Authors
Jay D Evans, Ryan S Schwarz, Yan Ping Chen, Giles Budge, Robert S Cornman, Pilar De la Rua, Joachim R de Miranda, Sylvain Foret, Leonard Foster, Laurent Gauthier, Elke Genersch, Sebastian Gisder, Antje Jarosch, Robert Kucharski, Dawn Lopez, Cheng Man Lun, Robin FA Moritz, Ryszard Maleszka, Irene Muñoz, M Alice Pinto
Publication date
2013/1/1
Source
Journal of apicultural research
Volume
52
Issue
4
Pages
1-54
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
From studies of behaviour, chemical communication, genomics and developmental biology, among many others, honey bees have long been a key organism for fundamental breakthroughs in biology. With a genome sequence in hand, and much improved genetic tools, honey bees are now an even more appealing target for answering the major questions of evolutionary biology, population structure, and social organization. At the same time, agricultural incentives to understand how honey bees fall prey to disease, or evade and survive their many pests and pathogens, have pushed for a genetic understanding of individual and social immunity in this species. Below we describe and reference tools for using modern molecular-biology techniques to understand bee behaviour, health, and other aspects of their biology. We focus on DNA and RNA techniques, largely because techniques for assessing bee proteins are …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JD Evans, RS Schwarz, YP Chen, G Budge… - Journal of apicultural research, 2013