2012
DOI: 10.2108/zsj.29.30
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Differences in Heat Sensitivity between Japanese Honeybees and Hornets Under High Carbon Dioxide and Humidity Conditions Inside Bee Balls

Abstract: Upon capture in a bee ball (i.e., a dense cluster of Japanese honeybees forms in response to a predatory attack), an Asian giant hornet causes a rapid increase in temperature, carbon dioxide (CO₂), and humidity. Within five min after capture, the temperature reaches 46°C, and the CO₂ concentration reaches 4%. Relative humidity gradually rises to 90% or above in 3 to 4 min. The hornet dies within 10 min of its capture in the bee ball. To investigate the effect of temperature, CO₂, and humidity on hornet mortali… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Although the bees near the bee‐ball center must suffer high temperatures and are surrounded by other hot bees, no honeybees died during bee‐balling. The LD 50 for honeybees in normal air is reported to be 50.8°C (Sugahara et al ). From our results, the average temperature in the bee‐ball was 44.0°C, so honeybees have sufficient margin to survive the temperature in the bee‐ball.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although the bees near the bee‐ball center must suffer high temperatures and are surrounded by other hot bees, no honeybees died during bee‐balling. The LD 50 for honeybees in normal air is reported to be 50.8°C (Sugahara et al ). From our results, the average temperature in the bee‐ball was 44.0°C, so honeybees have sufficient margin to survive the temperature in the bee‐ball.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A bee‐ball of A. cerana may have other factors that kill hornets, including heat, CO 2 and high relative humidity (Ono et al ; Sugahara et al ). In our work, the same temperature as inside the A. mellifera bee‐ball with low humidity killed hornets in bee‐less bottle experiments (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, the gating mechanisms of excitation brought about by CO 2 remain unclear (Luo et al, 2009). In contrast to these molecular biological experiments, CO 2 gas detection has been demonstrated behaviorally in the honeybee (Sugahara et al, 2012). These data indicate that direct detection of CO 2 is a common property of the nervous systems of both vertebrates and invertebrates.…”
Section: Co 2 Can Cause Excitation Directlymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The high temperature phase continues for approximately 20 min. Within approximately 30 to 60 min after initiating the bee ball formation, the hornet is killed by the heat [48,50] (Figure 5A–D). This anti-predator behavior is a good example that selective pressure to avoid predation resulted in species-specific behavioral evolution [47].…”
Section: Isolation Of Acks a Homologue Of Kakusei From The Japanementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because Acks is preferentially expressed in the class II KCs of the fighting workers and heat-exposed workers, we also speculate that class II KCs functions for thermal sensing to appropriately regulate heat generation during forming the bee ball. The Japanese honeybee workers fight against the giant hornet by utilizing the small (3–5 °C) difference in lethal temperature between them (the lethal temperature of the giant hornet is approximately 45 °C, while that of the Japanese honeybee workers is 49 °C) [48,50]. Therefore, precise temperature monitoring and control of heat production is vital to Japanese honeybee workers.…”
Section: Isolation Of Acks a Homologue Of Kakusei From The Japanementioning
confidence: 99%