Abstract

Africanized honey bees (Apis mellifera) arrived in the western hemisphere in the 1950s and quickly spread north reaching California in the 1990s. These bees are highly defensive and somewhat more difficult to manage for commercial purposes than the European honey bees traditionally kept. The arrival of these bees and their potentially replacing European bees over much of the state is thus of great concern. After a 25 year period of little systematic sampling, a recent small scale study found Africanized honey bees in the Bay Area of California, far north of their last recorded distribution. The purpose of the present study was to expand this study by conducting more intensive sampling of bees from across northern California. We found Africanized honey bees as far north as Napa and Sacramento. We also found Africanized bees in all counties south of these counties. Africanized honey bees were particularly abundant in parts of the central valley and Monterey. This work suggests the northern spread of Africanized honey bees may not have stopped. They may still be moving north at a slow rate, although due to the long gaps in sampling it is currently impossible to tell for certain. Future work should routinely monitor the distribution of these bees to distinguish between these two possibilities.

Highlights

  • Honey bees are a part of many urban and natural landscapes. They are the most populous, large colony bees and they play many important ecological roles [1]. In their introduced range, which includes essentially all land inhabited by human beings with the exception of the two poles, they are a major component of both ecological communities and economic systems in which they are used for large scale pollination and food production [2,3,4]

  • Many people identify with the honey bee due to its close relationship to human beings and are more willing to listen to environmental concerns regarding pollinators at large if they are packaged in the context of keeping honey bees healthy [5,6]

  • This study was motivated in part by numerous reports to the UC Davis Apiculture program from exterminators in the San Francisco Bay Area complaining of very aggressive bees

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Summary

Introduction

Honey bees are a part of many urban and natural landscapes In their native range, they are the most populous, large colony bees and they play many important ecological roles [1]. Africanized bees (AHBs) were initially brought to Brazil from South Africa for breeding purposes, but quickly escaped and spread north replacing European honey bees (EHBs) as they moved [7,8,9,10]. They arrived in the US in 1990 in Texas and in California in 1994 [11].

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