Migration Similar to virtually all other Asian honeybee species,
A. nigrocincta will abandon a nest to start a new one through
migration and absconding. Due to the
tropical climate of Southeast Asia, conditions for migration and absconding are possible year round, though predation pressure is severe in many areas. Colonies will leave due to disastrous events of nature or situations where abandonment is necessary, or due to reduced resources. In addition, one can predict colony migrations due to seasonal declines in pollen or extreme temperature.
Waggle dance The
waggle dance of
A. nigrocincta shares similarities with waggle dances of other cavity-nesting Asian honeybees. The dance will be performed on a vertical plane in an enclosed nest cavity near the entrance in the darkness of the cavity. During the straight portion of the dance, the location of a resource is based on its position relative to the sun, while during the angle portion, the angle relative to the vertical represents the angle of the food source relative to the sun. The dance tempo is slower than that of
A. cerana.
Mating Drones will congregate to specific sites known as
drone congregation areas, and queens will mate at these sites when she is out on her mating flight. When a queen encounters a drone, she can choose to exercise choice of mates before mating, although there is currently no evidence of this preferential treatment. A drone will then hold on to a queen and turn his endophallus inside out into the opened sting chamber of the queen. This then will paralyze him, the distal part of his genitalia will break off, and the sting chamber will be filled with sperm. The queen will then return from her mating flight with a mating sign that protrudes from the sting chamber
Mating frequency Apis nigrocincta queens mate with a relatively high number of males compared to queens of other bee species, with observed numbers of different matings ranging from 42 to 69 drones per queen. The mating frequency is the highest documented for honeybees, aside from
Apis dorsata,
Apis laboriosa, and
Apis cerana nuluensis, the only
Apis species that do not have documented paternity frequencies. Similar to other
Apis species,
A. nigrocincta have
monogynous colonies with queens mating with a large number of males.
Defense The primary measure of defense for
A. nigrocincta is to live in cavities, as the cavities restrict accessibility of resources to a predator, but allow possession of valuable and limited resources to the bees themselves. Entrances to these cavities are guarded and check incoming traffic for any intruders. Another act of defense is “body shaking,” a violent and pendulum like swaying of the abdomen, performed by worker bees to discourage any insects, especially
wasps, from invading the nest. ==Differences between
Apis cerana and
Apis nigrocincta==