Abstract

Nowadays, heat stress is emerging as a significant issue for honeybees in apiculture due to its potential to negatively impact the honey bees' health, the bee colony, and the economic stability. This review aims to thoroughly analyze the impact of heat stress on honeybee populations by consolidating existing research to provide accurate information. The thermoregulation process in honeybees and associated behavioral and molecular adaptations in worker bees, specific to Apis mellifera. Additionally covers the various ways that individual bees respond to heat stress, including changes in their metabolic rate and feeding habits. Furthermore, the paper provides a comprehensive analysis of how heat stress affects the entire bee colony, including detrimental effects on brood development, decreased productivity, and heightened susceptibility to illnesses and parasites. Also, it investigates the correlation between heat stress and other stressors, such as pesticide exposure, nutritional stress, biotic pressures, habitat loss, and the combined effects on bee health. To safeguard these important pollinators from the negative effects of climate change, this review stresses the need of interdisciplinary research and the need of identifying health stress as a major component influencing honeybee populations.

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