Quantitative Untersuchungen zum Dotterprotein-Haushalt der Honigbiene (Apis mellifica)

1972 ◽  
Vol 171 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolf Engels
Keyword(s):  
Development ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 291-301
Author(s):  
Herwig O. Gutzeit ◽  
Erwin Huebner

The localization of F-actin (microfilaments) in the nurse cells of ovarian follicles has been studied in 12 different insect species by fluorescence microscopy after specifically staining F-actin with rhodamine-conjugated phalloidin. In the analysed species with polytrophic ovaries (Apis mellifica, Pimpla turionellae, Bradysia tritici, Ephestia kuehniella, Protophormia terraenovae) a dense F-actin network was found to be associated with the nurse cell membranes. Only in Protophormia were microfilament bundles seen to extend from the cell membrane into the nurse cell cytoplasm and in a few cases appeared to make contact with the nuclear membrane. In the analysed coleopteran species with telotrophic ovarioles (Strangalia melanura, Leptinotarsa decemlineata, Oryzaephilus surinamensis) the fluorescence was also concentrated at the nurse cell membranes only. However, in all analysed hemipteran species (Lygus pratensis, Calocoris affinis, Graphosoma lineatum, Euscelis plebejus) the microfilament pattern was very different: while the nurse cells stained only weakly, we always found a characteristic (in some species massive) microfilament network surrounding the trophic core, a central area in the germarium from where material is transported through the trophic cords into the oocytes. The observed differences in the microfilament patterns are likely to reflect different mechanisms for transporting macromolecules and organelles within the ovariole.


1956 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 554-565
Author(s):  
H. KALMUS

The sun navigation of honey bees has been investigated in a region of the southern hemisphere where the sun was moving counter-clockwise during the observations. Foragers from a strain long established in the region were fed in the evening on a dish in a particular geographical direction and transferred overnight to a new locality unknown to them. During the next day the majority of bees were at all hours searching in the direction of their previous training. Foragers which were the offspring of queens recently improted in an inseminated state from the northern hemisphere showed after similar training systematically false orientation on the day of observation. The direction of their search shifted by about 30° per hour counter-clockwise from a direction about 90° clockwise from the training direction in the morning to the correct direction in the evening. Bees of hybrid (local and imported) origin also showed false orientation. The existence of innate mechanisms is postulated compensating in northern bees for the sun's clockwise movements and in southern bees for the counter-clockwise movement of the sun. The change in the direction of compensation must have occurred during the last 425 years, and a possible mode of this evolutionary process is discussed.


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