The honey bee society was famously described as “The Feminine Monarchy by the cleric Charles Butler in 1634. Honey bees and their relatives—including all hymenopteran societies—qualify for this label because their colonies are headed by one or a small number of fertile queens. These queens produce a large number of sterile or nearly sterile daughter workers and, later, with their assistance, produce a smaller number of fertile sons and daughter queens (1). The complex and diverse life cycles and social organization of the feminine monarchies are matched by their equally complex and diverse strategies for sexual and asexual reproduction (2). On page 1780 of this issue, Pearcy et al. (3) uncover a new dimension in the complexity of hymenopter...
Although social hymenopteran colonies show a high level of cooperation among their members, colony m...
Honey bee workers have few opportunities for direct reproduction because their ovary development is ...
The hallmark of eusociality is the division of labour between reproductive (queen) and non‐reproduct...
The honey bee society was famously described as “The Feminine Monarchy by the cleric Charles Butler ...
The honey bee society was famously described as The Feminine Monarchy by the cleric Charles Butler i...
The social organization of hymenopteran insects depends on their adoption of complex sexual and asex...
A critique of ‘‘Asexually Produced Cape Honeybee Queens (Apis mellifera capensis) Reproduce Sexually...
In this thesis I investigate some instances of highly unusual reproductive biology in the honey bee....
Copyright 2006, Duke University Press. All rights reserved. Used with permission of the publisher. I...
Nepotism is an important potential conflict in animal societies. However, clear evidence of nepotism...
Honey bee colonies, although highly cooperative, are composed of genetically distinct individuals wi...
The first experiments on sex determination in bees began with Dzierzon, Meves, Nachtsheim, Paulcke, ...
Social insect colonies invest in reproduction and growth, but how colonies achieve an adaptive alloc...
Sex allocation in colonies of eusocial Hymenoptera is one of the best studied social conflicts. We o...
The dominant and ancestral mode of sex determination in the Hymenoptera is arrhenotokous parthenogen...
Although social hymenopteran colonies show a high level of cooperation among their members, colony m...
Honey bee workers have few opportunities for direct reproduction because their ovary development is ...
The hallmark of eusociality is the division of labour between reproductive (queen) and non‐reproduct...
The honey bee society was famously described as “The Feminine Monarchy by the cleric Charles Butler ...
The honey bee society was famously described as The Feminine Monarchy by the cleric Charles Butler i...
The social organization of hymenopteran insects depends on their adoption of complex sexual and asex...
A critique of ‘‘Asexually Produced Cape Honeybee Queens (Apis mellifera capensis) Reproduce Sexually...
In this thesis I investigate some instances of highly unusual reproductive biology in the honey bee....
Copyright 2006, Duke University Press. All rights reserved. Used with permission of the publisher. I...
Nepotism is an important potential conflict in animal societies. However, clear evidence of nepotism...
Honey bee colonies, although highly cooperative, are composed of genetically distinct individuals wi...
The first experiments on sex determination in bees began with Dzierzon, Meves, Nachtsheim, Paulcke, ...
Social insect colonies invest in reproduction and growth, but how colonies achieve an adaptive alloc...
Sex allocation in colonies of eusocial Hymenoptera is one of the best studied social conflicts. We o...
The dominant and ancestral mode of sex determination in the Hymenoptera is arrhenotokous parthenogen...
Although social hymenopteran colonies show a high level of cooperation among their members, colony m...
Honey bee workers have few opportunities for direct reproduction because their ovary development is ...
The hallmark of eusociality is the division of labour between reproductive (queen) and non‐reproduct...