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Apis mellifera iberiensis

Apis mellifera iberiensis, or the Spanish bee, is a western honey bee subspecies native to the Iberian Peninsula. It is also found on the Balearic Islands.[2]

Apis mellifera iberiensis
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Apidae
Genus: Apis
Species:
Subspecies:
A. m. iberiensis
Trinomial name
Apis mellifera iberiensis
Engel, 1999 [1]

Distribution edit

This subspecies is well characterized towards the south and west of a line passing from Zaragoza to Barcelona in the Iberian Peninsula,[3] belonging to the A lineage of Apis mellifera originating from Africa (formally mis-identified as belonging to the M Lineage originating from central Asia), colonizing Iberia across the Strait of Gibraltar.[4]

Morphology edit

Apis mellifera iberiensis have a length of the forewings with an average of 9.226 mm and 3.098 mm [5][dead link] while the width of the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera is 9.381 mm and 3.0293 mm respectively. The first description of this bee of the Iberian Peninsula was published in the magazine Bee World, made by B. Adam. F. Ruttner described it in his book "Biogeography and Taxonomy of Honeybees." in base to the description of B. Adam, but like several authors prior to him (e.g., Goetze, 1964) erroneously equated this bee with the subspecies proposed by Skorikov (1929) as Apis mellifera iberica (Skorikov, however, proposed the name for a subspecies occurring in the Caucasus and based the name on the ancient Greco-Roman designation for the Georgian Kingdom, Caucasian Iberians, existing there in antiquity). Thus, the name as employed by Ruttner was an error, leaving Apis mellifera iberiensis as the only valid name for this subspecies of honey bees. B.Adam collect their views on a trip he made in 1959 to Spain and Portugal.

A. m. iberiensis has the body size of European subspecies with forewings narrower and wider abdomen. It is mostly dark brown to jet-black. The darkness is accentuated by the low tomentum and low hairiness. The queens are black almost uniform in color. They are prolific and with high fertility controlled by environmental conditions.[6] The closing membrane of the cells is watery, the breeding is sensitive to some diseases.

Behavior edit

They do not typically generate multiple queens (polygyny) in any given hive at swarming time. Their movements are fast and rather nervous. They exhibit quick defensive reaction, nervousness, and a propensity to swarm. They do make abundant use of propolis.[6] One or two sentry bees are always present at the entrance of the hive. If the colony is disturbed, the sentries raise a persistent alarm. The hive attack anything that seems threatening for at least 24 hours.

Taxonomy edit

The name often applied to this subspecie is A.m.iberica, an epithet originally proposed by Skorikov in his 1929 monograph on honey bees. Authors subsequent to Skorikov assumed in error that the iberica referred to the Iberian Peninsula and thereby quickly adopted the name for the subspecie of bees living in Spain and bordering areas. However, the name iberica was based on a Caucasian subspecie of honey bees, the epithet referring to the Greco-Roman designation for the Georgian Kingdom established in that region in antiquity. The true A. m. iberica of Skorikov has nothing to do with the western Mediterranean subspecie of bees, and under the rules of nomenclature the name iberica is not valid for this lineage of honey bees. The corrected and valid name for the subspecie is Apis mellifera iberiensis.

In a comparative study of A.m.iberiensis and five others sub-species of Apis mellifera including A.m.intermissa, A. m. monticola, A. m. scutellata, A. m. adansonii and A. m. capensis [7][8] cleavage maps obtained through the use of restriction enzyme [9] showed the Spanish Honey bee contains mtDNA similar to intermissa and also mellifera.[10] Additionally A.m.intermissa belongs to a group shown by experiment to have similar mtD.N.A (mitochondrian D.N.A.), this including monticola, scuttelata, adansonii and capensis. [7][8][11]

In Spanish bee populations, mtDNA haplotypes of African bee strains were found to be frequently present. Migrating bee populations formed the original colonies of bee in western Europe, landing to eventually populate the continent from Africa across the Straits of Gibraltar.[12]

Genoma edit

The Iberian Peninsula is an area of hybridization between the north of Africa and Europe, the influence of Apis mellifera mellifera is present in bees localized in the northern, and the influence of Apis mellifera intermissa is more present in the south, in the Apis mellifera iberiensis.[6]

A. m. iberiensis DNA is present in the honey bees of the western United States[13] where the honey bees are not native and they were introduced from Spain during the conquest of America.

