123 results match your criteria: "Carl Hayden Bee Research Center[Affiliation]"
Sensors (Basel)
October 2024
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.
From June to October, 2022, we recorded the weight, the internal temperature, and the hive entrance video traffic of ten managed honey bee () colonies at a research apiary of the Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson, AZ, USA. The weight and temperature were recorded every five minutes around the clock. The 30 s videos were recorded every five minutes daily from 7:00 to 20:55.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Econ Entomol
September 2024
USDA-ARS, Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, 2000 East Allen Road, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Vairimorpha (Microsporidia: Nosematidae) is a microsporidian that infects honey bees especially in winter. Fumagillin can reduce infections, but whether overwintering survival is improved is unclear. The diet also may influence the severity of Nosema infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Bioinformatics
August 2024
Department of Entomology, MSU Apiculture Lab, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, 48824, USA.
Sci Rep
April 2024
USDA-ARS Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, 2000 E. Allen Rd, Tucson, AZ, 85719, USA.
The health of honey bee queens is crucial for colony success, particularly during stressful periods like overwintering. To accompany a previous longitudinal study of colony and worker health, we explored niche-specific gut microbiota, host gene expression, and pathogen prevalence in honey bee queens overwintering in a warm southern climate. We found differential gene expression and bacterial abundance with respect to various pathogens throughout the season.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
March 2024
Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center, Washington State University, Wenatchee, WA, USA.
Honey bees and other pollinators are critical for food production and nutritional security but face multiple survival challenges. The effect of climate change on honey bee colony losses is only recently being explored. While correlations between higher winter temperatures and greater colony losses have been noted, the impacts of warmer autumn and winter temperatures on colony population dynamics and age structure as an underlying cause of reduced colony survival have not been examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
February 2024
Beehero Inc., Tel Aviv 6721117, Israel.
The foraging activity of honey bees used to pollinate almonds was examined in relation to their hive entrance orientation and colony strength. Twenty-four colonies of honey bees, twelve in each group, were situated with their entrances facing east and west cardinal points. Bee out counts were recorded continuously and hive weight data at ∼10 min intervals from 17 February to 15 March 2023.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2024
ScientificBeekeeping.com, Grass Valley, CA, USA.
Probiotics are widely used in agriculture including commercial beekeeping, but there is little evidence supporting their effectiveness. Antibiotic treatments can greatly distort the gut microbiome, reducing its protective abilities and facilitating the growth of antibiotic resistant pathogens. Commercial beekeepers regularly apply antibiotics to combat bacterial infections, often followed by an application of non-native probiotics advertised to ease the impact of antibiotic-induced gut dysbiosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2024
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center USDA-ARS, Tucson, Arizona, United States of America.
Neonicotinoid-contaminated sugar stores can have both near term and long term effects on honey bees due to their persistence in honey stores. Effects of imidacloprid food stores contaminants were examined in subtropical colonies that experience reduced brood rearing and foraging during overwintering. Colonies were given treatment sugar syrup containing 0 ppb (control), 20 ppb (field relevant), or 100 ppb (above field relevant) imidacloprid over six weeks to simulate contaminated fall nectar.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2023
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center USDA-ARS, Tucson, Arizona, United States of America.
Honey bee colonies maintain viable queens in part through communication with Queen Mandibular Pheromone (QMP), a mixture that signals the queen's presence and reproductive quality to workers. In turn, workers are thought to provide retinue queen care or replace queens partially based on QMP profiles. We examined the effects of seasonal dearth (overwintering in a warm subtropical location) on queen-worker interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlacing honey bee colonies in cold storage has been proposed as a way to induce a pause in brood production as part of a Varroa mite treatment plan. Here, we exposed colonies to combinations of with or without an October cold storage period and with or without a subsequent miticide application. We then measured the effects of those treatments on colony-level variables (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Math Biol
June 2023
Sciences and Mathematics Faculty, College of Integrative Sciences and Arts, Arizona State University, Mesa, AZ, 85212, USA.
The honeybee plays an extremely important role in ecosystem stability and diversity and in the production of bee pollinated crops. Honey bees and other pollinators are under threat from the combined effects of nutritional stress, parasitism, pesticides, and climate change that impact the timing, duration, and variability of seasonal events. To understand how parasitism and seasonality influence honey bee colonies separately and interactively, we developed a non-autonomous nonlinear honeybee-parasite interaction differential equation model that incorporates seasonality into the egg-laying rate of the queen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Econ Entomol
August 2023
USDA-ARS, Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, 2000 East Allen Road, Tucson, AZ, USA.
For over a decade, high percentages of honey bee colonies have been perishing during the winter creating economic hardship to beekeepers and growers of early-season crops requiring pollination. A way to reduce colony losses might be moving hives into cold storage facilities for the winter. We explored factors that could affect the size and survival of colonies overwintered in cold storage and then used for almond pollination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
April 2023
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, USDA-ARS, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.
Honey bee abdominal lipids decline with age, a change thought to be associated with the onset of foraging behavior. Stressors, such as pesticides, may accelerate this decline by mobilizing internal lipid to facilitate the stress response. Whether bees with stressor-induced accelerated lipid loss vary from controls in both the onset of foraging and nutritional quality of collected pollen is not fully understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
March 2023
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, USDA Agricultural Research Service, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.
