PLoS ONE (Oct 2010)

E-β-ocimene, a volatile brood pheromone involved in social regulation in the honey bee colony (Apis mellifera).

  • Alban Maisonnasse,
  • Jean-Christophe Lenoir,
  • Dominique Beslay,
  • Didier Crauser,
  • Yves Le Conte

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013531
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 10
p. e13531

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundIn honey bee colony, the brood is able to manipulate and chemically control the workers in order to sustain their own development. A brood ester pheromone produced primarily by old larvae (4 and 5 days old larvae) was first identified as acting as a contact pheromone with specific effects on nurses in the colony. More recently a new volatile brood pheromone has been identified: E-β-ocimene, which partially inhibits ovary development in workers.Methodology and principal findingOur analysis of E-β-ocimene production revealed that young brood (newly hatched to 3 days old) produce the highest quantity of E-β-ocimene relative to their body weight. By testing the potential action of this molecule as a non-specific larval signal, due to its high volatility in the colony, we demonstrated that in the presence of E-β-ocimene nest workers start to forage earlier in life, as seen in the presence of real brood.Conclusions/significanceIn this way, young larvae are able to assign precedence to the task of foraging by workers in order to increase food stores for their own development. Thus, in the complexity of honey bee chemical communication, E-β-ocimene, a pheromone of young larvae, provides the brood with the means to express their nutritional needs to the workers.