Advertisement

Science Friday
Hornets suffocate in bee ball
Spike in carbon dioxide combined with heat may make honeybees' enemies vulnerable
font_down font_up Text Size
access
Hornet on a stickScientists taped giant hornets to probes to measure carbon dioxide concentrations and temperature inside bee balls. The results show that a spike in carbon dioxide, along with an increase in heat, makes honeybees' enemies vulnerable. M. Sugahara, F. Sakamoto

Call it death by a thousand breaths. When hundreds of honeybees envelop a giant, enemy hornet in a ball, the bees aren’t just putting on the heat, as researchers had thought. Carbon dioxide levels spike along with temperature, fingering suffocation as the hornet’s cause of death, scientists report online and in an upcoming Naturwissenschaften.

Bees inside the ball can apparently cope with the smothering heat and low oxygen levels, but the high temperature appears to make giant hornets, Vespa mandarinia japonica, less tolerant of cranked-up carbon dioxide. The concentration of CO2 in the air increases to 3.6 percent after the bee ball forms, dropping sharply to lower levels five minutes later, report Michio Sugahara and Fumio Sakamoto, both of Kyoto Gakuen University in Japan.

access
Bee ball attackAll of the 24 hornets that stayed in bee balls (above) for 10 minutes died. Hornets removed after four minutes were alive but in critical condition. M. Sugahara, F. Sakamoto

The researchers taped anesthetized giant hornets to gas detectors and thermometer probes to measure carbon dioxide concentrations and temperatures inside bee balls. When the probes touched open bee nests, the bees formed balls around the hornets. All 24 test hornets died within 10 minutes of bee ball formation, the team reports. Hornets bore no sign of stings, pointing to smothering as the cause of death.

The spike in CO2 might be just a metabolic byproduct of the frenetic activity of balling bees. But, says Stan Schneider of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, bees might regulate this “panting,” perhaps in response to odor or behavioral cues from the giant hornets. “The specificity of the behavior suggests a very long coevolution in this predator-prey relationship,” Schneider says.

Although ball forming is unusual among bee species, coordinated defensive behavior is not, says entomologist P. Kirk Visscher of the University of California, Riverside. Giant honeybees form rippling waves en masse, startling predators (SN: 10/11/08, p. 10). There are even bees that mount a collective attack by yanking individual hairs on the enemy’s body. “It’s not like being stung by a swarm, but it is still pretty annoying,” Visscher says.


Found in: Life
Comments 2
  • CHOP used to be an acronym for Cyclophosphamide, drugs starting in H and O and prednisone but they changed the two middle drugs and kept the acronym (and added -R for rituxan). I had this for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (NHL) in summer-fall 2003, after losing 20 lb of mostly muscle (down to 93 lb). I gained back 30 during and after chemo. Before starting chemo I was too weak to sit up but got progressively stronger during chemo as I regained muscle, except for periods of weakness for a copule of days after the 5 days of prednisone, which prevents muscle growth. My partner dragged me out for walks starting about a week after my first therapy, at first a slow progression to the curb and back (the porch step was a problem), then we made it to the near corner, the far corner, the nearby orchard a few houses away where I sat as he picked windfalls, eventually around the block, to the pharmacy 1/4 mile away (a 'milestone') and after four months I made it to town 1 mile away, rested at the only placeopen Christmas day (Chinese restaurant) and back. That summer sohbet I went swimming and managed 1.5 lengths of the area (20 = mile) first time, 3 second. Next summer I went with another lymphoma survivor and gradually made it to a mile with rests. I still drag myself up stairs by the handrail and runout of breath, but am up to 15 pushups and 50 situps. Start with vertical pushups against the wall. Normal activities are not enough. I can run 1/2 of a short block, slowly. I am 55 now and bike everywhere. Hot flashes continue 2.5 years but every 3 hours not 45 min and shorter and milder. Still hurts where I sit. Doctor told me the foot cramps and frequent colds are due to chemo. Colds are caused by chemo wiping out the memory part of your B cells (immune response) and should be temporary, but they advised a flu shot. See my diary of 6 months chemo at (or similar - go to the main site). How long has it taken others to regain muscle strength after weight loss? , Good post,I think so!abercrombie and fitch on Sale, Hoodies, Jeans, T-Shirts, Pants, Polos hollister abercrombie outlethollister clothing Abercrombie Men Tee abercrombie womens polos Ruehl No.925, Men, women, and children's clothing. abercrombie and fitch , [Link was removed] ,abercrombie and fitch and abercrombie and fitchfashion is bold and interesting, all thanks to the interestingand original designs of Don
    [Link was removed]
    webalem net webalem net
    Dec. 18, 2009 at 3:57pm
  • Inappropriate and commercial posts have been removed by Science News Web Specialist. Thanks for pointing these out.
    Gwendolyn Gillespie Gwendolyn Gillespie
    Jan. 13, 2010 at 12:33pm
Post a comment (Please note: All links will be removed from comments.)

Please login or register to participate.


Advertisement
Suggested Reading:
seperator
  • Milius, S. 2005. Balls of fire: bees carefully cook invaders to death. Science News 168(Sept. 24): 197.
    [Go to]

    Milius, S. 2009. Swarm savvy. Science News 175(May 9): 16.
    [Go to]

    Milius, S. 2008. Giant honeybees do the wave. Science News 174(Oct. 11): 10.
    [Go to]

Citations & References:
seperator
  • Michio Sugahara and Fumio Sakamoto. 2009. Heat and carbon dioxide generated by honeybees jointly act to kill hornets. Naturwissenschaften. Online ahead of print
    DOI 10.1007/s00114-009-0575-0

Reader Favorites:
seperator
SN on the Web:
seperator