The roles of adult worker honeybees change with age; young workers nurse brood by secreting bee milk (royal jelly), and older workers forage for nectar and pollen and process nectar into honey. The electrophoretic profile of worker hypopharyngeal-gland proteins changes with age and/or role. Immunoblotting analysis using affinity-purified antibodies against three major proteins (50, 56, and 64 kDa) of the nurse-bee gland showed that they are synthesized selectively and secreted as bee-milk proteins. Immunofluorescence study showed that the proteins condense in the duct after secretion from acini. However, a major 70-kDa protein synthesized specifically in the forager-bee hypopharyngeal gland was identified as an alpha-glucosidase. Therefore, the hypopharyngeal gland seems to have two distinct states differentiated by synthesizing of different major proteins depending on the age-dependent role change.
We studied associative visual learning in harnessed honeybees trained with monochromatic lights associated with a reward of sucrose solution delivered to the antennae and proboscis, to elicit the proboscis extension reflex (PER). We demonstrated five properties of visual learning under these conditions. First, antennae deprivation significantly increased visual acquisition, suggesting that sensory input from the antennae interferes with visual learning. Second, covering the compound eyes with silver paste significantly decreased visual acquisition, while covering the ocelli did not. Third, there was no significant difference in the visual acquisition between nurse bees, guard bees, and foragers. Fourth, bees conditioned with a 540-nm light stimulus exhibited light-induced PER with a 618-nm, but not with a 439-nm light stimulus. Finally, bees conditioned with a 540-nm light stimulus exhibited PER immediately after the 439-nm light was turned off, suggesting that the bees reacted to an afterimage induced by prior adaptation to the 439-nm light that might be similar to the 540-nm light.
As an effective counterattack strategy against predacious hornets, especially Vespa simillima xanthoptera, workers of Apis ceranajaponica showed a distinct balling reaction, usually involving 180-300 bees. This produced heat for as long as 20 min, giving rise to temperatures inside the ball higher than 46 ~ which is lethal to the hornet but not to the bees.Summary, The plant amino acid canavanine and its hydrolytic product canaline were successfully separated and identified by Reverse Phase High Performance Liquid Chromatograph (RP-HPLC). This procedure was used to demonstrate the arginasemediated cleavage of canavanine to yield canaline and urea, and the subsequent formation of a Schifl's base complex between canaline and pyridoxal phosphate. Both aforementioned reactions were demonstrated by RP-HPLC.
ABSTRACT. The virgin female tobacco hawk moth, Manduca sexta, flies during the early scotophase in an L,D 16:8 cycle at 24°C then begins 'calling' within 2 h. Mating lasts 3-4h. Oviposition occurs in the succeeding scotophases if a tobacco plant is present. The switch from virgin 'calling' behaviour to mated ovipositional behaviour is mediated by the presence of sperm and/or associated testicular fluids in the bursa copulatrix. The corpora allata, which are necessary for egg maturation in this species, are activated via the NCC I and I1 around the time of eclosion. Feeding increases the activity of the corpora allata in the virgin female (as judged by the number of eggs matured in 4 days) but mating brings about a further stimulation of the activity of the corpora allata. The stretching of the bursa copulatrix by the insertion of the spermatophore during mating is probably the trigger for this response. Continued neural input from the bursa copulatrix to the brain is necessary to maintain the increased activity of the corpora allata.
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