transition to foraging is not purely age-dependent, but gets modulated, for example, by the presence of foragers. Ethyl oleate, a primer pheromone that is present only in foragers, was shown to delay the onset of foraging in nurse bees. Using artificial application of additional ethyl oleate in triple cohort colonies, I tested whether it directly affects adult neuronal plasticity in the visual input region of the mushroom body calyx. As the pheromonal treatment failed to induce a clear behavioral phenotype (delayed onset of foraging) it was not possible to show a direct link between the exposure to additional ethyl oleate and neuronal plasticity in mushroom body calyx. However, the general results on synaptic maturation confirmed my data of natural maturation processes in the mushroom body calyx. Given the result that dendritic plasticity is a major contributor to neuronal plasticity in the mushroom body calyx associated with division of labor, the question arose which proteins could be involved in mediating these effects. Calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) especially in mammals, but also in insects (Drosophila, Cockroach), was shown to be involved in facilitating learning and memory processes like long-term synaptic potentiation. In addition to presynaptic effects, the protein was also revealed to directly interact with cytoskeleton elements in the postsynapse. It therefore is a likely candidate to mediate structural synaptic plasticity. As part of my thesis, the presence and distribution of CaMKII was analyzed, and the results showed that the protein is highly concentrated in a distinct subpopulation of the mushroom body intrinsic neurons, the noncompact Kenyon cells. The dendritic network of this population arborizes in two calyx subregions: one receiving mainly olfactory input - the lip - and the collar receiving visual input. This distribution pattern did not change with age or task. The high concentration of CaMKII in dendritic spines and its overlap with f-actin indicates that CaMKII could be a key player inducing structural neuronal plasticity associated with learning and memory formation and/or behavioral transitions related to division of labor. Interestingly CaMKII immunoreactivity was absent in the basal ring, another subregion of the mushroom body calyx formed almost exclusively by the inner compact Kenyon cells and known to receive combined visual and olfactory input. This indicates differences of this mushroom body subregion regarding the molecular mechanisms controlling plastic changes in corresponding Kenyon cells. How is timing of behavioral and neuronal plasticity regulated? The primer pheromone ethyl oleate was found in high concentrations on foragers and was shown to influence behavioral maturation by delaying the onset of foraging when artificially applied in elevated concentrations. But how is ethyl oleate transferred and how does it shift the work force distribution between indoor and outdoor tasks? Previous work showed that ethyl oleate concentrations are highest in the honeycrop of foragers and suggested that it is transferred and communicated inside the colony via trophallaxis. The results of this thesis however clearly show, that ethyl oleate was not present inside the honey crop or the regurgitate, but rather in the surrounding tissue of the honey crop. As additionally the second highest concentration of ethyl oleate was measured on the surface of the cuticle of forgers, trophallaxis was ruled out as a mode of transmission. Neurophysiological measurements at the level of the antennae (electroantennogram recordings) and the first olfactory neuropil (calcium imaging of activity in the antennal lobe) revealed that the primer pheromone ethyl oleate is received and processed as an olfactory stimulus. Appetitive olfactory conditioning using the proboscis extension response as a behavioral paradigm showed that ethyl oleate can be associated with a sugar reward. This indicates that workers are able to perceive, learn and memorize the presence of this pheromone. As ethyl oleate had to be presented by a heated stimulation device at close range, it can be concluded that this primer pheromone acts via close range/contact chemoreception through the olfactory system. This is also supported by previous behavioral observations. Taken together, the findings presented in this thesis revealed structural changes in the synaptic architecture of the mushroom body calyx associated with division of labor. For the primer pheromone ethyl oleate, which modulates the transition from nursing to foraging, the results clearly showed that it is received via the olfactory system and presumably acts via this pathway. However, manipulation experiments did not indicate a direct effect of ethyl oleate on synaptic plasticity. At the molecular level, CaMKII is a prime candidate to mediate structural synaptic plasticity in the mushroom body calyx. Future combined structural and functional experiments are needed to finally link the activity of primer pheromones like ethyl oleate to the molecular pathways mediating behavioral and synaptic plasticity associated with division of labor in Apis mellifera. The here identified underlying processes will serve as excellent models for a general understanding of fundamental mechanisms promoting behavioral plasticity.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Nuernberger2018, author = {N{\"u}rnberger, Fabian}, title = {Timing of colony phenology and foraging activity in honey bees}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-155105}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {I. Timing is a crucial feature in organisms that live within a variable and changing environment. Complex mechanisms to measure time are wide-spread and were shown to exist in many taxa. These mechanisms are expected to provide fitness benefits by enabling organisms to anticipate environmental changes and adapt accordingly. However, very few studies have addressed the adaptive value of proper timing. The objective of this PhD-project was to investigate mechanisms and fitness consequences of timing decisions concerning colony phenology and foraging activity in the honey bee (Apis mellifera), a social insect species with a high degree of social organization and one of the most important pollinators of wild plants and crops. In chapter II, a study is presented that aimed to identify the consequences of disrupted synchrony between colony phenology and the local environment by manipulating the timing of brood onset after hibernation. In a follow-up experiment, the importance of environmental factors for the timing of brood onset was investigated to assess the potential of climate change to disrupt synchronization of colony phenology (Chapter III). Chapter IV aimed to prove for the first time that honey bees can use interval time-place learning to improve foraging activity in a variable environment. Chapter V investigates the fitness benefits of information exchange between nest mates via waggle dance communication about a resource environment that is heterogeneous in space and time. II. In the study presented in chapter II, the importance of the timing of brood onset after hibernation as critical point in honey bee colony phenology in temperate zones was investigated. Honey bee colonies were overwintered at two climatically different sites. By translocating colonies from each site to the other in late