When the frenzied and irregular foodrecruitment dances of bumblebees were first discovered, it was thought that they might represent an evolutionary prototype to the honeybee waggle dance. It later emerged that the primary function of the bumblebee dance was the distribution of an alerting pheromone. Here, we identify the chemical compounds of the bumblebee recruitment pheromone and their behaviour effects. The presence of two monoterpenes and one sesquiterpene (eucalyptol, ocimene and farnesol) in the nest airspace and in the tergal glands increases strongly during foraging. Of these, eucalyptol has the strongest recruitment effect when a bee nest is experimentally exposed to it. Since honeybees use terpenes for marking food sources rather than recruiting foragers inside the nest, this suggests independent evolutionary roots of food recruitment in these two groups of bees.
A new analytical method for determining 6-chloronicotinic acid (6-ClNA) in human urine is proposed. 6-ClNA is the main metabolite in warm-blooded animals after exposure to the insecticide imidachloprid. 6-ClNA was extracted from human urine using solid phase extraction (SPE) with laboratory-made cartridges of Amberlite XAD-4. A clean-up step and a derivatization process were carried out prior to gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometric (GC-MS-MS) determination. A study on the influence of pH in the extraction process revealed that it affects the analyte extraction efficiency. A working pH zone was defined between 0.8 and 2.8. Calibration curves were studied in the concentration range of 0.5-100 ng mL(-1) and showed good linearity. Limits of detection and determination of the method were 16 and 56 pg mL(-1) respectively. The mean recovery at 10 and 100 ng mL(-1) was between 97.2 and 102.1% and the repeatability was lower than 5.4% in all cases. The analysis of urine samples of five agricultural workers from Almería (Spain) did not detect the metabolite.
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