Perry Clint J, Søvik Eirik, Myerscough Mary R, Barron Andrew B
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia; School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, London E1 4NS, United Kingdom;
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia; Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130; and.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Mar 17;112(11):3427-32. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1422089112. Epub 2015 Feb 9.
Many complex factors have been linked to the recent marked increase in honey bee colony failure, including pests and pathogens, agrochemicals, and nutritional stressors. It remains unclear, however, why colonies frequently react to stressors by losing almost their entire adult bee population in a short time, resulting in a colony population collapse. Here we examine the social dynamics underlying such dramatic colony failure. Bees respond to many stressors by foraging earlier in life. We manipulated the demography of experimental colonies to induce precocious foraging in bees and used radio tag tracking to examine the consequences of precocious foraging for their performance. Precocious foragers completed far fewer foraging trips in their life, and had a higher risk of death in their first flights. We constructed a demographic model to explore how this individual reaction of bees to stress might impact colony performance. In the model, when forager death rates were chronically elevated, an increasingly younger forager force caused a positive feedback that dramatically accelerated terminal population decline in the colony. This resulted in a breakdown in division of labor and loss of the adult population, leaving only brood, food, and few adults in the hive. This study explains the social processes that drive rapid depopulation of a colony, and we explore possible strategies to prevent colony failure. Understanding the process of colony failure helps identify the most effective strategies to improve colony resilience.
许多复杂因素都与近期蜜蜂蜂群数量的显著减少有关,包括害虫和病原体、农用化学品以及营养压力源。然而,目前尚不清楚为何蜂群经常在短时间内几乎失去全部成年蜜蜂种群,从而导致蜂群数量崩溃。在此,我们研究了这种严重蜂群崩溃背后的社会动态。蜜蜂会通过提前开始觅食来应对许多压力源。我们操纵了实验蜂群的种群结构,以诱导蜜蜂早熟觅食,并使用无线电标签追踪来研究早熟觅食对其表现的影响。早熟觅食的蜜蜂一生中完成的觅食行程要少得多,并且在首次飞行时死亡风险更高。我们构建了一个种群模型,以探索蜜蜂对压力的这种个体反应如何可能影响蜂群表现。在该模型中,当觅食者死亡率长期升高时,越来越年轻的觅食者力量会引发正反馈,从而极大地加速蜂群最终种群数量的下降。这导致了分工的瓦解和成年蜜蜂数量的减少,蜂巢中只剩下幼虫、食物和少数成年蜜蜂。本研究解释了导致蜂群迅速减少的社会过程,并且我们探索了预防蜂群崩溃的可能策略。了解蜂群崩溃的过程有助于确定提高蜂群恢复力的最有效策略。