Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Apis mellifera intermissa

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Insecta

Family
  
Apidae

Rank
  
Subspecies

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Order
  
Hymenoptera

Genus
  
Apis

Apis mellifera intermissa httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Apis mellifera iberiensis, Cape honey bee, Apis mellifera unicolor, Maltese honey bee, Apis mellifera cecropia

Apis mellifera intermissa is an African sub-species of the Western honey bee.

Contents

Description

Previously classified as A.M.intermissa v. Buttel-Reepen a reviewed classification of genus instead states the sub-species as A.M.intermissa v.Maa (M.S.Engel 1999) Found in the south of Spain and the (Maghreb) north of the Sahara desert in Africa, ranging from the east (Libya) to the west (Morocco), and is adapted to dry climates. This bee has a black-brown and orange striated abdomen and black-brown thorax with orange fur.

Taxonomy

In a comparative study of five sub-species and A.m.iberica (Smith,Palopoli,Taylor,Garnery,Cornuet,Solignac,Brown 1991) cleavage maps obtained through the use of restriction enzyme showed the Spanish Honey bee contains mtDNA similar to intermissa and also mellifera. Additionally A.m.intermissa belongs to a group shown by experiment to have similar mtD.N.A (mitochondrian D.N.A.),this including monticola, scuttelata,andansonii and capensis

In Spanish bee populations, mtDNA haplotypes of African bee strains were found to be frequently present (Smith 1991, Garnery et al 1995) (Cornuet et al 1975,1978, 1982, 1988; Ruttner 1988;Cornuet and Fresnaye 1989;Orante-Bermejos and Garcia-Fernandez 1995; Hepburn and Radloff 1996). Migrating bee populations formed the original colonies of bee in western Europe, landing to eventually populate the continent from Africa across the Straits of Gibraltar.

References

Apis mellifera intermissa Wikipedia