Presents six haplotypes different, five of them correspond to an evolutionary lineage from Africa and one from West Europa. From this, infer the hybrid nature of this subspecies, which has a predominant influence in the south of the Iberian Peninsula, with a North African component that is gradually replaced towards the north, with Apis mellifera mellifera.[citation needed]

The genetic variability of the microsatellite of the chromosomes, is similar to that of African populations in the number of alleles detected and the values of genetic diversity. This suggests the genetic relationship between populations of Andalusia and North Africa.

Studied be populations of Portugal there were no major differences between different geographical locations. Morphometric studies of Apis mellifera iberiensis populations in Asturias and northern Iberian Peninsula indicated that the Cantabrian Mountains produces insulation allowing for differences between populations.

The results of microsatellites vary markedly between provinces. In Cadiz haplotype homogeneity contrasts with the microsatellite variability, suggesting the occurrence of recent phenomena of introgression from populations with African haplotypes, whose origin is indeterminate.


References edit

  1. ^ F. Cánovas; P. De la Rúa; J. Serrano; J. Galián (2007). "Geographical patterns of mitochondrial DNA variation in Apis mellifera iberiensis (Hymenoptera: Apidae)". Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 46 (1): 24–30. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0469.2007.00435.x.
  2. ^ Diversitat de l'abella de la mel
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2022-07-20. Retrieved 2018-05-19.
  4. ^ Tihelka, E., Cai, C., Pisani, D. (2020). "Mitochondrial genomes illuminate the evolutionary history of the Western honey bee (Apis mellifera)". Scientific Reports. 10 (1): 14515. Bibcode:2020NatSR..1014515T. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-71393-0. PMC 7471700. PMID 32884034.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ An adventitious distal abcissa in the forewing[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 2012-02-06. Retrieved 2012-02-06.
  7. ^ a b Garnery L, Cornuet JM, Solignac M (October 1992). "Evolutionary history of the honey bee Apis mellifera inferred from mitochondrial DNA analysis". Mol. Ecol. 1 (3): 145–54. doi:10.1111/j.1365-294X.1992.tb00170.x. PMID 1364272. S2CID 22494416.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b John E. Dews, Eric Milner Breeding Better Bees (80 pages) WritersPrintShop, 2004 ISBN 1-904623-18-2 [Retrieved 2011-12-19]
  9. ^ vivo.colostate.edu 2015-11-01 at the Wayback Machine [Retrieved 2011-12-19]
  10. ^ D. R. Smith, M. F. Palopoli, B. R. Taylor, L. Garnery, J.-M. Cornuet, M. Solignac, W. M. Brown Geographical Overlap of Two Mitochondrial Genomes in Spanish Honeybees (Apis mellifera iberica). Oxford University Press 03/01/1991. Retrieved 2011-12-19.[dead link]
  11. ^ M.Chouchene, N. Barbouche, M.Garnery, L.Baylac openstarts.units.it Nimis P.L. Vignes Lebbe R (eds.) Tools for Identifying Biodiversity: Progress and Problems p.343 Molecular and ecophysiological characterisation of the Tunisian bee : Apis mellifera intermissa ISBN 978-88-8303-295-0 EUT,2010[Retrieved 2011-12-20]
  12. ^ Pierre Franck, Lionel Garnery, Michel Solignac and Jean-Marie Cornuet (1997) JSTOR The Origin of West European Subspecies of Honeybees (Apis mellifera): New Insights from Microsatellite and Mitochondrial Data EvolutionVol. 52, No. 4 (Aug., 1998), pp. 1119-1134 (article consists of 16 pages) Published by: Society for the Study of Evolution [Retrieved 2011-12-22]
  13. ^ Carcaterització genètica de les abelles

