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Diversity In The Genus Apis

Editat de Deborah Roan Smith
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 iun 2019
The honey bees were formerly seen as a small, static group comprising four species, whose behavior and ecology were simple variants on the patterns found in Apis mellifera. The picture now is one of a large, actively speciating group, reflecting in part the complex geological and biological influence of the Apis environment. Research on this diversity has benefitted from new techniques of DNA analysis applied to several long-standing problems in honey bee phylogenetics and that are reported in this volume. The behavior and ecology of the Apis species and populations are also more diverse and differentiated than previously recognized: Radically different orientation systems as expressed through dance language exist in various species. This study of Apis will be of great interest not only to biologists and apiculturalists but to anyone interested in systematics, genetics, and ethology.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780367016005
ISBN-10: 0367016001
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 145 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: CRC Press
Colecția CRC Press

Cuprins

Preface -- A Cladistic Analysis of the Genus Apis -- A Review of the Diversity of Species Within Apis -- Morphological Analysis of the Tribes of Apidae -- A New Tribal Phylogeny of the Apidae Inferred from Mitochondrial DNA Sequences -- Ribosomal DNA Diversity in Apidae -- Genetic Diversity in Apis mellifera -- Allozyme Diversity in Asian Apis -- Mitochondrial DNA and Honey Bee Biogeography -- Comparative Studies of Dance Communication: Analysis of Phylogeny and Function -- Diversity in Apis Mating Systems -- Coadaptation of Colony Design and Worker Performance in Honey Bees

Descriere

The honey bees were formerly seen as a small, static group comprising four species, whose behavior and ecology were simple variants on the patterns found in Apis mellifera. The picture now is one of a large, actively speciating group, reflecting in part the complex geological and biological influence of the Apis environment. Research on this diversity has benefitted from new techniques of DNA analysis applied to several long-standing problems in honey bee phylogenetics and that are reported in this volume. The behavior and ecology of the Apis species and populations are also more diverse and differentiated than previously recognized: Radically different orientation systems as expressed through dance language exist in various species. This study of Apis will be of great interest not only to biologists and apiculturalists but to anyone interested in systematics, genetics, and ethology.