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Is the number of antennal plate organs
(sensilla placodea) greater in hygienic than
in non-hygienic Africanized honey bees?
Kátia Peres Gramacho1, Lionel Segui Gonçalves2,
Antônio Carlos Stort3 and Adriana Backx Noronha4
1Faculty of Technology and Sciences (FTC), Course of Biological Sciences, Salvador, BA, Brazil
2Department of Biology, FFCLRP-USP, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil
3Department of Biology, IB, UNESP, Rio Claro, SP, Brazil
4Department of Administration, FEARP-USP, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil
Corresponding author: L.S. Gonçalves
E-mail: lsgoncal@usp.br
Genet. Mol. Res. 2 (3): 309-316 (2003)
Received August 8, 2003
Accepted September 10, 2003
Published September 30, 2003

ABSTRACT. Hygienic behavior is a desirable trait in honey bees (Apis mellifera L.), as hygienic bees quickly remove diseased brood, interrupting the infectious cycle. Hygienic lines of honey bees appear to be more sensitive to the odors of dead and diseased honey bee brood, and Africanized honey bees are generally more hygienic than are European honey bees. We compared the number of sensilla placodea, antennal sensory structures involved in the perception of odor, in 10 bees from each of six hygienic and four non-hygienic colonies of Africanized honey bees. The sensilla placodea of three of the terminal segments (flagellomeres) of the right antenna of each bee were counted with a scanning electron microscope. There were no significant differences in the mean numbers of sensilla placodea between the hygienic and non-hygienic bees, though the variance was higher in the hygienic group. Flagellomere 4 had significantly more sensilla placodea than flagellomeres 6 and 8. However, there was no significant difference between the other two flagellomeres. As hygienic bees are capable of identifying dead, injured, or infested brood inside a capped brood cell, sensilla placodea probably have an important role in enabling worker bees to sense sick brood. However, we did not find greater numbers of this sensory structure in the antennae of hygienic, compared to non-hygienic Africanized honey bees.

Key words: Hygienic behavior, Honey bee, Africanized honey bee, Antennae, Flagellomere, Plate organs, Sensilla placodea

 

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