Gene flow between African-and European-derived honey bee populations in Argentina

WS Sheppard, TE Rinderer, JA Mazzoli, JA Stelzer… - Nature, 1991 - nature.com
IN the Neotropics, introduced European honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) 1, 2 have been
largely supplanted by bees descended from an African race, A. m. scutellata Lepetier, which …

Neotropical Africanized honey bees have African mitochondrial DNA

DR Smith, OR Taylor, WM Brown - Nature, 1989 - nature.com
NON-INDIGENOUS African honey bees have invaded most of South and Central America in
just over 30 years1. The genetic composition of this population and the means by which it …

Evidence from mitochondrial DNA that African honey bees spread as continuous maternal lineages

HG Hall, K Muralidharan - Nature, 1989 - nature.com
AFRICAN honey bees have populated much of South and Central America and will soon
enter the United States. The mechanism by which they have spread is controversial …

Hybridization between European and Africanized honey bees in the neotropical Yucatan peninsula

TE Rinderer, JA Stelzer, BP Oldroyd, SM Buco… - Science, 1991 - science.org
A population genetic analysis of honey bees of the Mexican neotropical Yucatan peninsula
shows that the range expansion of Africanized bees there has involved extensive …

African-European honeybee hybrids have low nonintermediate metabolic capacities

JF Harrison, HG Hall - Nature, 1993 - nature.com
BECAUSE of a number of behavioural, ecological and physiological factors, African
honeybees (Apis mellifera scutellata) are better adapted to tropical environments than …

Neotropical African bees.

RE Page Jr - Nature, 1989 - search.ebscohost.com
Neotropical African bees. Sign In Folder Preferences Languages New Features! Help Exit New
Search Publications Subject Terms Cited References More EBSCOhost Searching: Choose …

Insights into social insects from the genome of the honeybee Apis mellifera

… Overall project leadership: Weinstock George M. 1 2 … - Nature, 2006 - nature.com
Here we report the genome sequence of the honeybee Apis mellifera, a key model for social
behaviour and essential to global ecology through pollination. Compared with other …

[HTML][HTML] Insights into social insects from the genome of the honeybee Apis mellifera

Honeybee Genome Sequencing Consortium - Nature, 2006 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Here we report the genome sequence of the honeybee Apis mellifera, a key model for social
behaviour and essential to global ecology through pollination. Compared with other …

Genetic specialists, kin recognition and nepotism in honey-bee colonies

RE Page Jr, GE Robinson, MK Fondrk - Nature, 1989 - nature.com
INSECT societies have long served as useful models in the study of two often intertwined
issues in evolutionary biology: the levels at which natural selection operates1, and the …

A genetic component to division of labour within honey bee colonies

PC Frumhoff, J Baker - Nature, 1988 - nature.com
Division of labour among nestmate workers is central to the colonial organization and
ecological success of the eusocial Hymenoptera (ants, bees and wasps) 1. Workers …