2002
DOI: 10.1051/apido:2002002
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Population dynamics of the Cape bee phenomenon: The impact of parasitic laying worker clones in apiaries and natural populations

Abstract: -A population ecological host-parasite model is used to evaluate the potential impact of clonal parasitic laying workers of the Cape honeybee, Apis mellifera capensis on populations of Apis mellifera scutellata host colonies in apiaries and in the wild. The model includes three basic life history parameters: reproductive rate of the host colonies, transmission efficiency of the parasite and the death rate of parasitised colonies. The population dynamics of host and parasites are computed for 100 generations af… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…A. m. capensis workers are able to lay diploid eggs and produce queen-like signals (Onions 1912;Martin et al 2002;Neumann and Moritz 2002;Pirk et al 2012). These A. mellifera capensis social parasites do not contribute to the work force and their offspring do not replace the host workers, but these social parasites and their clonal offspring just reproduce which then results in the collapse of the host colony (Hillesheim et al 1989;Neumann et al 2001;Moritz 2002;Neumann and Hepburn 2002). This parasite is spread by migratory beekeepers during pollination and has resulted in large-scale colony losses with significant economic implications for the South African beekeeping industry (Allsopp and Crewe 1993;Johannsmeier 1994;Moritz 2002;Kryger et al 2003;Dietemann et al 2006;Pirk et al 2014).…”
Section: Honeybeesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A. m. capensis workers are able to lay diploid eggs and produce queen-like signals (Onions 1912;Martin et al 2002;Neumann and Moritz 2002;Pirk et al 2012). These A. mellifera capensis social parasites do not contribute to the work force and their offspring do not replace the host workers, but these social parasites and their clonal offspring just reproduce which then results in the collapse of the host colony (Hillesheim et al 1989;Neumann et al 2001;Moritz 2002;Neumann and Hepburn 2002). This parasite is spread by migratory beekeepers during pollination and has resulted in large-scale colony losses with significant economic implications for the South African beekeeping industry (Allsopp and Crewe 1993;Johannsmeier 1994;Moritz 2002;Kryger et al 2003;Dietemann et al 2006;Pirk et al 2014).…”
Section: Honeybeesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The resulting adults, therefore, are not queen-like and display normal social phenotypes that engage in collective division of labor. Genetic analysis has further shown that all workers with the malignant A. m. capensis phenotype, although collected from different A. m. scutellata colonies, are the parthenogenetic descendants of a single bee (Moritz, 2002). It has been proposed that this clonal population emerged from an extraordinary A. m. scutellata nest infestation; one A. m. capensis worker genotype suited to evade the full array of control mechanisms inherent to the host society.…”
Section: B Social Cancermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…workers cannot remain alive on its own and eventually dwindles and dies (Swart et al, 2001;Martin et al, 2002b;Moritz, 2002). These observations evoke a number of considerations.…”
Section: Transmission Of Social Parasitic Cape Honeybee Workersmentioning
confidence: 99%