Now on ScienceBlogs: HeartlandGate: Anti-Science Institute's Insider Reveals Secrets

ScienceBlogs Book Club: Inside the Outbreaks

Not Exactly Rocket Science

My small attempt to celebrate science and to make it interesting and fun by giving jargon, confusion and elitism a solid beating with the stick of good writing.

Profile

Ed_Yong.jpg Come and visit Ed Yong’s blog Not Exactly Rocket Science in its new home at Discover Blogs.

What others are saying...

"One of the best sites for in-depth analysis of interesting scientific papers" - The Times

"A consistently illuminating home for long, thoughtful, and thorough explorations of science news" - National Association of Science Writers

"Ed Yong... is made of pure unobtanium and rides TWO Toruks." - Frank Swain

"Ed Yong is better than chocolate, fairy lights, and kittens chasing yarn. That is all." - Christine Ottery

Sign up

Twitter.jpg

Facebook.jpg

Feed.jpg

Book.jpg

Why I blog
An interview with me
The original site • Tell me about you: Part 1 Part 2

Creative Commons License
This work is licenced under a Creative Commons Licence.

140-character ramblings

My wife, who makes it all possible

Alice.jpg

Search

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Blogroll


Science blogs Other blogs

« By eating fruit, birds protect Serengeti forests from beetles | Main | Mobs of honeybees suffocate hornets to death »

Bees kill hornets with carbon dioxide emissions and local warming

Category: Animal behaviourAnimal defencesAnimalsBeesInsectsInvertebrates
Posted on: July 5, 2009 10:00 AM, by Ed Yong

Gianthornet.jpgBlogging on Peer-Reviewed ResearchRising temperatures and high carbon dioxide emissions are the means through which humans are inadvertently causing the decline of several species. But one animal actively uses both heat and carbon dioxide as murderous weapons - the unassuming honeybee.

With their stings and numbers, bees already seem to be well-defended but they are completely outgunned by giant hornets (right). These two-inch long monsters are three times longer than several times heavier than tiny honeybees and raiding parties can decimate entire hives. European bees mount little in the way of an effective defence, but Japanese bees aren't so helpless. When their hives are invaded, they launch a mass counterattack.

Heatball.jpgSwarms of workers dogpile the hornet, pinning it down while vibrating their wing muscles. At the centre of this "heatball", the frenetic buzzing heats up the hornet to a roasting 45 degrees Celsius.

Scientists have long thought that this manoeuvre bakes the hornet alive, for the bees that surround it are more resistant to high temperatures. But Michio Sugahara and Fumio Sakamoto from Kyoto Gakuen University have found that this isn't the whole story.

They noted that heat-balls kill hornets in a mere ten minutes, but hornets will happily sit in a hotter 47C incubator for longer than that. To find out how the bees were actually killing their foes, the duo captured and anaesthetised giant hornets and taped them to the end of either a thermometer probe or a gas detector. Ignominiously restrained, the hornet was brought towards the hive and immediately surrounded.

Hornet_on_a_stick.jpg

Ten minutes later, and all the hornets were dead. Four were actually removed within four minutes and while three survived, they were in critical condition. As others have noted, the temperature within the buzzing throng rose to 46 degrees within five minutes. But Sugahara and Sakamoto also found that the concentration of carbon dioxide within the tight ball of bees was a whopping 3.6%, around 5 times higher than the levels around a typical hive and 100 times higher than levels in the atmosphere.

The presence of so much CO2 changes things for the hornet. In normal air, it takes temperatures of 47-48C to kill a hornet but when CO2 levels rise to 3.7%, that tolerance falls to 45-46C. This two degree gap is the difference between life and death for it puts the threshold of the hornet's heat tolerance within the temperature range of the heatball. The bees themselves are safe. Regardless of CO2 levels, they can withstand temperatures of 50-51C but when carbon dioxide levels are high, hornets just can't take the heat.

The buzzing defenders generally produce the most heat and carbon dioxide within the first five minutes of heatballing. Sugahara and Sakamoto suggest that it may only take this long to vanquish the hornet, and the rest of the 10-minute slot is "free running to ensure their victim's death".

Reference: Naturwissenschaften DOI 10.1007/s00114-009-0575-0

More on bees: Come back in a few hours and I'll repost and old article I wrote about a different variation on the heatball defence.

Images by Gary Alpert and Takahashi

Twitter.jpg RSS.jpg

Share on Facebook
Share on StumbleUpon
Share on Facebook
Find more posts in: Life Science

Comments

1

Interesting. I knew that raising CO2 levels cause an increase in heartrate (and in humans, hyperventilation). I wonder if that's somehow related to the hornet's lower heat threshold.

Posted by: The Science Pundit | July 5, 2009 11:34 AM

2

That's fascinating. I do feel sorry for the hornets in the experiment though.

Posted by: Lilian Nattel | July 5, 2009 2:19 PM

3

There's a video on Google that shows this happening, with a thermal camera.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3642419097420044432

Posted by: Vicki | July 5, 2009 6:48 PM

4

I can't imagine the hornet being happy in an overheated incubator.

The more I learn about social insects the more amazed I become. They display such collective intelligence that is way beyond the capacity of any single insect.

Posted by: Roger from Solar Power Facts | July 5, 2009 8:23 PM

5

This is really amazing. Very, very, very cool!

Posted by: Mike Olson | July 5, 2009 11:04 PM

6

Now, if only those powers could be put to use against humans ...

Posted by: Johnny Everhard | July 6, 2009 7:09 AM

7

that is so crazy. i would love to see this in action, it would be cool to see the fried hornet

Posted by: debt advice | July 8, 2009 3:43 PM

ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter

© 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.