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Apidologie 34 (2003) 591-596
DOI: 10.1051/apido:2003050
Autogrooming by resistant honey bees challenged with individual tracheal mites
Robert G. Danka and José D. VillaUSDA ARS Honey Bee Breeding, Genetics and Physiology Laboratory, 1157 Ben Hur Road, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70820, USA
(Received 16 August 2002; revised 6 March 2003; accepted 28 April 2003)
Abstract
Autogrooming responses of resistant and susceptible strains of honey bees were measured when
bees were challenged by placing adult female tracheal mites on their thoraces. Marked, young adult workers
of the two strains of bees were added to colonies in observation hives. We transferred a single, live, adult,
female mite onto the mesoscutum of a marked bee, monitored the bee for seven minutes and then removed
it and searched for the mite. Greater proportions of resistant bees autogroomed, and resistant bees made
more grooming attempts. Bees of both strains had equal apparent grooming effectiveness; grooming bees
lost approx. 75% of mites. Control-group bees (those only stroked with the brush used to transfer mites) of
the two bee strains did not differ in any response parameter. Resistant bees may have a lower threshold for
responding by autogrooming when stimulated by mites on their body.
Key words: Apis mellifera / honey bees / Acarapis woodi / tracheal mites genetic resistance / grooming behavior
Correspondence and reprints: Robert G. Danka rdanka@ars.usda.gov
© INRA, EDP Sciences, DIB, AGIB 2003
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