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Understanding social resilience in honeybee colonies

Zeynep N. Ulgezen, Coby van Dooremalen, Frank van Langevelde

2021Current Research in Insect Science22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Honeybee colonies experience high losses, induced by several stressors that can result in the collapse of colonies. Experiments show what effects stressors, such as parasites, pathogens and pesticides, can have on individual honeybees as well as colonies. Although individuals may die, colonies do not always collapse from such disturbances. As a superorganism, the colony can maintain or return back to homeostasis through colony mechanisms. This capacity is defined as social resilience. When the colony faces a high stress load, this may lead to breakdown in mechanisms, loss in resilience and eventually colony collapse. Before social resilience can be measured in honeybees, we need to examine the mechanisms in colonies that allow recovery and maintenance after stressor exposure. Here, we discuss some of these mechanisms and how they affect the social resilience of honeybee colonies. Understanding social resilience in honeybees is essential to managing colony health and loss prevention.

Topics & Concepts

StressorBiologyResilience (materials science)Social stressPsychological resilienceEcologyPsychologySocial psychologyNeuroscienceThermodynamicsPhysicsInsect and Pesticide ResearchPlant and animal studiesInsect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
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