winter, timing of brood onset was manipulated and consequently colony phenology was desynchronized with the local environment. Delaying colony phenology in respect to the local environment decreased the capability of colonies to exploit the abundant spring bloom. Early brood onset, on the other hand, increased the loads of the brood parasite Varroa destructor later in the season with negative impact on colony worker population size. This indicates a timing related trade-off and illustrates the importance of investigating effects of climate change on complex multi-trophic systems. It can be concluded that timing of brood onset in honey bees is an important fitness relevant step for colony phenology that is highly sensitive to climatic conditions in late winter. Further, phenology shifts and mismatches driven by climate change can have severe fitness consequences. III. In chapter III, I assess the importance of the environmental factors ambient temperature and photoperiod as well as elapsed time on the timing of brood onset. Twenty-four hibernating honey bee colonies were placed into environmental chambers and allocated to different combinations of two temperature regimes and three different light regimes. Brood onset was identified non-invasively by tracking comb temperature within the winter cluster. The experiment revealed that ambient temperature plays a major role in the timing of brood onset, but the response of honey bee colonies to temperature increases is modified by photoperiod. Further, the data indicate the involvement of an internal clock. I conclude that the timing of brood onset is complex but probably highly susceptible to climate change and especially spells of warm weather in winter. IV. In chapter IV, it was examined if honey bees are capable of interval time-place learning and if this ability improves foraging efficiency in a dynamic resource environment. In a field experiment with artificial feeders, foragers were able to learn time intervals and use this ability to anticipate time periods during which feeders were active. Further, interval time-place learning enabled foragers to increase nectar uptake rates. It was concluded that interval time-place learning can help honey bee foragers to adapt to the complex and variable temporal patterns of floral resource environments. V. The study presented in chapter V identified the importance of the honey bee waggle dance communication for the spatiotemporal coordination of honey bee foraging activity in resource environments that can vary from day to day. Consequences of disrupting the instructional component of honey bee dance communication were investigated in eight temperate zone landscapes with different levels of spatiotemporal complexity. While nectar uptake of colonies was not affected, waggle dance communication significantly benefitted pollen harvest irrespective of landscape complexity. I suggest that this is explained by the fact that honey bees prefer to forage pollen in semi-natural habitats, which provide diverse resource species but are sparse and presumably hard to find in intensively managed agricultural landscapes. I conclude that waggle dance communication helps to ensure a sufficient and diverse pollen diet which is crucial for honey bee colony health. VI. In my PhD-project, I could show that honey bee colonies are able to adapt their activities to a seasonally and daily changing environment, which affects resource uptake, colony development, colony health and ultimately colony fitness. Ongoing global change, however, puts timing in honey bee colonies at risk. Climate change has the potential to cause mismatches with the local resource environment. Intensivation of agricultural management with decreased resource diversity and short resource peaks in spring followed by distinctive gaps increases the probability of mismatches. Even the highly efficient foraging system of honey bees might not ensure a sufficiently diverse and healthy diet in such an environment. The global introduction of the parasitic mite V. destructor and the increased exposure to pesticides in intensively managed landscapes further degrades honey bee colony health. This might lead to reduced cognitive capabilities in workers and impact the communication and social organization in colonies, thereby undermining the ability of honey bee colonies to adapt to their environment.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Pahl2011, author = {Pahl, Mario}, title = {Honeybee Cognition: Aspects of Learning, Memory and Navigation in a Social Insect}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-66165}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Honeybees (Apis mellifera) forage on a great variety of plant species, navigate over large distances to crucial resources, and return to communicate the locations of food sources and potential new nest sites to nest mates using a symbolic dance language. In order to achieve this, honeybees have evolved a rich repertoire of adaptive behaviours, some of which were earlier believed to be restricted to vertebrates. In this thesis, I explore the mechanisms involved in honeybee learning, memory, numerical competence and navigation. The findings acquired in this thesis show that honeybees are not the simple reflex automats they were once believed to be. The level of sophistication I found in the bees' memory, their learning ability, their time sense, their numerical competence and their navigational abilities are surprisingly similar to the results obtained in comparable experiments with vertebrates. Thus, we should reconsider the notion that a bigger brain automatically indicates higher intelligence.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @article{PahlSiZhang2013, author = {Pahl, Mario and Si, Aung and Zhang, Shaowu}, title = {Numerical cognition in bees and other insects}, series = {Frontiers in Comparative Psychology}, journal = {Frontiers in Comparative Psychology}, doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00162}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-95935}, year = {2013}, abstract = {The ability to perceive the number of objects has been known to exist in vertebrates for a few decades, but recent behavioral investigations have demonstrated that several invertebrate species can also be placed on the continuum of numerical abilities shared with birds, mammals, and reptiles. In this review article, we present the main experimental studies that have examined the ability of insects to use numerical information. These studies have made use of a wide range of methodologies, and for this reason it is striking that a common finding is the inability of the tested animals to discriminate numerical quantities greater than four. Furthermore, the finding that bees can not only transfer learnt numerical discrimination to novel objects, but also to novel numerosities, is strongly suggestive of a true, albeit limited, ability to count. Later in the review, we evaluate the available evidence to narrow down the possible mechanisms that the animals might be using to solve the number-based experimental tasks presented to them. We conclude by suggesting avenues of further research that take into account variables such as the animals' age and experience, as well as complementary cognitive systems such as attention and the time sense.