Hs. Arathi et M. Spivak, Influence of colony genotypic composition on the performance of hygienic behaviour in the honeybee, Apis mellifera L., ANIM BEHAV, 62, 2001, pp. 57-66
Hygienic behaviour, an intranidal task performed by middle-aged worker bees
is an important behavioural mechanism of resistance to disease and to atta
ck by Varroa destructor, an ectoparasitic mite. We studied the effect of a
colony's genotypic composition on the expression of this behaviour among wo
rker bees by creating normal age-structured colonies with different proport
ions of bees belonging to hygienic and nonhygienic lines. We established fo
ur colonies with 0, 25, 50 or 100% of worker bees belonging to the hygienic
line. Analyses of the behaviour of hygienic bees in these colonies indicat
ed that the performance of hygienic behaviour depended on the proportion of
hygienic bees in the colony. Hygienic bees in the 25% hygienic colony perf
ormed the behaviour well beyond middle age and were more persistent at the
task compared with bees from the same genetic line in the other colonies. H
owever, the colony with all worker bees from the hygienic line was more eff
icient in achieving the task despite a lack of persistence. We also observe
d that in the colony with 50 and 100% hygienic bees, the behaviour was part
itioned into subtasks, and some bees performed the subtask of uncapping cel
ls at higher frequencies than the subtask of removing cell contents. These
results suggest that a colony's genotypic composition influences the perfor
mance and partitioning of hygienic behaviour. We propose that the performan
ce of hygienic behaviour and its partitioning into subtasks could be determ
ined by response thresholds of individual worker bees and that the rate of
behavioural ontogeny may be controlled by the demand for specific tasks. (C
) 2001 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.