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Viruses Drive Queen Bee Supersedure by Reducing a Key Pheromone

Preliminary field tests point to methyl oleate supplementation as a possible way to curb replacements, pending broader validation.

Overview

  • UBC researchers report in PNAS that common viral infections shrink queen ovaries, cutting egg production and lowering methyl oleate output.
  • Lower methyl oleate weakens the queen’s chemical signal, prompting workers to start rearing a replacement in a process known as supersedure.
  • Proof-of-concept field trials found colonies given synthetic blends containing methyl oleate were far less likely to raise new queens.
  • The team identifies varroa mites as major virus vectors and recommends stronger mite control as the most practical near-term intervention.
  • Beekeepers have long cited premature queen failure as a driver of losses affecting pollination and honey yields, and no antiviral treatments are currently available.