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @article{PahlZhuTautzetal.2011, author = {Pahl, Mario and Zhu, Hong and Tautz, J{\"u}rgen and Zhang, Shaowu}, title = {Large Scale Homing in Honeybees}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-68985}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Honeybee foragers frequently fly several kilometres to and from vital resources, and communicate those locations to their nest mates by a symbolic dance language. Research has shown that they achieve this feat by memorizing landmarks and the skyline panorama, using the sun and polarized skylight as compasses and by integrating their outbound flight paths. In order to investigate the capacity of the honeybees' homing abilities, we artificially displaced foragers to novel release spots at various distances up to 13 km in the four cardinal directions. Returning bees were individually registered by a radio frequency identification (RFID) system at the hive entrance. We found that homing rate, homing speed and the maximum homing distance depend on the release direction. Bees released in the east were more likely to find their way back home, and returned faster than bees released in any other direction, due to the familiarity of global landmarks seen from the hive. Our findings suggest that such large scale homing is facilitated by global landmarks acting as beacons, and possibly the entire skyline panorama.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Rutschmann2023, author = {Rutschmann, Benjamin}, title = {Occurrence and population density of wild-living honey bees in Europe and the impact of different habitat types on their foraging and overwintering success}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-28673}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-286732}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {The original habitat of native European honey bees (\(Apis\) \(mellifera\)) is forest, but currently there is a lack of data about the occurrence of wild honey bee populations in Europe. Prior to being kept by humans in hives, honey bees nested as wild species in hollow trees in temperate forests. However, in the 20th century, intensification of silviculture and agriculture with accompanying losses of nesting sites and depletion of food resources caused population declines in Europe. When the varroa mite (Varroa destructor), an invasive ectoparasite from Asia, was introduced in the late 1970s, wild honey bees were thought to be eradicated in Europe. Nevertheless, sporadic, mostly anecdotal, reports from ornithologists or forest ecologists indicated that honey bee colonies still occupy European forest areas. In my thesis I hypothesize that near-natural deciduous forests may provide sufficient large networks of nesting sites representing refugia for wild-living honey bees. Using two special search techniques, i.e. the tracking of flight routes of honey bee foragers (the "beelining" method) and the inspection of known cavity trees, I collected for the first time data on the occurrence and density of wild-living honey bees in forest areas in Germany (CHAPTER 3). I found wild-living honey bee colonies in the Hainich national park at low densities in two succeeding years. In another forest region, I checked known habitat trees containing black woodpecker cavities for occupation by wild-living honey bee colonies. It turned out that honey bees regularly use these cavities and occur in similar densities in both studied forest regions, independent of the applied detection method. Extrapolating these densities to all German forest areas, I estimate several thousand wild-living colonies in Germany that potentially interact in different ways with the forest environment. I conclude that honey bees regularly colonize forest areas in Germany and that networks of mapped woodpecker cavities offer unique possibilities to study the ecology of wild-living honey bees over several years. While their population status is ambiguous and the density of colonies low, the fact that honey bees can still be found in forests poses questions about food supply in forest environments. Consequently, I investigated the suitability of woodlands as a honey bee foraging habitat (CHAPTER 4). As their native habitat, forests are assumed to provide important pollen and nectar sources for honey bee colonies. However, resource supply might be spatially and temporally restricted and landscape-scale studies in European forest regions are lacking. Therefore, I set up twelve honey bee colonies in observation hives at locations with varying degree of forest cover. Capitalizing on the unique communication behaviour, the waggle dance, I examined the foraging distances and habitat preferences of honey bees over almost an entire foraging season. Moreover, by connecting this decoded dance information with colony weight recordings, I could draw conclusions about the contribution of the different habitat types to honey yield. Foraging distances generally increased with the amount of forest in the surrounding landscape. Yet, forest cover did not have an effect on colony weight. Compared to expectations based on the proportions of different habitats in the surroundings, colonies foraged more frequently in cropland and grasslands than in deciduous and coniferous forests, especially in late summer when pollen foraging in the forest is most difficult. In contrast, colonies used forests for nectar/honeydew foraging in early summer during times of colony weight gain emphasizing forests as a temporarily significant source of carbohydrates. Importantly, my study shows that the ecological and economic value of managed forest as habitat for honey bees and other wild pollinators can be significantly increased by the continuous provision of floral resources, especially for pollen foraging. The density of these wild-living honey bee colonies and their survival is driven by several factors that vary locally, making it crucial to compare results in different regions. Therefore, I investigated a wild-living honey bee population in Galicia in north-western Spain, where colonies were observed to reside in hollow electric poles (CHAPTER 5). The observed colony density only in these poles was almost twice as high as in German forest areas, suggesting generally more suitable resource conditions for the bees in Galicia. Based on morphometric analyses of their wing venation patterns, I assigned the colonies to the native evolutionary lineage (M-lineage) where the particularly threatened subspecies \(Apis\) \(mellifera\) \(iberiensis\) also belongs to. Averaged over two consecutive years, almost half of the colonies survived winter (23 out of 52). Interestingly, semi-natural areas both increased abundance and subsequent colony survival. Colonies surrounded by more semi-natural habitat (and therefore less intensive cropland) had an elevated overwintering probability, indicating that colonies need a certain amount of semi-natural habitat in the landscape to survive. Due to their ease of access these power poles in Galicia are, ideally suited to assess the population demography of wild-living Galician honey bee colonies through a long-term monitoring. In a nutshell, my thesis indicates that honey bees in Europe always existed in the wild. I performed the first survey of wild-living bee density yet done in Germany and Spain. My thesis identifies the landscape as a major factor that compromises winter survival and reports the first data on overwintering rates of wild-living honey bees in Europe. Besides, I established methods to efficiently detect wild-living honey bees in different habitat. While colonies can be found all over Europe, their survival and viability depend on unpolluted, flower rich habitats. The protection of near-natural habitat and of nesting sites is of paramount importance for the conservation of wild-living honey bees in Europe.  }, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schilcher2023, author = {Schilcher, Felix}, title = {Regulation of the nurse-forager transition in honeybees (\(Apis\) \(mellifera\))}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-28935}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-289352}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Honeybees are among the few animals that rely on eusociality to survive. While the task of queen and drones is only reproduction, all other tasks are accomplished by sterile female worker bees. Different tasks are mostly divided by worker bees of different ages (temporal polyethism). Young honeybees perform tasks inside the hive like cleaning and nursing. Older honeybees work at the periphery of the nest and fulfill tasks like guarding the hive entrance. The oldest honeybees eventually leave the hive to forage for resources until they die. However, uncontrollable circumstances might force the colony to adapt or perish. For example, the introduced Varroa destructor mite or the deformed wing virus might erase a lot of in-hive bees. On the other hand, environmental events might kill a lot of foragers, leaving the colony with no new food intake. Therefore, adaptability of task allocation must be a priority for a honeybee colony. In my dissertation, I employed a wide range of behavioral, molecular biological and analytical techniques to unravel the underlying molecular and physiological mechanisms of the honeybee division of labor, especially in conjunction with honeybee malnourishment. The genes AmOARα1, AmTAR1, Amfor and vitellogenin have long been implied to be important for the transition from in-hive tasks to foraging. I have studied in detail expression of all of these genes during the transition from nursing to foraging to understand how their expression patterns change during this important phase of life. My focus lay on gene expression in the honeybee brain and fat body. I found an increase in the AmOARα1 and the Amforα mRNA expression with the transition from in-hive tasks to foraging and a decrease in expression of the other genes in both tissues. Interestingly, I found the opposite pattern of the AmOARα1 and AmTAR1 mRNA expression in the honeybee fat body during orientation flights. Furthermore, I closely observed juvenile hormone titers and triglyceride levels during this crucial time. Juvenile hormone titers increased with the transition from in-hive tasks to foraging and triglyceride levels decreased. Furthermore, in-hive bees and foragers also differ on a behavioral and physiological level. For example, foragers are more responsive towards light and sucrose. I proposed that modulation via biogenic amines, especially via octopamine and tyramine, can increase or decrease the responsiveness of honeybees. For that purpose, in-hive bees and foragers were injected with both biogenic amines and the receptor response was quantified 1 using electroretinography. In addition, I studied the behavioral response of the bees to light using a phototaxis assay. Injecting octopamine increased the receptor response and tyramine decreased it. Also, both groups of honeybees showed an increased phototactic response when injected with octopamine and a decreased response when injected with tyramine, independent of locomotion. Additionally, nutrition has long been implied to be a driver for division of labor. Undernourished honeybees are known to speed up their transition to foragers, possibly to cope with the missing resources. Furthermore, larval undernourishment has also been implied to speed up the transition from in-hive bees to foragers, due to increasing levels of juvenile hormone titers in adult honeybees after larval starvation. Therefore, I reared honeybees in-vitro to compare the hatched adult bees of starved and overfed larvae to bees reared under the standard in-vitro rearing diet. However, first I had to investigate whether the in-vitro rearing method affects adult honeybees. I showed effects of in-vitro rearing on behavior, with in-vitro reared honeybees foraging earlier and for a shorter time than hive reared honeybees. Yet, nursing behavior was unaffected. Afterwards, I investigated the effects of different larval diets on adult honeybee workers. I found no effects of malnourishment on behavioral or physiological factors besides a difference in weight. Honeybee weight increased with increasing amounts of larval food, but the effect seemed to vanish after a week. These results show the complexity and adaptability of the honeybee division of labor. They show the importance of the biogenic amines octopamine and tyramine and of the corresponding receptors AmOARα1 and AmTAR1 in modulating the transition from inhive bees to foragers. Furthermore, they show that in-vitro rearing has no effects on nursing behavior, but that it speeds up the transition from nursing to foraging, showing strong similarities to effects of larval pollen undernourishment. However, larval malnourishment showed almost no effects on honeybee task allocation or physiology. It seems that larval malnourishment can be easily compensated during the early lifetime of adult honeybees.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schmalz2023, author = {Schmalz, Fabian Dominik}, title = {Processing of behaviorally relevant stimuli at different levels in the bee brain}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-28882}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-288824}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {The behavior of honeybees and bumblebees relies on a constant sensory integration of abiotic or biotic stimuli. As eusocial insects, a sophisticated intraspecific communication as well as the processing of multisensory cues during foraging is of utter importance. To tackle the arising challenges, both honeybees and bumblebees have evolved a sophisticated olfactory and visual processing system. In both organisms, olfactory reception starts at the antennae, where olfactory sensilla cover the antennal surface in a sex-specific manner. These sensilla house olfactory receptor neurons (ORN) that express olfactory receptors. ORNs send their axons via four tracts to the antennal lobe (AL), the prime olfactory processing center in the bee brain. Here, ORNs specifically innervate spheroidal structures, so-called glomeruli, in which they form synapses with local interneurons and projection neurons (PN). PNs subsequently project the olfactory information via two distinct tracts, the medial and the lateral antennal-lobe tract, to the mushroom body (MB), the main center of sensory integration and memory formation. In the honeybee calyx, the sensory input region of the MB, PNs synapse on Kenyon cells (KC), the principal neuron type of the MB. Olfactory PNs mainly innervate the lip and basal ring layer of the calyx. In addition, the basal ring receives input from visual PNs, making it the first site of integration of visual and olfactory information. Visual PNs, carrying sensory information from the optic lobes, send their terminals not only to the