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Why Queen Bees are So Darned Promiscuous [LiveScience 2006-12-19] latin dict size=16   common dict size=313
Image Info Original File Name: 20050616_bee_mite.jpg Resolution: 650x425 File Size: 50351 Bytes Upload Time: 2006:12:20 07:28:47
Author Name (E-mail): News (from@LiveScience.com)
Subject Why Queen Bees are So Darned Promiscuous [LiveScience 2006-12-19]
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Why Queen Bees are So Darned Promiscuous [LiveScience 2006-12-19]

Seeking extra mates costs a promiscuous queen honeybee energy and time, and it puts her at greater risk of predation and catching venereal diseases. But it doesn't stop her.

For a healthier hive, the queens have sex with multiple males, according to a new study. While one male drone provides all the sperm a queen needs to be fully inseminated, she'll mate with a dozen or more.

So why is this wanton behavior worth the hazards?

"Evidently, one important reason is to generate diverse offspring, something that produces a colony that has higher disease resistance than a colony with offspring from just one father," said Cornell University biologist Thomas Seeley.

Seeley and North Carolina State University entomologist David Tarpy found that a colony fathered by more than one male was better equipped to fight off the infectious American foulbrood disease.

The results will be published in the Jan. 7 issue of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society of London.

Understanding the biology behind the behavior of promiscuous queens could help the big business of pollinating honeybees, which brings in $20 billion a year.

"Our findings are useful to beekeepers by showing them convincingly, I think, of the importance of providing lots of diverse males wherever queens are being produced," Seeley told LiveScience. "This is particularly important for commercial queen breeders, who have bee yards in which thousands of queens are being mated."

Source: LiveScience - http://www.LiveScience.com

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