Life (Feb 2024)

The Effect of Comb Cell Size on the Development of <i>Apis mellifera</i> Drones

  • Lifu Zhang,
  • Linxin Shao,
  • Muhammad Fahad Raza,
  • Richou Han,
  • Wenfeng Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life14020222
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
p. 222

Abstract

Read online

The growth and development of honeybees are influenced by many factors, one of which is the cell size of the brood comb. Larger worker bees can be obtained by being raised in bigger cells. However, whether cell size has the same effect on drone development is still unknown. Here, using 3D-printed foundations, we observed the development of drones kept in comb cells of different sizes from the late larval stage through eclosion. The results showed that drones in larger cell-size combs had heavier body weights, longer body lengths, and larger head widths, thorax widths, and abdomen widths compared to those in smaller cell-size combs. Furthermore, regardless of developmental stages, the drones’ body weights increased linearly with the comb’s cell size. However, the other morphological changes of drones in different developmental stages were out of proportion to the cell-size changes, resulting in smaller cells with a higher fill factor (thorax width/cell width). Our findings confirm that comb cell size affects the development of honeybees; drones become bigger when raised in large cells.

Keywords