Honey bee colonies are resource rich and densely populated, generating a constant battle to control microbial growth. Honey is relatively sterile in comparison with beebread: a food storage medium comprising pollen mixed with honey and worker head-gland secretions. Within colonies, the microbes that dominate aerobic niches are abundant throughout social resource space including stored pollen, honey, royal jelly, and the anterior gut segments and mouthparts of both queens and workers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Entomol Res
June 2023
Department of Biological Sciences, North Dakota State University, 308 Stevens Hall, P.O. Box 6050, Fargo, ND 58102, USA.
The success of agriculture relies on healthy bees to pollinate crops. Commercially managed pollinators are often kept under temperature-controlled conditions to better control development and optimize field performance. One such pollinator, the alfalfa leafcutting bee, , is the most widely used solitary bee in agriculture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2023
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, USDA Agricultural Research Service, 2000 E. Allen Rd., Tucson, AZ, 85719, USA.
As essential pollinators of ecosystems and agriculture, honey bees (Apis mellifera) are host to a variety of pathogens that result in colony loss. Two highly prevalent larval diseases are European foulbrood (EFB) attributed to the bacterium Melissococcus plutonius, and Varroosis wherein larvae can be afflicted by one or more paralytic viruses. Here we used high-throughput sequencing and qPCR to detail microbial succession of larval development from six diseased, and one disease-free apiary.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
December 2022
USDA-ARS Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, Tucson, AZ, United States.
Honey bees exhibit an elaborate social structure based in part on an age-related division of labor. Young workers perform tasks inside the hive, while older workers forage outside the hive, tasks associated with distinct diets and metabolism. Critical to colony fitness, the work force can respond rapidly to changes in the environment or colony demography and assume emergency tasks, resulting in young foragers or old nurses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adv Res
November 2023
U.S. Department of Agriculture -Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) Bee Research Laboratory, Beltsville, MD 20705, USA. Electronic address:
Introduction: Honey bees provides valuable pollination services for world food crops and wild flowering plants which are habitats of many animal species and remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, a powerful tool in the fight against climate change. Nevertheless, the honey bee population has been declining and the majority of colony losses occur during the winter.
Objectives: The goal of this study was to understand the mechanisms underlying overwinter colony losses and develop novel therapeutic strategies for improving bee health.
J Insect Physiol
December 2022
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, USDA-ARS, Tucson, AZ 85719, United States.
Honey bee colony health is a function of the individuals, their interactions, and the environment. A major goal of honey bee research is to understand how colonies respond to stress. Individual-level studies of the bee stress response are tractable, but their results do not always translate to the colony level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
September 2022
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, USDA-ARS, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.
The extent to which insecticides harm non-target beneficial insects is controversial. The effects of long-term exposure on honey bees to sublethal concentrations of flonicamid, a pyridinecarboxamide compound used as a systemic insecticide against sucking insects, were examined in a field study and two cage studies. The field study involved the continuous weight, temperature, and CO monitoring of 18 honey bee colonies, 6 of which were exposed over six weeks to 50 ppb flonicamid in sugar syrup, 6 exposed to 250 ppb flonicamid in syrup, and 6 exposed to unadulterated syrup (control).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
October 2022
School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 427 E Tyler Mall, Tempe, AZ, 85281, USA.
Honey bee pollination services are of tremendous agricultural and economic importance. Despite this, honey bees and other pollinators face ongoing perils, including population declines due to a variety of environmental stressors. Fungicides may be particularly insidious stressors for pollinators due to their environmental ubiquity and widespread approval for application during crop bloom.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiol Spectr
August 2022
USDA-ARS Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
The highly social honey bee has dense populations but a significantly reduced repertoire of immune genes relative to solitary species, suggesting a greater reliance on social immunity. Here we investigate immune gene expression and gut microbial succession in queens during colony introduction. Recently mated queens were placed into an active colony or a storage hive for multiple queens: a queen-bank.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
June 2022
Carl Hayden Bee Research Center, USDA-ARS, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.
The relationship between beehive weight and traffic is a fundamental open research problem for electronic beehive monitoring and digital apiculture, because weight and traffic affect many aspects of honeybee () colony dynamics. An investigation of this relationship was conducted with a nondisruptive two-sensor (scale and camera) system on the weight and video data collected on six colonies in Langstroth hives at the USDA-ARS Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson, Arizona, USA, from 15 May to 15 August 2021. Three hives had positive and two hives had negative correlations between weight and traffic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
June 2022
Department of Entomology and Center for Insect Science, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Microb Ecol
May 2023
Department of Entomology and Center for Insect Science, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA.
Honey bees are a model for host-microbial interactions with experimental designs evolving towards conventionalized worker bees. Research on gut microbiome transmission and assembly has examined only a fraction of factors associated with the colony and hive environment. Here, we studied the effects of diet and social isolation on tissue-specific bacterial and fungal colonization of the midgut and two key hindgut regions.
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