apis, mellifera, iberiensis, spanish, western, honey, subspecies, native, iberian, peninsula, also, found, balearic, islands, scientific, classificationdomain, eukaryotakingdom, animaliaphylum, arthropodaclass, insectaorder, hymenopterafamily, apidaegenus, api. Apis mellifera iberiensis or the Spanish bee is a western honey bee subspecies native to the Iberian Peninsula It is also found on the Balearic Islands 2 Apis mellifera iberiensisScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder HymenopteraFamily ApidaeGenus ApisSpecies A melliferaSubspecies A m iberiensisTrinomial nameApis mellifera iberiensisEngel 1999 1 Contents 1 Distribution 2 Morphology 3 Behavior 4 Taxonomy 5 Genoma 6 ReferencesDistribution editThis subspecies is well characterized towards the south and west of a line passing from Zaragoza to Barcelona in the Iberian Peninsula 3 belonging to the A lineage of Apis mellifera originating from Africa formally mis identified as belonging to the M Lineage originating from central Asia colonizing Iberia across the Strait of Gibraltar 4 Morphology editApis mellifera iberiensis have a length of the forewings with an average of 9 226 mm and 3 098 mm 5 dead link while the width of the subspecies Apis mellifera mellifera is 9 381 mm and 3 0293 mm respectively The first description of this bee of the Iberian Peninsula was published in the magazine Bee World made by B Adam F Ruttner described it in his book Biogeography and Taxonomy of Honeybees in base to the description of B Adam but like several authors prior to him e g Goetze 1964 erroneously equated this bee with the subspecies proposed by Skorikov 1929 as Apis mellifera iberica Skorikov however proposed the name for a subspecies occurring in the Caucasus and based the name on the ancient Greco Roman designation for the Georgian Kingdom Caucasian Iberians existing there in antiquity Thus the name as employed by Ruttner was an error leaving Apis mellifera iberiensis as the only valid name for this subspecies of honey bees B Adam collect their views on a trip he made in 1959 to Spain and Portugal A m iberiensis has the body size of European subspecies with forewings narrower and wider abdomen It is mostly dark brown to jet black The darkness is accentuated by the low tomentum and low hairiness The queens are black almost uniform in color They are prolific and with high fertility controlled by environmental conditions 6 The closing membrane of the cells is watery the breeding is sensitive to some diseases Behavior editThey do not typically generate multiple queens polygyny in any given hive at swarming time Their movements are fast and rather nervous They exhibit quick defensive reaction nervousness and a propensity to swarm They do make abundant use of propolis 6 One or two sentry bees are always present at the entrance of the hive If the colony is disturbed the sentries raise a persistent alarm The hive attack anything that seems threatening for at least 24 hours Taxonomy editThe name often applied to this subspecie is A m iberica an epithet originally proposed by Skorikov in his 1929 monograph on honey bees Authors subsequent to Skorikov assumed in error that the iberica referred to the Iberian Peninsula and thereby quickly adopted the name for the subspecie of bees living in Spain and bordering areas However the name iberica was based on a Caucasian subspecie of honey bees the epithet referring to the Greco Roman designation for the Georgian Kingdom established in that region in antiquity The true A m iberica of Skorikov has nothing to do with the western Mediterranean subspecie of bees and under the rules of nomenclature the name iberica is not valid for this lineage of honey bees The corrected and valid name for the subspecie is Apis mellifera iberiensis In a comparative study of A m iberiensis and five others sub species of Apis mellifera including A m intermissa A m monticola A m scutellata A m adansonii and A m capensis 7 8 cleavage maps obtained through the use of restriction enzyme 9 showed the Spanish Honey bee contains mtDNA similar to intermissa and also mellifera 10 Additionally A m intermissa belongs to a group shown by experiment to have similar mtD N A mitochondrian D N A this including monticola scuttelata adansonii and capensis 7 8 11 In Spanish bee populations mtDNA haplotypes of African bee strains were found to be frequently present