Unique long-term videos show the bee nursery in the hive
FRANKFURT. A newly developed video technique has
allowed scientists at Goethe University Frankfurt at the Bee Research Institute
of the Polytechnical Society to record the complete development of a honey bee
in its hive for the first time. It also led to the discovery that certain
pesticides – neonicotinoids – changed the behaviour of the nurse bees:
researchers determined that they fed the larvae less often. Larval development
took up to 10 hours longer. A longer development period in the hive can foster
infestation by parasites such as the Varroa
mite (Scientific Reports, DOI 10.1038/s41598-020-65425-y).
Honey bees have very complex breeding
behaviour: a cleaning bee cleans an empty comb (brood cell) of the remains of
the previous brood before the queen bee lays an egg inside it. Once the bee
larva has hatched, a nurse bee feeds it for six days. Then the nurse bees caps
the brood cell with wax. The larva spins a cocoon and goes through metamorphosis,
changing the shape of its body and developing a head, wings and legs. Three
weeks after the egg was laid, the fully-grown bee hatches from the cocoon and
leaves the brood cell.
Using a new video technique, scientists at
Goethe University Frankfurt have now succeeded for the first time in recording
the complete development of a honey bee in a bee colony at the Bee Research
Institute of the Polytechnical Society. The researchers built a bee hive with a
glass pane and were thus able to film a total of four bee colonies
simultaneously over several weeks with a special camera set-up. They used deep red
light so that the bees were not disturbed, and recorded all the movements of
the bees in the brood cells.
The researchers were particularly
interested in the nursing behaviour of the nurse bees, to whose food (a sugar
syrup) they added small amounts of pesticides known as neonicotinoids. Neonicotinoids
are highly effective insecticides that are frequently used in agriculture. In
natural environments, neonicotinoids arrive in bee colonies through nectar and
pollen collected by the bees. It is already known that these substances disturb
the navigational abilities and learning behaviour of bees. In a measure
criticised by the agricultural industry, the European Union has prohibited the
use of some neonicotinoids in crop cultivation.
Using machine learning algorithms
developed by the scientists together with colleagues at the Centre for
Cognition and Computation at Goethe University, they were able to evaluate and quantify
the nursing behaviour of the nurse bees semi-automatically. The result: even
small doses of the neonicotinoids Thiacloprid or Clothianidin led to the nurse
bees feeding the larva during the 6-day larval development less frequently, and
consequently for a shorter daily period. Some of the bees nursed in this manner
required up to10 hours longer until the cell was capped with wax.
“Neonicotinoids affect the bees' nervous
systems by blocking the receptors for the neurotransmitter acetylcholine," explains
Dr Paul Siefert, who carried out the experiments in Professor Bernd Grünewald's
work group at the Bee Research Institute Oberursel. Siefert: “For the first
time, we were able to demonstrate that neonicotinoids also change the social
behaviour of bees. This could point to the disruptions in nursing behaviour due
to neonicotinoids described by other scientists." Furthermore, parasites such
as the feared Varroa mite (Varroa destructor) profit from an
extended development period, since the mites lay their eggs in the brood cells
shortly before they are capped: if they remain closed for a longer period, the
young mites can develop and multiply without interruption.
However, according to Siefert, it still
remains to be clarified whether the delay in the larval development is caused
by the behavioural disturbance of the nurse bee, or whether the larvae develop
more slowly because of the altered jelly. The nurse bees produce the jelly and
feed it to the larvae. “From other studies in our work group, we know that the
concentration of acetylcholine in the jelly is reduced by neonicotinoids," says
Siefert. “On the other hand, we have observed that with higher dosages, the
early embryonal development in the egg is also extended – during a period in
which feeding does not yet occur." Additional studies are needed to determine
which factors are working together in these instances.
In any case, the new video technique and
the evaluation algorithms offer great potential for future research projects.
In addition to feeding, behaviours for heating and construction were also able
to be reliably identified. Siefert: “Our innovative technology makes it
possible to gain fundamental scientific insights into social interactions in
bee colonies, the biology of parasites, and the safety of pesticides."
Publication:
Paul Siefert, Rudra
Hota, Visvanathan Ramesh, Bernd Grünewald. Chronic
within-hive video recordings detect altered nursing behaviour and retarded
larval development of neonicotinoid treated honey bees. Sci. Rep. 10,
8727 (2020).
Video:
Development of a bee larva https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-65425-y (Supplementary
Material)
Images may be downloaded
here: http://www.uni-frankfurt.de/88682581
Captions:
Figure 1: Diagram/monitoring of brood cells – side view of the construction and camera view of the brood area. The brood area of the bees was filmed with a camera (green) through a dome lighting (grey). The specially designed hive (brown) was only 2.4 cm wide, so that the bees would raise young as quickly as possible (right). Credit: Paul Siefert/Bee Research Institute Oberursel/Goethe University Frankfurt
Figure.
2 Excerpts from the video of the development of
a worker bee. Above left: The queen lays an egg (arrow) in the cell. The growing
larva (arrow) is fed with jelly. Below left: the metamorphosis takes about one
hour and includes the rupture of the larval skin (arrow); the pupa is beneath
it. Finally, the adult bee hatches out of the cell. Credit: Paul Siefert/Bee
Research Institute Oberursel/Goethe University Frankfurt
Further
information:
Dr Paul Siefert
Bee Research Institute Oberursel
Subsidiary of the Polytechnical Society
Frankfurt am Main,
Faculty of Biosciences
Goethe University Frankfurt am Main
Tel.:
+49 6171 21278
siefert@bio.uni-frankfurt.de
www.institut-fuer-bienenkunde.de