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31 March 2018 Phenology of Honey Bee Swarm Departure in New Jersey, United States
D. C. Gilley, T. J. Courtright, C. Thom
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Abstract

Departure of swarms from honey bee (Apis mellifera Linnaeus (Hymenoptera: Apidae)) nests is an important reproductive event for wild honey bee colonies and economically costly in managed bee colonies. The seasonal timing of swarm departure varies regionally and annually, creating challenges for honey bee management and emphasizing the potential for swarming behavior to be affected by plant-pollinator phenological mismatch. In this study, we first document variability in the timing of swarm departure across the large and heterogeneous geographical area of New Jersey over 4 years using 689 swarm-cluster observations. Second, hypothesizing that honey bee colonies adaptively tune the timing of swarm departure to match floral food-resource availability, we predicted that growing degree-days could be used to account for regional and annual variability. To test this idea, we used local weather records to determine the growing degree-day on which each swarm cluster was observed and tested for differences among climate regions and years. The state-wide mean swarm cluster date was May 15 (± 0.6 d), with moderate but significant differences among the state's five climate regions and between years. Use of degree-day information suggests that local heat accumulation can account for some climate-region differences in swarm-departure timing. Annual variation existed on a scale of only several days and was not accounted for by growing degree-days, suggesting little adaptive tuning of swarm-departure timing with respect to local heat accumulation.

© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
D. C. Gilley, T. J. Courtright, and C. Thom "Phenology of Honey Bee Swarm Departure in New Jersey, United States," Environmental Entomology 47(3), 603-608, (31 March 2018). https://doi.org/10.1093/ee/nvy039
Received: 5 August 2017; Accepted: 1 March 2018; Published: 31 March 2018
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KEYWORDS
Climate
growing degree-day
phenology
swarm
temperature
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