Search results for "bees"

showing 10 items of 88 documents

Antimicrobial beeswax coated polylactide films with silver control release capacity.

2013

Although the application of silver based antimicrobial systems is a widespread technology, its implementation in areas such as food packaging is still challenging. The present paper describes the fabrication of poly(lactic acid) (PLA) coated with beeswax with controlled release properties for sustained antimicrobial performance. Release of silver ions from the polymers was monitored voltammetrically under various conditions (surface contact, immersion in various liquid media and at different pH values) throughout at least 7days. A higher release was noted with decreasing pH while surface release was much slower than the release when immersed in liquid medium. While uncoated films demonstrat…

BiocideSilverPolymersPolyestersNanotechnologyMicrobiologyBeeswaxchemistry.chemical_compoundLactic Acidchemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryFood PackagingSalmonella entericaGeneral MedicinePolymerHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAntimicrobialControlled releaseLactic acidAnti-Bacterial AgentsFood packagingSteamChemical engineeringvisual_artDelayed-Action PreparationsWaxesvisual_art.visual_art_mediumLayer (electronics)Food ScienceInternational journal of food microbiology
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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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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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Different mechanisms underlie implicit visual statistical learning in honey bees and humans

2020

International audience; The ability of developing complex internal representations of the environment is considered a crucial antecedent to the emergence of humans’ higher cognitive functions. Yet it is an open question whether there is any fundamental difference in how humans and other good visual learner species naturally encode aspects of novel visual scenes. Using the same modified visual statistical learning paradigm and multielement stimuli, we investigated how human adults and honey bees ( Apis mellifera ) encode spontaneously, without dedicated training, various statistical properties of novel visual scenes. We found that, similarly to humans, honey bees automatically develop a comp…

Computer scienceSensory systemEnvironmentENCODEunsupervised learning03 medical and health sciences[SCCO]Cognitive science0302 clinical medicineCognitionMemoryAnimalsHumansLearninginternal representation030304 developmental biologyhuman visual cognition0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryRepresentation (systemics)Contrast (statistics)Cognition[SCCO] Cognitive scienceBeesBiological Sciencesinsect cognitionAntecedent (behavioral psychology)Unsupervised learningApis melliferaVisual learning030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychology
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Comparative morphology of the postpharyngeal gland in the Philanthinae (Hymenoptera, Crabronidae) and the evolution of an antimicrobial brood protect…

2015

Background Hymenoptera that mass-provision their offspring have evolved elaborate antimicrobial strategies to ward off fungal infestation of the highly nutritive larval food. Females of the Afro-European Philanthus triangulum and the South American Trachypus elongatus (Crabronidae, Philanthinae) embalm their prey, paralyzed bees, with a secretion from a complex postpharyngeal gland (PPG). This coating consists of mainly unsaturated hydrocarbons and reduces water accumulation on the prey’s surface, thus rendering it unfavorable for fungal growth. Here we (1) investigated whether a North American Philanthus species also employs prey embalming and (2) assessed the occurrence and morphology of …

CrabronidaeWaspsMolecular ConformationBeewolvesBeesAntifungalBiological Evolution590 Tiere (Zoologie)HydrocarbonsPrey preservationExocrine GlandsLarvaPredatory BehaviorPhilanthinaeddc:590AnimalsPostpharyngeal glandComparative morphologyAntimicrobialFemale3D reconstructionPostpharyngeal gland; 3D reconstruction; Comparative morphology; Prey preservation; Antimicrobial; Antifungal; Crabronidae; Philanthinae; BeewolvesPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
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Analysis of organophosphorus pesticides in honeybee by liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-mass spectrometry.

2001

Pesticides applied in extended agricultural fields may be controlled by means of bioindicators, such as honeybees, in which are the pesticides bioaccumulate. Liquid chromatography-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS) experiments with positive (PI) and negative (NI) ion modes were optimized for the analysis of 22 organophosphorus pesticides in honeybee samples. The extraction required 3 g of sample, which was extracted with acetone. The extract was purified with coagulating solution and reextracted with Cl(2)CH(2). Pesticides studied could be detected by both ionization modes except for parathion, parathion-methyl, and bromophos, which did not give signals …

Detection limitChemical ionizationInsecticidesChromatographyExtraction (chemistry)Analytical chemistryPesticide ResiduesAtmospheric-pressure chemical ionizationGeneral ChemistryPesticideBeesMass spectrometrySensitivity and SpecificityMass Spectrometrychemistry.chemical_compoundParathionOrganophosphorus CompoundschemistryAnimalsSelected ion monitoringGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesChromatography LiquidJournal of agricultural and food chemistry
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Quantification of Imidacloprid in Honeybees: Development of a Chemiluminescent ELISA

