stingless bee / Melipona beecheii / queen acceptance / dominance behavior / physical aggression Stingless bees (Apidae, Meliponini), which are close relatives to honey bees (Apidae, Apini) and share with them a highly eusocial colonial organization (Michener, 2000), are remarkable for their habit of producing virgin queens throughout the year (Engels and Imperatriz-Fonseca, 1990). Most of these queens are not needed for a colony's survival or division, however, and get executed some time after their emergence (Imperatriz-Fonseca and Zucchi, 1995). Only little is known about the mechanism that releases the execution behavior in workers or about how a particular virgin queen is chosen as a new queen. Recently, we found that in Melipona beecheii a virgin queen's conspicuous behavior, which consists of rapidly running over the brood area, thereby making spinning movements and beating her wings, triggers the worker attacks (Jarau et al., 2009). A chemical signal or cue potentially released by such queens seems not to account for her execution. Virgin queens were never attacked as long as they sat motionless on the comb and the number of aggressive worker attacks significantly decreased from 15 to zero within 10 min when we made an active virgin queen "behaviorless" through freezing (for details see Jarau et al., 2009). During our study, in which we observed the virgin queens' behavior and interactions with workers in small observation boxes that contained a comb of approximately 200 cells and initially 25-30 adult bees (the number of which increased as further bees emerged from the cells), we registered one Corresponding author: S. Jarau, stefan.jarau@uni-ulm.de * Manuscript editor: Stan Schneider interesting case of queen acceptance, on which we report in the following.On the 21st day after we established an orphan condition in our observation boxes, we observed a virgin queen (marked with color the first time we saw her) that was not aggressively attacked by the workers, as is typical during queen elimination in M. beecheii (Jarau et al., 2009). Instead, she actively contacted the workers and bumped into them, often bringing herself into close lateral contact with a worker and quickly shaking her abdomen in a wagging movement, thereby pushing the workers away. The virgin queen's aggressive behavior continued for the following three days, but on the fourth day she slowly walked through the observation box without bumping into workers. By that time she apparently was accepted by the workers and the observed calm behavior continued until the end of our observations nine days after first seeing her. During that time we observed only one further virgin queen, which was killed by the workers, and no males emerged from the brood cells. Since the observation box was not connected to the outside the accepted queen could not leave for a nuptial flight. The virgin's aggression towards the workers, especially the conspicuous abdomen shaking after she brought herself into a position side to side with a worker, likely is an esse...