Migrating bee populations formed the original colonies of bee in western Europe landing to eventually populate the continent from Africa across the Straits of Gibraltar 12 Genoma editThe Iberian Peninsula is an area of hybridization between the north of Africa and Europe the influence of Apis mellifera mellifera is present in bees localized in the northern and the influence of Apis mellifera intermissa is more present in the south in the Apis mellifera iberiensis 6 A m iberiensis DNA is present in the honey bees of the western United States 13 where the honey bees are not native and they were introduced from Spain during the conquest of America Presents six haplotypes different five of them correspond to an evolutionary lineage from Africa and one from West Europa From this infer the hybrid nature of this subspecies which has a predominant influence in the south of the Iberian Peninsula with a North African component that is gradually replaced towards the north with Apis mellifera mellifera citation needed The genetic variability of the microsatellite of the chromosomes is similar to that of African populations in the number of alleles detected and the values of genetic diversity This suggests the genetic relationship between populations of Andalusia and North Africa Studied be populations of Portugal there were no major differences between different geographical locations Morphometric studies of Apis mellifera iberiensis populations in Asturias and northern Iberian Peninsula indicated that the Cantabrian Mountains produces insulation allowing for differences between populations The results of microsatellites vary markedly between provinces In Cadiz haplotype homogeneity contrasts with the microsatellite variability suggesting the occurrence of recent phenomena of introgression from populations with African haplotypes whose origin is indeterminate References edit F Canovas P De la Rua J Serrano J Galian 2007 Geographical patterns of mitochondrial DNA variation in Apis mellifera iberiensis Hymenoptera Apidae Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 46 1 24 30 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0469 2007 00435 x Diversitat de l abella de la mel Honey bee locations Archived from the original on 2022 07 20 Retrieved 2018 05 19 Tihelka E Cai C Pisani D 2020 Mitochondrial genomes illuminate the evolutionary history of the Western honey bee Apis mellifera Scientific Reports 10 1 14515 Bibcode 2020NatSR 1014515T doi 10 1038 s41598 020 71393 0 PMC 7471700 PMID 32884034 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link An adventitious distal abcissa in the forewing permanent dead link a b c Documento sin titulo Archived from the original on 2012 02 06 Retrieved 2012 02 06 a b Garnery L Cornuet JM Solignac M October 1992 Evolutionary history of the honey bee Apis mellifera inferred from mitochondrial DNA analysis Mol Ecol 1 3 145 54 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 1992 tb00170 x PMID 1364272 S2CID 22494416 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b John E Dews Eric Milner Breeding Better Bees 80 pages WritersPrintShop 2004 ISBN 1 904623 18 2 Retrieved 2011 12 19 vivo colostate edu Archived 2015 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2011 12 19 D R Smith M F Palopoli B R Taylor L Garnery J M Cornuet M Solignac W M Brown Geographical Overlap of Two Mitochondrial Genomes in Spanish Honeybees Apis mellifera iberica Oxford University Press 03 01 1991 Retrieved 2011 12 19 dead link M Chouchene N Barbouche M Garnery L Baylac openstarts units it Nimis P L Vignes Lebbe R eds Tools for Identifying Biodiversity Progress and Problems p 343 Molecular and ecophysiological characterisation of the Tunisian bee Apis mellifera intermissa ISBN 978 88 8303 295 0 EUT 2010 Retrieved 2011 12 20 Pierre Franck Lionel Garnery Michel Solignac and Jean Marie Cornuet 1997 JSTOR The Origin of West European Subspecies of Honeybees Apis mellifera New Insights from Microsatellite and Mitochondrial Data EvolutionVol 52 No 4 Aug 1998 pp 1119 1134 article consists of 16 pages Published by Society for the Study of Evolution Retrieved 2011 12 22 Carcateritzacio genetica de les abelles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apis mellifera iberiensis amp oldid 1163041687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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