to the basal ring compartment but also to the collar of the calyx. Receiving olfactory or visual input, KCs send their axons along the MB peduncle and terminate in the main output regions of the MB, the medial and the vertical lobe (VL) in a layer-specific manner. In the MB lobes, KCs synapse onto mushroom body output neurons (MBON). In so far barely understood processes, multimodal information is integrated by the MBONs and then relayed further into the protocerebral lobes, the contralateral brain hemisphere, or the central brain among others. This dissertation comprises a dichotomous structure that (i) aims to gain more insight into the olfactory processing in bumblebees and (ii) sets out to broaden our understanding of visual processing in honeybee MBONs. The first manuscript examines the olfactory processing of Bombus terrestris and specifically investigates sex-specific differences. We used behavioral (absolute conditioning) and electrophysiological approaches to elaborate the processing of ecologically relevant odors (components of plant odors and pheromones) at three distinct levels, in the periphery, in the AL and during olfactory conditioning. We found both sexes to form robust memories after absolute conditioning and to generalize towards the carbon chain length of the presented odors. On the contrary, electroantennographic (EAG) activity showed distinct stimulus and sex-specific activity, e.g. reduced activity towards citronellol in drones. Interestingly, extracellular multi-unit recordings in the AL confirmed stimulus and sex-specific differences in olfactory processing, but did not reflect the differences previously found in the EAG. Here, farnesol and 2,3-dihydrofarnesol, components of sex-specific pheromones, show a distinct representation, especially in workers, corroborating the results of a previous study. This explicitly different representation suggests that the peripheral stimulus representation is an imperfect indication for neuronal representation in high-order neuropils and ecological importance of a specific odor. The second manuscript investigates MBONs in honeybees to gain more insights into visual processing in the VL. Honeybee MBONs can be categorized into visually responsive, olfactory responsive and multimodal. To clarify which visual features are represented at this high-order integration center, we used extracellular multi-unit recordings in combination with visual and olfactory stimulation. We show for the first time that information about brightness and wavelength is preserved in the VL. Furthermore, we defined three specific classes of visual MBONs that distinctly encode the intensity, identity or simply the onset of a stimulus. The identity-subgroup exhibits a specific tuning towards UV light. These results support the view of the MB as the center of multimodal integration that categorizes sensory input and subsequently channels this information into specific MBON populations. Finally, I discuss differences between the peripheral representations of stimuli and their distinct processing in high-order neuropils. The unique activity of farnesol in manuscript 1 or the representation of UV light in manuscript 2 suggest that the peripheral representation of a stimulus is insufficient as a sole indicator for its neural activity in subsequent neuropils or its putative behavioral importance. In addition, I discuss the influence of hard-wired concepts or plasticity induced changes in the sensory pathways on the processing of such key stimuli in the peripheral reception as well as in high-order centers like the AL or the MB. The MB as the center of multisensory integration has been broadly examined for its olfactory processing capabilities and receives increasing interest about its visual coding properties. To further unravel its role of sensory integration and to include neglected modalities, future studies need to combine additional approaches and gain more insights on the multimodal aspects in both the input and output region.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schneider2011, author = {Schneider, Christof}, title = {Detecting the influence of different potential stress factors on the behavior of the honeybee Apis mellifera using Radiofrequency Identification (RFID)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-71344}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {This study was conducted to determine the influence of different stress factors on the honeybee Apis mellifera. The investigation was motivated by previous experiments that suggested the existence of an unspecific defense mechanism causing a generalized change of flight behavior after the onset of different diseases. This mechanism is thought to impede the ability of flight bees to return to their respective colonies thereby removing the disease from the colony over time. During the last years, the existence of such a "suicidal behavior" was supported by further studies. Thus, an unnoticed, potentially highly effective defense mechanism of social insects was revealed whose spectrum of activity and physiological basics require further investigation. Suggesting that the reaction by the bees is unspecific to different diseases as well as to other potential stress factors, this study was designed to investigate the influence of pathogens, insecticides, and different brood rearing temperatures on different parameters like lifespan, foraging activity, and foraging trip duration of worker bees.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Scholl2015, author = {Scholl, Christina}, title = {Cellular and molecular mechanisms contributing to behavioral transitions and learning in the honeybee}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115527}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {The honeybee Apis mellifera is a social insect well known for its complex behavior and the ability to learn tasks associated with central place foraging, such as visual navigation or to learn and remember odor-reward associations. Although its brain is smaller than 1mm² with only 8.2 x 105 neurons compared to ~ 20 x 109 in humans, bees still show amazing social, cognitive and learning skills. They express an age - related division of labor with nurse bees staying inside the hive and performing tasks like caring for the brood or cleaning, and foragers who collect food and water outside the hive. This challenges foragers with new responsibilities like sophisticated navigation skills to find and remember food sources, drastic changes in the sensory environment and to communicate new information to other bees. Associated with this plasticity of the behavior, the brain and especially the mushroom bodies (MBs) - sensory integration and association centers involved in learning and memory formation - undergo massive structural and functional neuronal alterations. Related to this background my thesis on one hand focuses on neuronal plasticity and underlying molecular mechanisms in the MBs that accompany the nurse - forager transition. In the first part I investigated an endogenous and an internal factor that may contribute to the nurse - forager phenotype plasticity and the correlating changes in neuronal network in the MBs: sensory exposure (light) and juvenile hormone (JH). Young bees were precociously exposed to light and subsequently synaptic complexes (microglomeruli, MG) in the MBs or respectively hemolymph juvenile hormone (JH) levels were