20 years ago, in 1989, Deborah Roan Smith and Orley Taylor described
the situation where in 30 short years, most of South and Central
America had been "invaded" by African honey bees. They state quite
plainly that it is "unclear" whether the bees are a hybrid of European
and Africans, or represent an essentially pure African population.
Using the relatively new technique of mapping mitochondrial DNA, it
was found that bees of Brazil, Venezuela and Mexico were 97% African
(scutellata) type. Their analysis seems to indicate that the gene flow
is one directional, probably due to fact that the propagation is
mainly via queens, and not drones. They state that there is no
evidence that the feral population is significantly "Europeanized".
One could logically assume that Africanization would continued
unchecked into the US until it reached a climate barrier, as it has in
South America.
Some years later, in 2000, this scenario had come about. Ernesto
Guzman wrote about it and points out that hybridization may still
prevail at the northern limit.
> THE SUB-SAHARAN RACE of the honey bee (A. m. scutellata) has made
an unprecedented sweep across South and Central America and is
currently spreading into North America. There is increasing evidence
that the previous gene pool, derived from a mixture of European races,
has largely been replaced by the A. m. scutellata genotype in these
areas. This has occurred despite the fact that the honey bee races
interbreed freely.
> At the leading edge of Africanization in California, >95% of the
colonies identified as Africanized by morphometrics had A. m.
scutellata mitochondrial genotypes suggesting that selection or
reproductive isolation is maintaining the correlation between
mitochondrial and nuclear genomes. Thus, mitochondrial genotype alone
may be a strong indicator of both maternal and paternal inheritance,
in most geographical areas. However, at the extreme southern limits of
the range of A. m. scutellata in South America, there appears to be
considerable genetic mixing between A. m. scutellata and the
previously existing European feral bees. This situation is expected to
occur at the eventual northern limit of Africanized bee spread as well.
> In North America, hybridization between these races is expected to
be considerable at the northern extreme of the geographical range of
Africanized bees. In this situation, mitochondrial analysis will
provide a discrete genetic marker of Africanization that will
compliment diagnostic genomic DNA markers.
Meanwhile, the bees of the Yucatan were studied:
> Since the arrival of Africanized bees, the genetic architecture of
the Yucatecan population of honeybees has changed dramatically. By
1998 (13 years after the arrival of Africanized bees) there had been a
dramatic increase in the proportion of African nuclear alleles
estimated in the managed Yucatecan population (65%) and, similarly,
the gene pool of the feral population contained an estimated 63%
African nuclear alleles. Africanized bees have a competitive
advantage over European bees in the Neotropics, in terms of their
colonizing abilities and rules of reproduction and dispersal.
Finally, in 2004, we have the following summary, written by
researchers living and working with African bees in Arizona.
> One of the more remarkable aspects of the African bee is its
ability to displace European honey bee subspecies in the New World.
Initially, it was assumed that African and European bees would
interbreed, giving rise to the “Africanized honey bee” of Latin
America. However, although substantial hybridization occurs when
African bees invade areas with European populations over time European
characteristics tend to be lost. Indeed, throughout much of its range
in the New World, the invading honey bee population has remained
essentially African in its nesting biology, swarming and absconding
behavior, foraging and diet selection, and mitochondrial DNA.
> While some introgression of European alleles has occurred, African
genetic and *behavioral* characteristics have been largely preserved
during the invasion process. For brevity, we refer to the descendants
of A. m. scutellata in the Americas as *African bees*
ref available on request
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