Abstract
In a honey bee colony, a polyandrous queen bee performs two important
duties predominantly. The first is reproduction, for modulation of colonial strength; and
the second is the secretion of queen pheromones for regulation of social organization,
developmental specification, colonial productivity control, retinue behaviour induction,
worker ovarian suppression, foraging control, swarming reduction, other queen rearing
inhibition, etc. In the female caste of honey bees, reproduction is uni-righted by a
polyandrous queen, which mates preferably with multiple drones of other colonies
during a nuptial flight in a Drone Congregation Area(DCA) and thereafter lays
fertilised or unfertilized eggs depending on in-situ and ex-situ hive ambience, whereas
worker honey bees perform the remaining tasks, including hive construction, brood
rearing, foraging for food and nectar, honey production, protection and general
organisation of the colony, pollen grain storage, water collection for the colony,
ventilation in the hive, and the removal of carcases. In other words, worker bees
perform all tasks except for reproduction and colony dominance. The specific duties
assigned reflect the rectitudinous behaviour of the honey bee colony. Additionally, the
specific division of labour enhances the competence of all honey bee castes. The
Queen's honey bee is considerably fertile due to differential genomic expression,
proteomics, and developmental specification. Further, her reproducibility is influenced
by different biotic and abiotic factors prevailing within and outside the hive. In this
chapter, a brief description of two predominant duties of the queen, including
reproduction and pheromonal secretion, is highlighted. Subsequent chapters provide
elaborative views of reproduction and pheromones.