quantified. The results show that light input indeed triggered a significant decrease in MG density, and mass spectrometry JH detection revealed an increase in JH titer. Interestingly light stimulation in young bees (presumably nurse bees) triggered changes in MG density and JH levels comparable to natural foragers. This indicates that both sensory stimuli as well as the endocrine system may play a part in preparing bees for the behavioral transition to foraging. Considering a connection between the JH levels and synaptic remodeling I used gene knockdown to disturb JH pathways and artificially increase the JH level. Even though the knockdown was successful, the results show that MG densities remained unchanged, showing no direct effect of JH on synaptic restructuring. To find a potential mediator of structural synaptic plasticity I focused on the calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) in the second part of my thesis. CaMKII is a protein known to be involved in neuronal and behavioral plasticity and also plays an important part in structural plasticity reorganizing synapses. Therefore it is an interesting candidate for molecular mechanisms underlying MG reorganization in the MBs in the honeybee. Corresponding to the high abundance of CaMKII in the learning center in vertebrates (hippocampus), CaMKII was shown to be enriched in the MBs of the honeybee. Here I first investigated the function of CaMKII in learning and memory formation as from vertebrate work CaMKII is known to be associated with the strengthening of synaptic connections inducing long term potentiation and memory formation. The experimental approach included manipulating CaMKII function using 2 different inhibitors and a specific siRNA to create a CaMKII knockdown phenotype. Afterwards bees were subjected to classical olfactory conditioning which is known to induce stable long-term memory. All bees showed normal learning curves and an intact memory acquisition, short-term and mid-term memory (1 hour retention). However, in all cases long-term memory formation was significantly disrupted (24 and 72 hour retention). These results suggests the necessity of functional CaMKII in the MBs for the induction of both early and late phases of long-term memory in honeybees. The neuronal and molecular bases underlying long-term memory and the resulting plasticity in behavior is key to understanding higher brain function and phenotype plasticity. In this context CaMKII may be an important mediator inducing structural synaptic and neuronal changes in the MB synaptic network.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Seitz2020, author = {Seitz, Nicola}, title = {Bee demise and bee rise: From honey bee colony losses to finding measures for advancing entire bee communities}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-18418}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-184180}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {My dissertation comprises three studies: (1) an assessment of honey bee colony losses in the USA between 2014 and 2015, (2) an exploration of the potential of reclaimed sand mines as bee habitat, and (3) an evaluation of native and non-native pollinator friendly plants in regard to their attraction to bees. While the first study focuses on honey bees, the latter two studies primarily take wild bees or entire bee communities in focus. The study on honey bee colony losses was conducted within the framework of the Bee Informed Partnership (BIP, beeinformed.org) and aligns with the annual colony loss surveys which have been conducted in the USA since the winter of 2006/2007. It was the fourth year for which summer and annual losses were calculated in addition to winter losses. Among participants, backyard beekeepers were the largest group (n = 5690), although sideline (n = 169) and commercial (n = 78) beekeepers managed the majority (91.7 \%) of the 414 267 surveyed colonies. Overall, 15.1 \% of the estimated 2.74 million managed colonies in the USA were included in the study. Total honey bee colony losses (based on the entirety of included colonies) were higher in summer (25.3 \%) than in winter (22.3 \%) and amounted to 40.6 \% for the entire 2014/2015 beekeeping year. Average colony losses per beekeeper or operation were higher in winter (43.7 \%) than in summer (14.7 \%) and amounted to 49 \% for the entire 2014/2015 beekeeping year. Due to the dominance of backyard beekeepers among participants, average losses per operation (or unweighted loss) stronger reflected this smaller type of beekeeper. Backyard beekeepers mainly named colony management issues (e.g., starvation, weak colony in the fall) as causes for mortality, while sideline and commercial beekeepers stronger emphasized parasites or factors outside their control (e.g., varroa, nosema, queen failure). The second study took place at reclaimed sand mines. Sand mines represent anthropogenically impacted habitats found worldwide, which bear potential for bee conservation. Although floral resources can be limited at these habitats, vegetation free patches of open sandy soils and embankments may offer good nesting possibilities for sand restricted and other bees. We compared bee communities as found in three reclaimed sand mines and at adjacent roadside meadows in Maryland, USA, over two years. Both sand mines and roadsides hosted diverse bee communities with 111 and 88 bee species, respectively. Bee abundances as well as richness and Shannon diversity of bee species were higher in sand mines than at roadsides and negatively correlated with the percentage of vegetational ground cover. Species composition also differed significantly between habitats. Sand mines hosted a higher proportion of ground nesters, more uncommon and more 'sand loving' bees similar to natural sandy areas of Maryland. Despite the destruction of the original pre-mining habitat, sand mines thus appear to represent a unique habitat for wild bees, particularly when natural vegetation and open sand spots are encouraged. Considering habitat loss, the lack of natural disturbance regimes, and ongoing declines of wild bees, sand mines could add promising opportunities for bee conservation which has hitherto mainly focused on agricultural and urban habitats. The third study was an experimental field study on pollinator friendly plants. Bees rely on the pollen and nectar of plants as their food source. Therefore, pollinator friendly plantings are often used for habitat enhancements in bee conservation. Non-native pollinator friendly plants may aid in bee conservation efforts, but have not been tested and compared with native pollinator friendly plants in a common garden experiment. In this study, we seeded mixes of 20 native and 20 non-native pollinator friendly plants in two separate plots at three sites in Maryland, USA. For two years, we recorded flower visitors to the plants throughout the blooming period and additionally sampled bees with pan traps. A total of 3744 bees (120 species) were sampled in the study. Of these, 1708 bees (72 species) were hand netted directly from flowers for comparisons between native and non-native plants. Depending on the season, bee abundance and species richness was either similar or lower (early season and for richness also late season) at native plots compared to non-native plots. Additionally, the overall bee community composition differed significantly between native and non-native plots. Furthermore, native plants were associated with more specialized plant-bee visitation networks compared to non-native plants. In general, visitation networks were more specialized in the early season than the later seasons. Four species (Bombus impatiens, Halictus poeyi/ligatus, Lasioglossum pilosum, and Xylocopa virginica) out of the five most abundant bee species (also including Apis mellifera) foraged more specialized on native than non-native plants. Our study showed that non-native plants were well accepted by a diverse bee community and had a similar to higher attraction for bees compared to native plants. However, we also demonstrated alterations in foraging behavior, bee community assemblage, and visitation networks. As long as used with caution, non-native plants can be a useful addition to native pollinator friendly plantings. This study gives a first example of a direct comparison between native and non-native pollinator friendly plants.