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From:
Peter Loring Borst <[log in to unmask]>
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Informed Discussion of Beekeeping Issues and Bee Biology <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 29 Mar 2013 18:20:14 +0000
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There is ample evidence that CO2 can cause serious colony disruption.

Field tests would be required to ascertain the real world implications





Ribbands (1950) found that the exposure of worker honey bees to CO2 for 2

min caused them to change from hive to field activities at an earlier age

than control bees. This treatment also caused an elimination or a marked

reduction of pollen collecting behavior and a reduction of life expectancy.





Furthermore, CO2 treatment of recently emerged bees eliminated all or most

of subsequent brood rearing and wax secreting activities. Simpson (1954)

found significant reduction of pollen gathering when pollen foraging bees

were treated with CO2 for 10 min. He also indicated that CO2 treatment

accelerates the retrogression of pharyngeal glands of young bees.





Effects of Carbon Dioxide and Low Temperature Narcosis on Honey Bees, Apis

mellifera 

RAHIM EBADI, NORMAN E. GARY, AND KENNETH LORENZEN Dept. of Entomology,

Univ. of Calif., Davis 95616





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A single brief anesthesia by CO2 may have strong ethological

repercussions. One exposure to CO2 causes worker honey bees, Apis

mellijera, to change from hive to field activities at an earlier age,

leads to a marked reduction of pollen gathering (123), modifies hoarding

behavior (88), and affects the age-dependent temperature preference (56);

some of these effects are observed after only a short anesthesia (30 sec)

with pure CO2 (33)





Laboratory experiments have been carried out to define the role of CO2 and

breath odors on the activity of hematophagous insects. A quantitative

relation¡© ship has been demonstrated between the number of flights and CO2

con¡© centrations up to 1% for Muscidae (159) or 5% for Glossinidae





The correspondence between field and laboratory results is not perfect.

For example, the kinetic effect of low CO2 concentration that

characterizes the laboratory behavior of some flies has not been

convincingly demonstrated in the field





IMMEDIATE AND LATENT EFFECTS OF CARBON DIOXIDE ON INSECTS

Gerard Nicolas Laboratoire de Biologie de l'lnsecte, Universite Paris-Sud,

Orsay Cedex, France





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CO2 narcosis is known to change the reproductive status of queen and

worker honey bees in opposite directions. It also alters the foraging

preferences of workers away from pollen, and causes early onset of

foraging. Here we have shown that the expression of genes related to

foraging and reproductive behaviour change in response to narcosis. Thus

our results provide further support for the hypothesis that reproductive

and foraging traits are causally related in the honey bee, and may be

regulated by the same gene network(s).





Expression of genes related to reproduction and pollen foraging in honey

bees (Apis mellifera) narcotized with carbon dioxide

R. M. Brito, M. McHale and B. P. Oldroyd

Insect Molecular Biology (2010) 19(4), 451¡©461

R. M. Brito, M. McHale and B. P. Oldroyd







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