| Battle
of the Bees
By Jennifer Viegas
|
![]() Mild-Mannered Bees Outmaneuver Killer Bees As bees go, Cape honeybees are relatively mild-mannered. But they’re not complacent. Through subterfuge, they’re able to sabotage the hives of their more aggressive cousins, the African “killer” |
African “killer bees” may be tough and temperamental, but they’re no match for the relatively mild-mannered Cape honeybee.
Sometimes the nicer bee wins.
In a battle of bees in South Africa,
the clever and unassuming Cape honeybee overcomes, through a surprising
subterfuge, its more ferocious cousins, the African honeybees. The African
honeybees are the original “killer bees,” ancestors of the swarming,
aggressive bees now marauding through the Americas.
Infiltrating
Insects
First, the Cape honeybees dispatch small swarms of female workers to sneak into African “killer bee” hives.
There they lay eggs in the hives of
their unwitting hosts. The infiltrating Cape larvae then manipulate the killer
bee workers into giving them better food than what is fed to their host’s own
brood. This gourmet-quality food contains less sugar filler and more nutrients
than regular honeybee food. It’s more like what the queen bee is served.
Writing in Thursday’s issue of the journal Nature,
researchers led by Madeleine Beekman, a research associate at Sheffield
University’s Laboratory of Apiculture and Social Insects in England, offer a
theory about how Cape larvae are able to receive the royal grub.
“We think that this is caused by the [Cape honeybee]
brood having a different smell, meaning different pheromones,” Beekman says.
“In some way this results in the nurse bees feeding this brood more food and
food of different composition.”
Beekman and her colleagues analyzed the interaction
between Cape and European honeybees, but she says her study can apply to how the
Cape bees raid African killer bee colonies, too.
Faux
Queens
Pampered and well fed, many of the Cape larvae develop into
pseudoqueens, possessing some of the characteristics typical of queen bees, such
as greater body weight. These pseudoqueens are the key to the overthrow.
Explains Robert Danka, research entomologist at the
U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Honey Bee Breeding, Genetics and Physiology
Laboratory in Baton Rouge, La.: “Pseudoqueens don’t work like workers and
they aren’t normally as reproductive as regular queens. The colony becomes
dysfunctional and you wind up with a bunch of weird misfits.”
In the ensuing chaos, the killer bees reject their own
ruling queen. When faced with this dire situation, killer bee workers usually
are able to rear an “emergency queen.” But the presence of egg-laying Cape
workers prevents them from doing this. Eventually the host colony either dies
out, or the egg-laying workers are usurped by a Cape bee queen.
Killer
Bees on This Side of the Atlantic
Still, the killer bees have spread farther around the world
than their Cape invaders. In 1956, Brazilian scientists brought the aggressive
African bees to South America in a botched experiment to create a better
honeybee. Some of the African bees escaped quarantine and bred with local bees,
creating the hybrid species now commonly called “killer bees.” Now they’ve
spread to several different countries, including America, overwhelming other
species of honeybees.
The first swarm was detected in the United States in
1990 in the border town of Hidalgo, Texas. At present, killer bees are firmly
established throughout much of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada and
California.
The Africanized killer bees, like their original
African honeybee ancestors, are deadly because they are very short-tempered and
can be vicious when disturbed. While their venom is no more potent than that of
native bees, killer bees may remain agitated for an entire day, attacking people
and animals up to one quarter of a mile from their hive.
The attacks can be deadly. One Texas man died after he
was stung more than 40 times while he trying to remove a colony from a wall on
his ranch.
Not
a Solution Here
Given their ability to destroy killer bees, could the Cape
honeybee help us to curb the attack of the killer bees in the United States?
Here, the honeybee of choice is the European honeybee, which doesn’t possess
the same talent for guerilla warfare.
Unfortunately, no, according to Danka. “An
introduction of Cape bees to alleviate problems with Africanized bees,” he
says, “would be exactly wrong for beekeeping according to most beekeepers who
have experience with both bee types in Africa.”
Danka explains Cape bees would invade not only the
colonies of killer bees, but also virtually all bee colonies, causing them to
become nonproductive or to die. Cape bee genes could mix with those of our
honeybees, ruining hundreds of years of selective breeding.
He adds, “In the end, it may be summed up that, at
least for beekeepers, the problems posed by Africanized bees are less than those
posed by Cape bees.”
Sometimes, nicer doesn’t mean better.
Bee
Safe
To avoid becoming a killer bee victim, experts offer the following advice:
| If you suspect that a colony has established itself in or near your home, do not approach the nest or try to remove the colony yourself. Call in a professional service to take care of the job. | |
| Africanized bees often nest in wall cracks or utility box holes. Try to keep these areas sealed. | |
| Killer bees also may nest in tree or cactus holes, or in holes in the ground. Again, try to prevent such areas from attracting Africanized bees in the first place. | |
| In states where killer bee colonies are established, be especially alert in rural areas, such as farmlands, regional parks or wilderness reserves. Watch out for bee swarms just as you would other natural dangers, such as snakes. | |
| When in such areas, wear clothing that is light in color and avoid wearing floral or citrus scents. Dark clothing and certain perfumes and aftershaves can attract Africanized bees. | |
| Finally, don’t panic unless you suspect there is a problem. Most bees are docile and are just trying to go about their daily routine of pollinating flowers and making honey. Avoid disturbing them, and they generally won’t bother you. |
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