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Dead Brood of Apis mellifera Is Removed More Effectively from Small-Cell Combs Than from Standard-Cell Combs

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Honeybee workers are able to detect dead or infected brood in comb cells and remove it outside the nest before the infection spreads onto the colony. Such a phenomena is called an hygienic behaviour. Colonies with efficient hygienic behaviour are more resistant to diseases. Bee comb...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dziechciarz, Piotr, Borsuk, Grzegorz, Olszewski, Krzysztof
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8868292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35203126
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12040418
Descripción
Sumario:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Honeybee workers are able to detect dead or infected brood in comb cells and remove it outside the nest before the infection spreads onto the colony. Such a phenomena is called an hygienic behaviour. Colonies with efficient hygienic behaviour are more resistant to diseases. Bee comb cells may vary in width. In Europe, standard-cell combs (cell width approx. 5.50 mm) and small-cell combs (cell width approx. 4.90 mm) are used. Typically, colonies are kept only on standard- or small-cell combs. We assessed the dead brood removal efficiency in colonies kept on both comb types. Simultaneous keeping of a colony on standard- and small-cell combs is a novel approach to the use of small-cell combs in beekeeping. The removal from small-cell combs was significantly more efficient than in the case of the standard-cell combs, which indicates that bees find dead brood in small-cell combs faster or devoted more attention to the removal. Better understanding of the effect of the simultaneous keeping of colonies on standard- and small-cell combs on the efficiency of hygienic behaviour may contribute to enhancement of the resistance of bee colonies to diseases. ABSTRACT: The efficiency of the hygienic behaviour in bee colonies towards dead brood was assessed in small-cell combs (SMCombs) and in standard-cell combs (STCombs). Each colony had both types of combs in the nest on a permanent basis. Simultaneous keeping of a colony on standard- and small-cell combs is a novel approach to the use of small-cell combs in beekeeping. The number of killed pupae removed within 24 h was the measure of the hygienic behaviour efficiency. Regardless of the year, the brood in the SMCombs was uncapped and removed significantly more efficient (p ≤ 0.01) than in the STCombs (number of non-uncapped cells: in 2020 SMCombs = 3.79, STCombs = 11.62; in 2021 SMCombs = 2.34, STCombs = 5.28 and completely removed cells: in 2020 SMCombs = 87.46, STCombs = 80.04; in 2021 SMCombs = 96.75, STCombs = 92.66). In colonies kept simultaneously on standard- and small-cell combs, the width of the comb cells has a significant effect on the efficiency of removal of dead brood, which is removed more efficient from small-cell combs than from standard-cell combs.