Abstract

Four physiological parameters (haemolymph-juvenile hormone titre, protein concentration, vitellogenin concentration, and pharyngeal gland dry weight) were examined in the following categories of queenright adult worker bees: summer bees 1–40 days old, winter bees 80–130 days old, 12–100-day old bees at the beginning of winter, 100–195-day old bees at the end of winter, and 1–100-day old bees experimentally induced to live longer in summer. In contrast to the continuously increasing titre of juvenile hormone in ageing summer bees, winter bees kept a constant low level. In bees at the beginning of winter, the hormone titre never reached high values. However, at the end of winter it rose from a low to a high level, comparable with the high titre of 24–40-day old summer bees. In experimentally induced longlived bees in summer, the juvenile hormone titre did not increase as in normal summer bees but remained low as in bees at the beginning of winter. Among the known natural juvenile hormones, only juvenile hormone III was present in the haemolymph of winter bees. The results support the hypothesis of polyphenism being regulated by the titre of juvenile hormone in the haemolymph.

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