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Behavioral Ecology Vol. 12 No. 4: 419-428
© 2001 International Society for Behavioral Ecology

Social parasitism by honeybee workers (Apis mellifera capensis Escholtz): host finding and resistance of hybrid host colonies

Peter Neumanna,b, Sarah E. Radloffc, Robin F. A. Moritzb, H. Randall Hepburna and Sacha L. Reecea

a Department of Zoology and Entomology, Rhodes University, Grahamstown 6140, South Africa b Institut für Zoologie, Martin-Luther-Universität, Kröllwitzer Str. 44, 06099 Halle/Saale, Germany c Department of Statistics, Rhodes University, Grahamstown 6140, South Africa

Address correspondence to P. Neumann, Institut für Zoologie, Martin-Luther-Universität, Kröllwitzer Str. 44, 06099 Halle/Saale, Germany. E-mail: p.neumann{at}zoologie.uni-halle.de .

We studied possible host finding and resistance mechanisms of host colonies in the context of social parasitism by Cape honeybee (Apis mellifera capensis) workers. Workers often join neighboring colonies by drifting, but long-range drifting (dispersal) to colonies far away from the maternal nests also rarely occurs. We tested the impact of queenstate and taxon of mother and host colonies on drifting and dispersing of workers and on the hosting of these workers in A. m. capensis, A. m. scutellata, and their natural hybrids. Workers were paint-marked according to colony and reintroduced into their queenright or queenless mother colonies. After 10 days, 579 out of 12,034 labeled workers were recaptured in foreign colonies. We found that drifting and dispersing represent different behaviors, which were differently affected by taxon and queenstate of both mother and host colonies. Hybrid workers drifted more often than A. m. capensis and A. m. scutellata. However, A. m. capensis workers dispersed more often than A. m. scutellata and the hybrids combined, and A. m. scutellata workers also dispersed more frequently than the hybrids. Dispersers from queenright A. m. capensis colonies were more often found in queenless host colonies and vice versa, indicating active host searching and/or a queenstate-discriminating guarding mechanism. Our data show that A. m. capensis workers disperse significantly more often than other races of A. mellifera, suggesting that dispersing represents a host finding mechanism. The lack of dispersal in hybrids and different hosting mechanisms of foreign workers by hybrid colonies may also be responsible for the stability of the natural hybrid zone between A. m. capensis and A. m. scutellata.

Key words: Apis mellifera capensis, Apis mellifera scutellata, honeybee, host finding, hybrids, social parasitism.


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