Abstract

Anti-predator behaviors are essential to survival for most animals. The neural bases of such behaviors, however, remain largely unknown. Although honeybees commonly use their stingers to counterattack predators, the Japanese honeybee (Apis cerana japonica) uses a different strategy to fight against the giant hornet (Vespa mandarinia japonica). Instead of stinging the hornet, Japanese honeybees form a “hot defensive bee ball” by surrounding the hornet en masse, killing it with heat. The European honeybee (A. mellifera ligustica), on the other hand, does not exhibit this behavior, and their colonies are often destroyed by a hornet attack. In the present study, we attempted to analyze the neural basis of this behavior by mapping the active brain regions of Japanese honeybee workers during the formation of a hot defensive bee ball. First, we identified an A. cerana homolog (Acks = Apis cerana kakusei) of kakusei, an immediate early gene that we previously identified from A. mellifera, and showed that Acks has characteristics similar to kakusei and can be used to visualize active brain regions in A. cerana. Using Acks as a neural activity marker, we demonstrated that neural activity in the mushroom bodies, especially in Class II Kenyon cells, one subtype of mushroom body intrinsic neurons, and a restricted area between the dorsal lobes and the optic lobes was increased in the brains of Japanese honeybee workers involved in the formation of a hot defensive bee ball. In addition, workers exposed to 46°C heat also exhibited Acks expression patterns similar to those observed in the brains of workers involved in the formation of a hot defensive bee ball, suggesting that the neural activity observed in the brains of workers involved in the hot defensive bee ball mainly reflects thermal stimuli processing.

Highlights

  • In nature, animals threatened by predators exhibit a variety of adaptive behaviors to escape or actively defend themselves against the predators [1]

  • Because no kakusei homolog had been identified in any other animal species, including insects, we first amplified parts of kakusei cDNA from the Japanese honeybee using primers designed from the European honeybee kakusei cDNA sequences

  • We identified Apis cerana kakusei (Acks), a Japanese honeybee homolog of kakusei, which is a neural immediate early gene (IEG) in the European honeybee

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Summary

Introduction

Animals threatened by predators exhibit a variety of adaptive behaviors to escape or actively defend themselves against the predators [1]. Some animals exhibit characteristic antipredator behaviors against their natural enemies that are considered to be an evolutionary consequence of adaptation to the threat of natural enemies [2,3]. Japanese honeybees (Apis cerana japonica), fight against the giant hornet (Vespa mandarinia japonica), their most formidable natural enemy [5], by exhibiting a characteristic behavior called ‘hot defensive bee ball formation’. Within ,30 to 60 min after initiating the bee ball formation, the hornet is killed by the heat produced [6]. The defensive bee ball formation is considered to result from Japanese honeybee-specific selective pressure to avoid predation by the giant hornets that inhabit East Asia, including Japan [6]

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