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Streinzer2013, author = {Streinzer, Martin}, title = {Sexual dimorphism of the sensory systems in bees (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) and the evolution of sex-specific adaptations in the context of mating behavior}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-78689}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Bees have had an intimate relationship with humans for millennia, as pollinators of fruit, vegetable and other crops and suppliers of honey, wax and other products. This relationship has led to an extensive understanding of their ecology and behavior. One of the most comprehensively understood species is the Western honeybee, Apis mellifera. Our understanding of sex-specific investment in other bees, however, has remained superficial. Signals and cues employed in bee foraging and mating behavior are reasonably well understood in only a handful of species and functional adaptations are described in some species. I explored the variety of sensory adaptations in three model systems within the bees. Females share a similar ecology and similar functional morphologies are to be expected. Males, engage mainly in mating behavior. A variety of male mating strategies has been described which differ in their spatiotemporal features and in the signals and cues involved, and thus selection pressures. As a consequence, males' sensory systems are more diverse than those of females. In the first part I studied adaptations of the visual system in honeybees. I compared sex and caste-specific eye morphology among 5 species (Apis andreniformis, A. cerana, A. dorsata, A. florea, A. mellifera). I found a strong correlation between body size and eye size in both female castes. Queens have a relatively reduced visual system which is in line with the reduced role of visual perception in their life history. Workers differed in eye size and functional morphology, which corresponds to known foraging differences among species. In males, the eyes are conspicuously enlarged in all species, but a disproportionate enlargement was found in two species (A. dorsata, A. florea). I further demonstrate a correlation between male visual parameters and mating flight time, and propose that light intensities play an important role in the species-specific timing of mating flights. In the second study I investigated eye morphology differences among two phenotypes of drones in the Western honeybee. Besides normal-sized drones, smaller drones are reared in the colony, and suffer from reduced reproductive success. My results suggest that the smaller phenotype does not differ in spatial resolution of its visual system, but suffers from reduced light and contrast sensitivity which may exacerbate the reduction in reproductive success caused by other factors. In the third study I investigated the morphology of the visual system in bumblebees. I explored the association between male eye size and mating behavior and investigated the diversity of compound eye morphology among workers, queens and males in 11 species. I identified adaptations of workers that correlate with distinct foraging differences among species. Bumblebee queens must, in contrast to honeybees, fulfill similar tasks as workers in the first part of their life, and correspondingly visual parameters are similar among both female castes. Enlarged male eyes are found in several subgenera and have evolved several times independently within the genus, which I demonstrate using phylogenetic informed statistics. Males of these species engage in visually guided mating behavior. I find similarities in the functional eye morphology among large-eyed males in four subgenera, suggesting convergent evolution as adaptation to similar visual tasks. In the remaining species, males do not differ significantly from workers in their eye morphology. In the fourth study I investigated the sexual dimorphism of the visual system in a solitary bee species. Males of Eucera berlandi patrol nesting sites and compete for first access to virgin females. Males have enlarged eyes and better spatial resolution in their frontal eye region. In a behavioral study, I tested the effect of target size and speed on male mate catching success. 3-D reconstructions of the chasing flights revealed that angular target size is an important parameter in male chasing behavior. I discuss similarities to other insects that face similar problems in visual target detection. In the fifth study I examined the olfactory system of E. berlandi. Males have extremely long antennae. To investigate the anatomical grounds of this elongation I studied antennal morphology in detail in the periphery and follow the sexual dimorphism into the brain. Functional adaptations were found in males (e.g. longer antennae, a multiplication of olfactory sensilla and receptor neurons, hypertrophied macroglomeruli, a numerical reduction of glomeruli in males and sexually dimorphic investment in higher order processing regions in the brain), which were similar to those observed in honeybee drones. The similarities and differences are discussed in the context of solitary vs. eusocial lifestyle and the corresponding consequences for selection acting on males.}, subject = {Biene}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Thom2002, author = {Thom, Corinna}, title = {Dynamics and Communication Structures of Nectar Foraging in Honey Bees (Apis mellifera)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-3601}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2002}, abstract = {In this thesis, I examined honey bee nectar foraging with emphasis on the communication system. To document how a honey bee colony adjusts its daily nectar foraging effort, I observed a random sample of individually marked workers during the entire day, and then estimated the number and activity of all nectar foragers in the colony. The total number of active nectar foragers in a colony changed frequently between days. Foraging activity did not usually change between days. A honey bee colony adjusts its daily foraging effort by changing the number of its nectar foragers rather than their activity. I tested whether volatiles produced by a foraging colony activated nectar foragers of a non-foraging colony by connecting with a glass tube two colonies. Each colony had access to a different green house. In 50\% of all experiments, volatile substances from the foraging colony stimulated nectar