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Injuries of Worker Bees (Apis Mellifera Carnica) Stored in Own and Stranger Queenright Colonies Cover

Injuries of Worker Bees (Apis Mellifera Carnica) Stored in Own and Stranger Queenright Colonies

Open Access
|Dec 2014

Abstract

This research was conducted in 2008 and 2010 in the experimental apiary of the Warsaw University of Life Sciences. Worker bees were stored in transport cages in their own colonies and stranger colonies. The number of injuries and the death rate were checked twice, after 3 and 7 days of storage. In total, 6720 bees were examined (3360 workers from their own colonies and the same number from stranger colonies). The number of injured and dead workers had an exponential distribution (skewness>1). The worker bees sustained significantly more leg injuries (missing leg segments - 92 - 96%) than injuries of arolia (13 - 15%), wings (1 - 7%) or antennae (1 - 2). Worker bees stored in stranger colonies were injured significantly more frequently than worker bees stored in their own colonies. A significantly greater number of bees died in stranger colonies than in own colonies. The fact that bees stored in own colonies were injured proves that, even if they have the same smell, bees kept in cages provoke aggressive behavior from bees belonging to the banking colony.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/jas-2014-0020 | Journal eISSN: 2299-4831 | Journal ISSN: 1643-4439
Language: English
Page range: 33 - 39
Submitted on: Dec 10, 2013
Accepted on: Aug 7, 2014
Published on: Dec 11, 2014
Published by: Research Institute of Horticulture
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2014 Barbara Zajdel, Jakub Gąbka, Zygmunt Jasiński, Madras-Majewska Beata, published by Research Institute of Horticulture
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.