2010

A Chemiluminescente Enzyme-Linked Immuno-Sorbent Assay (CL-ELISA) for determination and quantification of the fungicide imidacloprid in honeybees was developed in an indirect competitive format. The assay was optimized by determining: the optimal coating conjugate concentration and anti-imidacloprid antiserum dilution, the effect of the incubation time on the competitive step, the tolerance to organic solvents. The IC50 and the limit of detection (LOD) values were 14.8 ng mL-1 and 0.11 ng mL -1, respectively, similar to those of colorimetric ELISA with a calibration range of 0.1 – 2600 ng mL-1. Cross reactivity of some related compounds such as three imidacloprid metabolites, 6-chloro nicot…

Detection limitChromatographyMetaboliteBiochemistry (medical)Clinical BiochemistryIMIDACLOPRIDBiochemistryAcetamipridCHEMILUMINESCENCEAnalytical Chemistrylaw.inventionStandard curvechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistrylawImidaclopridparasitic diseasesElectrochemistrySample preparationELISAHONEYBEESColorimetrySpectroscopyChemiluminescence
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Determination of organophosphorus pesticides in honeybees after solid-phase microextraction.

2001

A method based on solid-phase microextraction (SPME) followed by gas chromatography with nitrogen-phosphorus detection was developed for the purpose of determining 18 organophosphorus pesticide residues in honeybee samples (Apis mellifera). The extraction capacities of polyacrylate and poly(dimethylsiloxane) fibers were compared. The main factors affecting the SPME process, such as the absorption time profile, salt, and temperature, were optimized. The method involved honeybee sample homogenization, elution with an acetone:water solution (1:1) and dilution in water prior to fiber extraction. Moreover, the matrix effect on the extraction was evaluated. In samples spiked at the 0.2 mg kg(-1) …

Detection limitInsecticidesChromatographyChemistryElutionOrganic ChemistryExtraction (chemistry)Osmolar ConcentrationTemperatureGeneral MedicineBeesSolid-phase microextractionBiochemistrySensitivity and SpecificityAnalytical ChemistryDilutionOrganophosphorus CompoundsSolventsAnimalsSample preparationSaltsSolid phase extractionGas chromatographyJournal of chromatography. A
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Biogenic amine levels, reproduction and social dominance in the queenless ant Streblognathus peetersi

2006

Social harmony often relies on ritualized dominance interactions between society members, particularly in queenless ant societies, where colony members do not have developmentally predetermined castes but have to fight for their status in the reproductive and work hierarchy. In this behavioural plasticity, their social organisation resembles more that of vertebrates than that of the "classic" social insects. The present study investigates the neurochemistry of the queenless ant species, Streblognathus peetersi, to better understand the neural basis of the high behavioural plasticity observed in queenless ants. We report measurements of brain biogenic amines [octopamine, dopamine, serotonin]…

Dominance-SubordinationMale0106 biological sciencesBiogenic AminesSerotonin[SDV.OT]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Other [q-bio.OT]DopamineReproduction (economics)HymenopteraBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesHoney Bees0302 clinical medicineBiogenic amineAnimals[ SDV.OT ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Other [q-bio.OT][SDV.BDD]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Development BiologyOctopamineEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicschemistry.chemical_classification[SDV.OT] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Other [q-bio.OT]EcologyBrain[SDV.BDLR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Reproductive BiologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationHymenopteraEusocialityANTDominance (ethology)chemistryEvolutionary biologyFemaleStreblognathus peetersi030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Bilabiate Flowers: The Ultimate Response to Bees?

2007

† Background and Aims Bilabiate flowers have evolved in many lineages of the angiosperms, thus representing a convincing example of parallel evolution. Similar to keel blossoms, they have obviously evolved in order to protect pollen against pollen-collecting bees. Although many examples are known, a comprehensive survey on floral diversity and functional constraints of bilabiate flowers is lacking. Here, the concept is widened and described as a general pattern. † Methods The present paper is a conceptional review including personal observations of the authors. To form a survey on the diversity of bilabiate blossoms, a search was made for examples across the angiosperms and these were combi…

DorsumPollinationEcologyLamialesBiodiversityFeeding BehaviorFlowersPlant ScienceBeesBiologybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeBiological EvolutionMagnoliopsidaInflorescencePollenmedicineAnimalsPollenGeneral patternFunctional significanceParallel evolutionFloral Biology of the LamiaceaeAnnals of Botany
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