foragers of the non-foraging colony to fly to an empty feeder. The results of this study show that honey bees can produce a chemical signal or cue that activates nectar foragers. However, more experiments are needed to establish the significance of the activating volatiles for the foraging communication system. The brief piping signal of nectar foragers inhibits forager recruitment by stopping waggle dances (Nieh 1993, Kirchner 1993). However, I observed that many piping signals (approximately 43\%) were produced off the dance floor, a restricted area in the hive where most waggle dances are performed. If the inhibition of waggle dances would be the only function of the brief piping signal, tremble dancers should produce piping signals mainly on the dance floor, where the probability to encounter waggle dancers is highest. To therefore investigate the piping signal in more detail, I experimentally established the foraging context of the brief piping signal, characterized its acoustic properties, and documented for the first time the unique behavior of piping nectar foragers by observing foragers throughout their entire stay in the hive. Piping nectar foragers usually began to tremble dance immediately upon their return into the hive, spent more time in the hive, more time dancing, had longer unloading latencies, and were the only foragers that sometimes unloaded their nectar directly into cells instead of giving it to a nectar receiver bee. Most of the brief piping signals (approximately 99\%) were produced by tremble dancers, yet not all tremble dancers (approximately 48\%) piped. This suggests that piping and tremble dancing have related, but not identical functions in the foraging system. Thus, the brief piping signals may not only inhibit forager recruitment, but have an additional function both on and off the dance floor. In particular, the piping signal might function 1. to stop the recruitment of additional nectar foragers, and 2. as a modulatory signal to alter the response threshold of signal receivers to the tremble dance. The observation that piping tremble dancers often did not experience long unloading delays before they started to dance gave rise to a question. A forager's unloading delay provides reliable information about the relative work capacities of nectar foragers and nectar receivers, because each returning forager unloads her nectar to a nectar receiver before she takes off for the next foraging trip. Queuing delays for either foragers or receivers lower foraging efficiency and can be eliminated by recruiting workers to the group in shortage. Short unloading delays indicate to the nectar forager a shortage of foragers and stimulate waggle dancing which recruits nectar foragers. Long unloading delays indicate a shortage of nectar receivers and stimulate tremble dancing which recruits nectar receivers (Seeley 1992, Seeley et al. 1996). Because the short unloading delays of piping tremble dancers indicated that tremble dancing can be elicited by other factors than long unloading delays, I tested whether a hive-external stimulus, the density of foragers at the food source, stimulated tremble dancing directly. The experiments show that tremble dancing can be caused directly by a high density of foragers at the food source and suggest that tremble dancing can be elicited by a decrease of foraging efficiency either inside (e.g. shortage of receiver bees) or outside (e.g. difficulty of loading nectar) the hive. Tremble dancing as a reaction to hive-external stimuli seems to occur under natural conditions and can thus be expected to have some adaptive significance. The results imply that if the hive-external factors that elicit tremble dancing do not indicate a shortage of nectar receiver bees in the hive, the function of the tremble dance may not be restricted to the recruitment of additional nectar receivers, but might be the inhibition or re-organization of nectar foraging.}, subject = {Bienen }, language = {en} } @misc{Wenzel2011, type = {Master Thesis}, author = {Wenzel, Frank}, title = {Smell and repel: Resin based defense mechanisms and interactions between Australian ants and stingless bees}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-65960}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Bees are subject to permanent threat from predators such as ants. Their nests with large quantities of brood, pollen and honey represent lucrative targets for attacks whereas foragers have to face rivalry at food sources. This thesis focused on the role of stingless bees as third party interactor on ant-aphid-associations as well as on the predatory potential represented by ants and defense mechanisms against this threat. Regular observations of an aphid infested Podocarpus for approaching stingless bees yielded no results. Another aim of this thesis was the observation of foraging habits of four native and one introduced ant species for assessment of their predatory potential to stingless bees. All species turned out to be dietary balanced generalists with one mostly carnivorous species and four species predominantly collecting nectar roughly according to optimal foraging theory. Two of the species monitored, Rhytidoponera metallica and Iridomyrmex rufoniger were considered potential nest robbers. As the name implies, stingless bees lack the powerful weapon of their distant relatives; hence they specialized on other defense strategies. Resin is an important, multipurpose resource for stingless bees that is used as material for nest construction, antibiotic and for defensive means. For the latter purpose highly viscous resin is either directly used to stick down aggressors or its terpenic compounds are included in the bees cuticular surface. In a feeding choice experiment, three ant species were confronted with the choice between two native bee species - Tetragonula carbonaria and Austroplebeia australis - with different cuticular profiles and resin collection habits. Two of the ant species, especially the introduced Tetramorium bicarinatum did not show any preferences. The carnivorous R. metallica predominantly took the less resinous A. australis as prey. The reluctance towards T. carbonaria disappeared when the resinous compounds on its cuticle had been washed off with hexane. To test whether the repulsive reactions were related to the stickiness of the resinous surface or to chemical substances, hexane extracts of bees' cuticles, propolis and three natural tree resins were prepared. In the following assay responses of ants towards extract treated surfaces were observed. Except for one of the resin extracts, all tested substances had repellent effects to the ants. Efficacy varied with the type of extract and species. Especially to the introduced T. bicarinatum the cuticular extract had no effect. GCMS-analyses showed that some of the resinous compounds were also found in the cuticular profile of T. carbonaria which featured reasonable analogies to the resin of Corymbia torelliana that is highly attractive for stingless bees. The results showed that repellent effects were only partially related to the sticky quality of resin but were rather caused by chemical substances, presumably sesqui- and diterpenes. Despite its efficacy this defense strategy only provides short time repellent effects sufficient for escape and warning of nest mates to initiate further preventive measures.}, subject = {Stachellose Biene}, language = {en} }