Search results for "bee"

showing 10 items of 628 documents

Analytical Methods for Pesticide Residue Determination in Bee Products

2002

Monitoring pesticide residues in honey, wax, and bees helps to assess the potential risk of these products to consumer health and gives information on the pesticide treatments that have been used on the field crops surrounding the hives. The present review seeks to discuss the basic principles and recent developments in pesticide analysis in bee products and their application in monitoring programs. Consideration is given to extraction, cleanup, chromatographic separation, and detection techniques.

ChromatographyPesticide residuePotential riskfungiConsumer healthPesticide ResiduesFood ContaminationHoneyBeesPesticidecomplex mixturesMicrobiologyGas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryChromatographic separationWaxesBee productsAnimalsEnvironmental scienceBiochemical engineeringAnalysis methodEnvironmental MonitoringFood ScienceJournal of Food Protection
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Natural reduction of willow carrot aphids by Coccinellidae on a carrot crop

1993

Coccinellidaecarrot aphidwillow carrot aphidcoccinellid beetlecarrotnatural reductionFolia Horticulturae
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Could Europe Apply a Suitable Control Method for the Small Hive Beetle (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae)?

2022

Abstract The European bee, Apis mellifera L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae), is a fundamental resource for the pollination of a great variety of botanical species used by humans for sustenance. Over the last few decades, bee colonies have become vulnerable to a new pest that has advanced beyond its native sub-Saharan territory: the small hive beetle, Aethina tumida Murray (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae). This currently presents a pressing problem in the United States and Australia, but it has also been recorded in Portugal and Italy and it is likely to spread in the rest of Europe too. This study represents a systematic review, based on EFSA guidelines, of the various control treatments for small hive bee…

ColeopteraEuropeInsecticidesSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataEcologyItalyInsect Sciencesmall hive beetle European bee hive pest control EuropeAustraliaAnimalsGeneral MedicineBeesJournal of economic entomology
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Wolbachia prevalence and diversity in selected riverine predatory beetles (Bembidiini and Paederini)

2018

Despite the many studies on Wolbachia in Coleoptera, data about the prevalence of this bacterium among ground and rove beetles are missing. This study describes Wolbachia distribution and diversity in predatory beetles co-habiting the same environment - submontane river channels. Three species of Paederini (Staphylinidae) and four Bembidiini (Carabidae) were collected from six river catchments of the Carpathians. Wolbachia was absent in three species: Paederidus rubrothoracicus (Goeze), Bembidion decorum (Zenker in Panzer), Bembidion modestum (F.) - but detected in four others. Paederus limnophilus Erichson and Paederidus ruficollis F. were infected at only some sites by different strains o…

Coleopteraendosymbiontspredators.rove beetlesα-proteobacteriariverineground beetlesBulletin of Insectology
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Ptiliolum marginatum (Aube, 1850) (Coleoptera: Ptiliidae)– gatunek nowy dla Polski z Białowieskiego Parku Narodowego

2021

We present the first record of Ptiliolum marginatum for Poland. The specimens have been extracted from two nests of the wood warbler Phylloscopus sibilatrix in 2020, during investigations of the invertebrate fauna inhabiting bird nests. The samples were collected in the strictly protected part of the Białowieża National Park, in eastern Poland. We provide general information on the geographical distribution of Ptiliolum marginatum in Europe, the state of knowledge of the genus Ptiliolum in Poland, and further documentation including colour photographs of dorsal and ventral habitus, and characteristic features of hind femora and spermatheca of females.

Coleopteraprimeval Białowieża Forest.bird nestsnest-dwelling arthropodsentomofaunafeatherbeetlesActa Entomologica Silesiana
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Synthesis of the aggregation pheromone of the Colorado potato beetle from its degradation product

2015

Incubation of the Colorado potato beetle aggregation pheromone, (S)-1,3-dihydroxy-3,7-dimethyl-6-octen-2-one, with antennal or leg extracts from this beetle gave 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one as the major product. This ketone was used as a substrate in a stereoselective synthesis of the pheromone. It was attached to the butanediacetal of glycolic acid with good stereoselectivity and the desired isomer was further enriched by purification of the product of this reaction on silica gel.

ColoradoKetoneClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceBiochemistryPheromoneschemistry.chemical_compoundbutanediacetalsDrug DiscoveryColorado potato beetleAnimalsOrganic chemistryMolecular BiologyGlycolic acidSolanum tuberosumchemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyChemistrySilica gelOrganic ChemistryColorado potato beetleSubstrate (chemistry)StereoisomerismKetonesbiology.organism_classificationColeopteraBiochemistrySex pheromoneMolecular MedicinePheromoneStereoselectivitypheromone inactivationaggregation pheromoneBioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters
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The archaeology of beekeeping in pre-roman Iberia

1997

This paper presents a set of pottery beehives from the pre~Roman Iberian peninsula, dating from the third century BC, and all coming from a single region known in antiquity as Edetania. These beehives are closely related to similar examples from Greece and to a type described by Roman authors such as Columella. It is the first such archaeological material that can be associated with apiculture in this area.

ColumellaArcheologyBeekeepingGeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)PeninsulaGeography Planning and DevelopmentCeràmica antigaPotteryAncient historyArqueologiaArchaeology
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Bacteria from acidic to strongly alkaline insect midguts: Potential sources of extreme cellulolytic enzymes

2012

Abstract Bacterial isolates from the European Corn Borer (ECB) Ostrinia nubilalis and the coleopteran Colorado Potato Beetle (CPB) Leptinotarsa decemlineata midguts were identified and characterized. Twenty-four colonies, selected on solid media with cellulose as the sole carbon source and pH values ranging from 5 to 12, were identified through 16S sequencing as members of the genera Acinetobacter , Comamonas , Klebsiella , Microbacterium , Micrococcus and Sphingobacterium . A complete enzymatic characterization revealed widespread – albeit moderate – cellulase properties in all but one isolate and high xylanase activity in the four CPB isolates. Different enzymatic patterns in terms of opt…

ComamonasbiologySphingobacteriumRenewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentColorado potato beetleMicrobacteriumMicrococcusForestryCellulasebiology.organism_classificationOstriniaMicrobiologyXylanasebiology.proteinWaste Management and DisposalAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiomass and Bioenergy
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Foragers of the stingless bee Plebeia droryana inform nestmates about the direction, but not the distance to food sources

2020

The tropical stingless bees have evolved intricate communication systems to recruit nestmates to food locations. Some species are able to accurately communicate the location of food, whereas others simply announce the presence of food in the environment. Plebeia droryana is a tiny Neotropical stingless bee that, until recently, was thought to use a solitary foraging strategy, that is without the use of a recruitment communication system. However, recent research has indicated that P. droryana might be able to recruit nestmates to specific food source locations. We tested this by studying whether foragers can guide nestmates in the direction and the distance of artificial feeders placed in t…

CommunicationEcologybiologybusiness.industryStingless beePlebeia droryanaForagingSocial cuebiology.organism_classificationSucrose solutionInsect SciencebusinessPotential mechanismSensory cueEcological Entomology
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Genomic architecture and sexually dimorphic expression underlying immunity in the red mason bee, Osmia bicornis

2021

AbstractInsect pollinators provide crucial ecosystem services yet face increasing environmental pressures. The challenges posed by novel and reemerging pathogens on bee health means we need to improve our understanding of the immune system, an important barrier to infections and disease. Despite its importance, for certain ecologically important species, such as solitary bees, our understanding of the genomic basis and molecular mechanisms underlying immune potential, and how intrinsic and extrinsic factors may influence immune gene expression is lacking. Here, to improve our understanding of the genomic architecture underlying immunity of a key solitary bee pollinator, we characterised put…

Comparative genomicsGeneticsImmune systembiologyImmunityPollinatorGene expressionMason beeDiseasebiology.organism_classificationGene
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