The Buzz on Bees
We don't give bees much thought unless they're terrorizing us at a picnic, but they're exquisitely complex creatures. Nature and Science reported last week that the genome of the honeybee has been mapped, making it only the fourth bug to be so sequenced. Researchers have already begun studying that genetic blueprint, providing new insights into our most valuable insect--and new strategies to save it from extinction.
Why bees are in danger
Over the past 50 years, the honeybee population in the U.S. has been cut in half. Here are some reasons:
1 THE VARROA MITE A tiny killer first detected in the U.S. in 1987, the mite attacks honeybee adults and larvae, wiping out a generation of young bees before they hatch
2 TRACHEAL MITES First spotted in the U.S. in 1984, tracheal mites attack the respiratory system of adult bees and can kill an entire hive in a matter of hours
3 PESTICIDES The wax in beehives is a natural sink for airborne toxins, and the relatively weak bee immune system is no match for such concentrations of man-made poisons
What we stand to lose
Honeybees are responsible for up to 30%* of food in the U.S. diet that relies on pollination--and that includes alfalfa-fed beef •ORANGES 17.8 billion lbs. •GRAPES 15.7 billion lbs. •APPLES 9.9 billion lbs. •WATERMELONS 3.8 billion lbs. •CUCUMBERS 2.2 billion lbs. •ALMONDS 915 million lbs. •SQUASH 815 million lbs. •CHERRIES (sweet) 502 million lbs. •HONEY 175 million lbs. *2005 production
Inside the honeybee
It's not easy to build a bee, as new insights into its genes and anatomy are revealing
Brain Smaller than the period at the end of a sentence, the bee brain owes its versatility to perhaps 200 polypeptides that drive behavior. At least 36 genes produce those chemicals
Pathogen resistance The bee's genes do not give it a very powerful immune system, surprising in so communal a species. The bee has yet undiscovered ways of staying healthy
Royal jelly Adult bees secrete this protein mix, and all young bees are fed a portion of it. But an exclusive diet of royal jelly can transform an ordinary bee into an egg-laying queen
Outer body The exterior of the bee is not particularly thick, a genetic adaptation that probably arose as a result of hive living, which keeps bees safer than other, more solitary insects
Dull taste Bees are poorly equipped with taste genes, another likely result of the hive, since anything one bee eats has probably been proved safe by another
Stinger When deployed, it is left in the victim; the bee dies soon after, but the sac pumps poison for up to 20 min.
Sharp smell The new genome studies have located the genes that give the bee its acute sense of smell. Smell is vital in an insect that uses pheromones both to communicate locations and to indicate rank
Pollen As bees collect pollen for food, they also act as sex workers, scattering stray grains among male and female flower parts, allowing the plants to reproduce Compound eyes (2) Simple eyes (3) Antennae THORAX HEAD ABDOMEN Wax secretion Nerve center Poison sac Hindgut Pollen basket Honey stomach Midgut Heart
The social bug
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Watch: Dan Savage Leaves Stephen Speechless on 'Colbert Report'
- 'Anonymous' Knocks CIA Site Offline
- Androgynous Model Andrej Pejic Pushes the Fashion World's Limits
- Why American Kids Are Brats
- Icelanders Avoid Inbreeding Through Online Incest Database
- World Press Photo Awards Announced
- Desperately Seeking Susan Powell: A Best Friend's Quest
- The Grand Canyon Bans Sales of Bottled Water
- Kate Middleton's Amazing Fashion Evolution
- Seriously This Time: Chad Ochocinco Says He Will Change His Name
- Harvard's Hoops Star Is Asian. Why's That a Problem?
- How to End the Global Food Shortage
- Study: Children of Lesbians May Do Better Than Their Peers
- Friends With Benefits
- Medical Meditation: Say Om Before Surgery
- A New World Dawns




