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Keeping Bees Sweet

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

bee coolWest Lafayette, IND (3/30/98)- The discovery of a "mean gene" in Africanized honey bees could provide the basis for reducing the diaspora of these 'killer' bees, now buzzing their way into California.

Researchers at three institutions collaborated in a successful search for the gene for aggressive stinging behavior in  the Africanized honey bees. Finding the 'mean gene' "may help us reduce the occurrence of Africanized bees and prevent the spread of the gene to other bee colonies," said Greg Hunt, a bee specialist with the Purdue University Department of Entomology and principal investigator on the project.

Graphic: Greg Hunt checks a bee hive at a Purdue research facility.

Controlling the spread of the aggresive bees from South America is critical for the survival of U.S. agriculture, not to mention honey producers. One-third of the food produced in the United States comes from plants pollinated by honey bees. Because of fatal infestations of two parasites, almost all honey bees in North America now are raised by beekeepers. Already many beekeepers in Mexico have stopped keeping bee hives because of the eager stingers, he noted.

Africanized honey bees are a genetic variant of our own European-origin  honey bees. The interlopers are considerably more aggressive. Research conducted in Venezuela found that Africanized honey bees will attack a visual stimulus 20 times faster than European honey bees and that when they attack they deposit about eight times as many stingers in the first 30 seconds.

Africanized honey bees aren't bad, just misunderstood, say entomologists: "It seems like aggression when a bee stings you, but we call it defensive behavior," Hunt says. "Different insects use various methods to protect themselves from predators. Bee stings are a response to predation by mammals -- bee venom is specialized for causing pain in vertebrates."

Hunt and colleagues Robert E. Page of the University of California- Davis and Ernesto Guzman-Novoa of Mexico's agricultural research service identified the mean gene by measuring the speed and intensity of stinging behavior in 162 colonies of hybrid bees. They then located gene markers on the chromosomes of the aggressive hybrid bees and compared the genes with those of non-aggressive hybrid bees.

"We made a genetic map of the honey bee using the same techniques used in crop genetics, a technique called quantitative trait locus mapping," Hunt says. "This process hasn't been used much in insects. But if you have markers for the genes, we can do what the crop geneticists are doing and selectively breed for gentle bees."

The scientists identified five genes that appear to have some link to the aggressive behavior, and one of these genes was found to have a much greater effect on the tendency to sting. "We have also mapped genes that affect levels of alarm pheromone," Hunt says. "These genes are completely independent of stinging behavior."

These findings may allow breeders and scientists to reduce the spread of the Africanized traits in the Western Hemisphere, he ntoes:

"We are developing specific genetic markers that could predict the probability of queens having the African version of stinging genes so it will be easier for breeders to avoid using these queen bees," Hunt says. "Ultimately it might be possible to clone the gene through map- based cloning so that we can better understand how this gene affects stinging behavior."

Background

Africanized bees are just one of several subspecies of honey bees. They were introduced to the Western Hemisphere by an accidental release from a Brazilian geneticist in 1956 and spread rapidly through South and Central America. Since then they have spread steadily north, entering Mexico in 1988. By 1991, almost 100 percent of the honey bees in Mexico carried the aggressiveness gene.

Graphic: Africanized honey bees have spread through Mexico and into the southern United States. (Purdue Agricultural Communications)

The Africanized bees reached the United States in 1991 and are now found in parts of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and southern California. There the spread of the Africanized bees has stalled. "Although the front of the migration has slowed down, it shouldn't be any problem for the bees to go across the Louisiana coast or go farther north in California," Hunt says. "We don't know why they haven't gone there already."

Even without further migration, the Africanized bees still could threaten the bee population throughout North America. "In the tropics the aggressiveness trait is a desired one; we don't know if it will be a dominant trait in temperate areas, too," Hunt says. "If it is, the aggressiveness trait could be introduced in northern areas in European bees even if the subspecies of Africanized bees doesn't expand its territory."

The mechanism for spreading the trait is already in place. Because of fatal infestations of two parasites, there are almost no wild bees left in North America. Virtually all honey bees are raised by beekeepers who buy their queen bees each spring from large breeders in the southern states near the regions where Africanized honey bees have invaded. These queens could acquire the gene for aggressive behavior and spread the trait to other regions of the country, Hunt says.

The research appears in the March 1998 issue of the scientific journal Genetics.


Related information on the Internet
Bee Research Center
Bee Careful
Killer Bee History

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