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The cuticular hydrocarbon profiles of honey bee workers develop via a socially-modulated innate process.


ABSTRACT: Large social insect colonies exhibit a remarkable ability for recognizing group members via colony-specific cuticular pheromonal signatures. Previous work suggested that in some ant species, colony-specific pheromonal profiles are generated through a mechanism involving the transfer and homogenization of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) across members of the colony. However, how colony-specific chemical profiles are generated in other social insect clades remains mostly unknown. Here we show that in the honey bee (Apis mellifera), the colony-specific CHC profile completes its maturation in foragers via a sequence of stereotypic age-dependent quantitative and qualitative chemical transitions, which are driven by environmentally-sensitive intrinsic biosynthetic pathways. Therefore, the CHC profiles of individual honey bees are not likely produced through homogenization and transfer mechanisms, but instead mature in association with age-dependent division of labor. Furthermore, non-nestmate rejection behaviors seem to be contextually restricted to behavioral interactions between entering foragers and guards at the hive entrance.

SUBMITTER: Vernier CL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6382352 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The cuticular hydrocarbon profiles of honey bee workers develop via a socially-modulated innate process.

Vernier Cassondra L CL   Krupp Joshua J JJ   Marcus Katelyn K   Hefetz Abraham A   Levine Joel D JD   Ben-Shahar Yehuda Y  

eLife 20190205


Large social insect colonies exhibit a remarkable ability for recognizing group members via colony-specific cuticular pheromonal signatures. Previous work suggested that in some ant species, colony-specific pheromonal profiles are generated through a mechanism involving the transfer and homogenization of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) across members of the colony. However, how colony-specific chemical profiles are generated in other social insect clades remains mostly unknown. Here we show that i  ...[more]

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