Honeybees and Wax: An Experimental Natural HistorySpringer-Verlag, 1986 - 205 páginas "Instead of dirt and poison we have rather chosen to fill our hives with honey and wax; thus furnisning mankind with the two noblest of things, which are sweetness and light". Mindful of Swift's dictum, this compilation is offered as an exhaustive coverage of a smallish literature on the synthesis and secretion of beeswax, its elaboration into combs and the factors which bear on the execution of these processes by honeybees. To codify any aspect of the biology of an animal of agricultural importance is to sift through myriad observations and experiments, centuries old, that come down to us enshrouded in the folk literature. It is evident that wars and languages have also acted as barriers to the dissemination of knowledge about honeybees. Thus, particular care has been given to the primacy of discovery and its con textual significance. I have endeavoured to not over-interpret data and to allow the authors' works to speak for themselves. I have also tried to indicate some of the more obvious gaps in our knowledge of honeybees in relation to wax and to suggest some directions as to where we might proceed, aided by discoveries made on other animals and plants. This was done to remind the seasoned bee-hand of our general neglect of beeswax biology, historically constituting less than a percentage point of the apicultural literature. |
Índice
CHAPTER 1 | 1 |
Filaments or Microtubules? | 16 |
CHAPTER 4 | 29 |
Página de créditos | |
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Honeybees and Wax: An Experimental Natural History H. Randall Hepburn No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 2011 |
Términos y frases comunes
activity African bees African honeybee Apis mellifera beekeeping beeswax beeswax foundation behaviour Boehm brood brood-rearing build combs caged capping cell walls cells dm chemical colonies of bees comb construction comb wax comb-building constructed comb corpora allata cuticle Darchen density Dreischer empty comb epicuticle epidermis ester experiment experimental fat body fat cells foragers Freudenstein Gontarski height Hepburn hive honey honeybee colony Huber hydrocarbons insect Kurstjens larvae laying workers mandibles Martin and Lindauer mated queen measured mellifica metabolic rate monoester nectar nest normal observations oenocytes pheromones pollen procuticle propolis queen cell construction queen cells queen substance queenless bees queenright colonies ratio rearing Rinderer Rösch scale wax secrete wax secretion of wax shown space stimulates sugar swarm synthesis Table Taranov temperature vertical virgin scales virgin wax scales wax gland epithelium wax mirror wax production wax scales wax secretion worker bees young bees
