Abstract

Honeybee larvae and pupae are extremely stenothermic, i.e. they strongly depend on accurate regulation of brood nest temperature for proper development (33–36°C). Here we study the mechanisms of social thermoregulation of honeybee colonies under changing environmental temperatures concerning the contribution of individuals to colony temperature homeostasis. Beside migration activity within the nest, the main active process is “endothermy on demand” of adults. An increase of cold stress (cooling of the colony) increases the intensity of heat production with thoracic flight muscles and the number of endothermic individuals, especially in the brood nest. As endothermy means hard work for bees, this eases much burden of nestmates which can stay ectothermic. Concerning the active reaction to cold stress by endothermy, age polyethism is reduced to only two physiologically predetermined task divisions, 0 to ∼2 days and older. Endothermic heat production is the job of bees older than about two days. They are all similarly engaged in active heat production both in intensity and frequency. Their active heat production has an important reinforcement effect on passive heat production of the many ectothermic bees and of the brood. Ectothermy is most frequent in young bees (<∼2 days) both outside and inside of brood nest cells. We suggest young bees visit warm brood nest cells not only to clean them but also to speed up flight muscle development for proper endothermy and foraging later in their life. Young bees inside brood nest cells mostly receive heat from the surrounding cell wall during cold stress, whereas older bees predominantly transfer heat from the thorax to the cell wall. Endothermic bees regulate brood comb temperature more accurately than local air temperature. They apply the heat as close to the brood as possible: workers heating cells from within have a higher probability of endothermy than those on the comb surface. The findings show that thermal homeostasis of honeybee colonies is achieved by a combination of active and passive processes. The differential individual endothermic and behavioral reactions sum up to an integrated action of the honeybee colony as a superorganism.

Highlights

  • Among social insects, the cavity nesting honeybee species Apis mellifera and A. cerana display the most advanced regulation of the nest climate [1]

  • The body surface temperature of the bees varied in a wide range. Both the lowest and the highest Tthorax were measured at an experimental temperature (Texp) of 15uC: minimum Tthorax = 17.5uC (Thead = 17.1uC, Tabdomen = 17.5uC, Ta = 19.8uC, Tcell rim = 18.9uC) and maximum Tthorax = 44.5uC (Thead = 41.4uC, Tabdomen = 39.5uC, Ta = 31.0uC, Tcell rim = 35.9uC)

  • In insects capable of endothermy, the flight muscles are the source of active heat production [e.g. 1,44,48,49]

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Summary

Introduction

The cavity nesting honeybee species Apis mellifera and A. cerana display the most advanced regulation of the nest climate [1] Of these two species, Apis mellifera is the more intensely investigated concerning thermal homeostasis of the colony. While eggs and larvae (in open brood cells) can tolerate lower temperatures for some time, the pupae (in sealed brood cells) are very sensitive to cooling. If they remain too long below 32uC there is a high incidence of shrivelled wings and legs, and malformations of the abdomen [4], and adults may suffer from neural and behavioral insufficiencies [14,15,16,17]. The accuracy of thermoregulation is high in the presence of brood [3,4,9,10], and much more variable and generally lower in broodless colonies [8,18]

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