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Evaluation of the time of uncapping and removing dead brood from cells by hygienic and non-hygienic honey bees
Maria Alejandra Palacio1, Jose Manuel Flores2, Emilio Figini3, Sergio Ruffinengo1,
Alberto Escande1, Enrique Bedascarrasbure3, Edgardo Rodriguez3 and
Lionel Segui Gonçalves4
1Unidad Integrada INTA, Facultad Ciencias Agrarias, PROAPI, Balcarce, Argentina
2Centro Andaluz de Apicultura Ecológica, Universidad de Córdoba, España
3Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias, UNCPBA, PROAPI, Campus Universitario, Tandil, Argentina
4Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão Preto, USP, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brasil
Corresponding author: M.A. Palacio
E-mail: tiruggi@infovia.com.ar
Genet. Mol. Res. 4 (1): 105-114 (2005)
Received August 11, 2004
Accepted December 14, 2004
Published March 31, 2005

ABSTRACT. Most research on hygienic behavior has recorded the time taken by the colony to remove an experimental amount of dead brood, usually after one or two days. We evaluated the time that hygienic (H) and non-hygienic (NH) honey bees take to uncap and remove dead brood in observation hives after the brood was killed using the pin-killing assay. Four experimental colonies were selected as the extreme cases among 108 original colonies. Thirty brood cells were perforated with a pin in two H and two NH colonies and observations were made after 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 24 h. Different stages of uncapping and removing were recorded. Differences in uncapping and removal between H and NH colonies were significant for all comparisons made at the different times after perforation. Using observation hives one obtains a better and faster discrimination between H and NH colonies than in full size colonies. It is possible to differentiate H and NH within a few hours after perforating the cells.

Key words: Honey bees, Hygienic behavior, Uncapping, Removing, Apis mellifera

 

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