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| HYMENOPTERA, Apidae (Apoidea) --  <Images> & <Juveniles>     Description & Statistics            Apidae includes the honeybee and some of the socialized
  bees, but the genus Psithyrus
  parasitizes the bumblebees (Clausen 1940/62).  This family includes long-tongued bees without pygidial or
  basitibial plates (Finnamore & Michener 1993).  There is no scopa in queens of social species and in the
  parasitic and robber genera,              The honeybees always produce a wax comb with hexagonal
  cells. The cells serve for larval rearing sites and honey storage.  Honey is formed in the stomach from nectar
  through the action of enzymes.  It is
  regurgitated into the storage cells.             The developing brood is fed with pollen.  The queen is responsible for the
  production of eggs.  She produces a
  "queen substance" that suppresses the development of other females
  in the colony.             A marked division of labor occurs in the colony.  The drones exist solely for the purpose of
  mating with the queen.  There is a
  continuous cycle in a colony, and a division takes place when a second queen
  is produced.  The old queen then leads
  a part of the old colony away to a new site in a swarm.  Three principal stimuli to the production
  of new queens are, (1) when an overabundance of individuals occurs in the
  hive, (2) an old queen dies and (3) when there is a shortage of food.  The latter case stimulates swarming to
  form new colonies.             Apiculture regularly includes artificial
  insemination.  The genetic
  configureation of a queen is 2X, a worker 2X and a drone 1X.  Drones are produced from unfertilized
  eggs.             Honeybees are of great economic importance in that they
  are widely deployed for the pollination of both orchard and field crops
  (Please see ).  Bee venom has been used in therapy and
  royal jelly has been touted for rather doubtful rejuvenation properties.             The family includes about. 1,000 species including all
  the highly social bees as well as some solitary and primitively social
  forms.  There were 47 species known in
  North America as of 2000.  Principal
  subfamilies are:  Euglossinae,
  Bombinae, Meliponinae and Apinae.               One species, A.
  mellifera L., has been
  transported worldwide for pollination and honey production.  The earlier range was from northern Europe
  to southern Africa.  The other species
  are found in southern and eastern Asia. 
  Colonies are perennial and they swarm.  The old queen departs the nest with many workers.  Queens and workers differ in
  appearance.  Colonies generally have
  thousands of bees and in the wild occur in hollow trees, rock or soil
  cavities.  In southern Asia they have
  been found on exposed combs of cells hanging from tree branches or ledges
  (Finnamore & Michener 1993).             This is a large family
  of bees, comprising the common honey bees, stingless bees (which are also
  cultured for honey), carpenter bees, orchid bees, cuckoo bees, bumblebees,
  and various other less well-known groups. The family Apidae presently
  includes all the genera that were previously classified in the families
  Anthophoridae and Ctenoplectridae, and most of these are solitary species,
  though a few are also cleptoparasites. The four groups that were subfamilies
  in the old family Apidae are presently ranked as tribes within the subfamily
  Apinae. This trend has been taken to its extreme in a few recent
  classifications that place all the existing bee families together under the
  name "Apidae" (or, alternatively, the non-Linnaean clade
  "Anthophila"), but this is not a widely-accepted practice.             The
  subfamily Apinae contains a diversity of lineages, the majority of which are
  solitary, and whose nests are simple burrows in the soil. However, honey
  bees, stingless bees, and bumblebees are colonial (eusocial), though they are
  sometimes believed to have each developed this independently, and show
  notable differences in such things as communication between workers and
  methods of nest construction. Xylocopines (the subfamily which includes
  carpenter bees) are mostly solitary, though they tend to be gregarious, and
  some lineages such as the Allodapini contain eusocial species; most members
  of this subfamily make nests in plant stems or wood. The nomadines are all
  cleptoparasites in the nests of other bees.             Other key references are Maa
  (1953), Schwarz (1939, 1948) and Michener (1990).     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   |