翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Honey Prairie Fire
・ Honey production in Hungary
・ Honey program
・ Honey Promises
・ Honey Puffs
・ Honey Queen Program
・ Honey Recourse Loan Program
・ Honey Rider
・ Honey roasted peanuts
・ Honey Rose
・ Honey Run Covered Bridge
・ Honey Ryder
・ Honey Ryder (band)
・ Honey Smacks
・ Honey bee pheromones
Honey bee race
・ Honey Bees
・ Honey Bend, Illinois
・ Honey Benjamin
・ Honey Births, a Salt Troupe
・ Honey Bitter
・ Honey Bottom
・ Honey Boy
・ Honey Branch
・ Honey Brook
・ Honey Brook Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania
・ Honey Brook, Pennsylvania
・ Honey Brown
・ Honey Bruce
・ Honey bucket


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Honey bee race : ウィキペディア英語版
Honey bee race

Honey bee race is a classifications of honey bees, in particular European dark bees (''Apis mellifera mellifera'') into various named instances of an informal taxonomic rank of race—below that of subspecies—on the basis of shared genetic traits.
== Description ==
The race of honey bees is classified into various named instances of an informal taxonomic rank of race—below that of subspecies—on the basis of shared genetic traits. Honey bees are divided into several species. In Europe, the Americas, and Australia, the term "honey bee" means a bee of the species ''A. mellifera''. They all spring from bees that originated in Europe and Africa. In other parts of the world, there are several other recognized honey bee species, most notably ''A. cerana'', ''A. dorsata'', and ''A. florea''. The first two of these species have subspecies. The classification has been more defined for the European dark bees (''Apis mellifera mellifera'').
Differences in the colors of bees may be more pronounced in queens and drones; workers are much less easily differentiated by color. Drones are produced from the unfertilized eggs of queens and therefore their genetic characteristics depend entirely on those of the queen, whereas worker bees are produced from fertilized eggs, which means that each worker bee will share genetic characteristics. To make things even more complicated, a queen will normally mate several times before settling down to a life of egg laying, and the spermatozoa from her multiple matings are retained alive within her body. That means that workers may only be half-sisters, and their colors and other characteristics may differ.
Pure representatives of any race are becoming ever rarer because humans have imported favored subspecies to regions that previously had distinctive type(s) of their own, and the imported bees have interbred with the native bees. The best chance to find representatives of any subspecies is in the center or the most protected part of the subspecies' native area. In the Americas, there has been a great deal of mixing of subspecies (and European dark bee "races") of the European honey bee (''A. mellifera'') more generally, since all American honey bees have been imported at some point after 1492. Lacking systematic and widespread DNA analyses, it is difficult to estimate which subspecies predominate there, and it is probably more realistic to treat most feral populations as belonging to undefined hybrid lineages. Among beekeepers, the term "race" has been used increasingly imprecisely, and is often used to refer to bee subspecies and hybrids as well as sub-subspecific divisions more properly.
There are also certain lineages of honey bees whose rank is below that of subspecies (particularly within the nominate subspecies, ''A. m. mellifera''), being little more than color variants or domesticated lineages (''strains'') that may not be correlated with distinct native distributions; these are "races" in the most restrictive sense, and are often referred to as "breeds". These were often given their own scientific names when originally described, but modern zoological nomenclature does not recognize the names given to these forms as valid, as only ranks of subspecies and above have formal scientific names in zoology.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Honey bee race」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.