Natural mating of instrumentally inseminated queen bees

  • Woyke J
  • Jasiński Z
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Abstract

Virgin queens homozygous for the recessive cordovan body color gene were inseminated with semen of cordovan drones. The queens were divided into 4 groups and were treated as follows: 1), inseminated with 8 mm 3 of semen; 2), treated with CO 2 before insemination with 8 mm 3 of semen; 3), inseminated twice with 4 mm 3 of semen; and 4), treated twice with CO 2, ie before and after insemination with 8 mm 3 of semen. Queen excluders were removed from the entrances after the last treatment. Mating nuclei were placed in the apiary with dominant black drones. The number of emerging cordovan and black workers was determined. Of the queens which were only inseminated once, 50% mated naturally; however, out of those additionally treated once with CO 2, only 25% mated. No queen from the 2 other groups mated naturally. The ratio of wild black progeny originating from queens which also mated naturally was on average 33.4% for group 1, and 6.2% for group 2. Queens from group 1 additionally mated naturally on average with 3 drones per queen, and those from group 2 with only 1 drone per queen. Double insemination with the same total amount of semen or 2 additional CO 2 treatments prevented additional natural mating of instrumentally inseminated queens.

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Woyke, J., & Jasiński, Z. (1992). Natural mating of instrumentally inseminated queen bees. Apidologie, 23(3), 225–230. https://doi.org/10.1051/apido:19920305

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