Despite the fact that Meliponini bee lost their sting apparatus (stingless bees), they did not lose their ability to defend themselves. A variety of defensive strategies is described for the group, such as bitting and resin deposition. Defensive behaviours are usually mediated by chemical communication such as alarm pheromones. This study describe the defensive strategies of the stingless bee Melipona flavolineata Friese 1900 towards known pheromone sources, the head secretions of the robber bee Lestrimelitta limao and the mandibular gland extract of conspecifics M. flavolineata workers. The pheromones provoked different defensive reactions. The head secretions of the robber bee repelled returning foragers, elicited the enclosing of the nes...
Social immunity forms an essential part of the defence repertoire of social insects. In response to ...
Social insects use cuticular lipids for nestmate recognition. These lipids are chiefly hydrocarbons ...
Guard honey bees patrol the entrance to the nest and are thought to recognise nestmates by cuticular...
Despite the fact that Meliponini bee lost their sting apparatus (stingless bees), they did not lose ...
Among eusocial bees, two genera evolved a cleptobiotic life strategy, stealing food resources from o...
Honeybees (Apis mellifera) are insects living in colonies with a complex social organization. Their ...
Abstract: The evolution of obligate kleptoparasitism, the theft of food, has led t...
Species in the stingless bee genus, Lestrimelitta, like L. niitkib, are all obligate cleptoparasites...
Like ants and termites some species of stingless bees (Meliponini), which are very important pollina...
The stingless bee Melipona fuliginosa Lepeletier is described as being aggressive robber, but there ...
Stingless bees belonging to the Lestrimelitta genus shows a unique foraging ecology for the group. I...
Texto completo del documentoForagers of several stingless bee species deposit attractive scent marks...
The aim of this study was to expand occurrence records of Lestrimelitta rufa (Friese, 1903) to the B...
The aim of this study was to expand occurrence records of Lestrimelitta rufa (Friese, 1903) to the B...
BackgroundSocial insect colonies routinely face large vertebrate predators, against which they need ...
Social immunity forms an essential part of the defence repertoire of social insects. In response to ...
Social insects use cuticular lipids for nestmate recognition. These lipids are chiefly hydrocarbons ...
Guard honey bees patrol the entrance to the nest and are thought to recognise nestmates by cuticular...
Despite the fact that Meliponini bee lost their sting apparatus (stingless bees), they did not lose ...
Among eusocial bees, two genera evolved a cleptobiotic life strategy, stealing food resources from o...
Honeybees (Apis mellifera) are insects living in colonies with a complex social organization. Their ...
Abstract: The evolution of obligate kleptoparasitism, the theft of food, has led t...
Species in the stingless bee genus, Lestrimelitta, like L. niitkib, are all obligate cleptoparasites...
Like ants and termites some species of stingless bees (Meliponini), which are very important pollina...
The stingless bee Melipona fuliginosa Lepeletier is described as being aggressive robber, but there ...
Stingless bees belonging to the Lestrimelitta genus shows a unique foraging ecology for the group. I...
Texto completo del documentoForagers of several stingless bee species deposit attractive scent marks...
The aim of this study was to expand occurrence records of Lestrimelitta rufa (Friese, 1903) to the B...
The aim of this study was to expand occurrence records of Lestrimelitta rufa (Friese, 1903) to the B...
BackgroundSocial insect colonies routinely face large vertebrate predators, against which they need ...
Social immunity forms an essential part of the defence repertoire of social insects. In response to ...
Social insects use cuticular lipids for nestmate recognition. These lipids are chiefly hydrocarbons ...
Guard honey bees patrol the entrance to the nest and are thought to recognise nestmates by cuticular...