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Dive into the research topics where Susan E. Fahrbach is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan E. Fahrbach.


Nature | 2000

Ontogeny of orientation flight in the honeybee revealed by harmonic radar.

Elizabeth A. Capaldi; Alan D. Smith; Juliet L. Osborne; Susan E. Fahrbach; Sarah M. Farris; Don R. Reynolds; Ann S. Edwards; Andrew V. Martin; Gene E. Robinson; Guy M. Poppy; J. R. Riley

Cognitive ethology focuses on the study of animals under natural conditions to reveal ecologically adapted modes of learning. But biologists can more easily study what an animal learns than how it learns. For example, honeybees take repeated ‘orientation’ flights before becoming foragers at about three weeks of age. These flights are a prerequisite for successful homing. Little is known about these flights because orienting bees rapidly fly out of the range of human observation. Using harmonic radar, we show for the first time a striking ontogeny to honeybee orientation flights. With increased experience, bees hold trip duration constant but fly faster, so later trips cover a larger area than earlier trips. In addition, each flight is typically restricted to a narrow sector around the hive. Orientation flights provide honeybees with repeated opportunities to view the hive and landscape features from different viewpoints, suggesting that bees learn the local landscape in a progressive fashion. We also show that these changes in orientation flight are related to the number of previous flights taken instead of chronological age, suggesting a learning process adapted to changes in weather conditions, flower availability and the needs of bee colonies.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1999

Larval and pupal development of the mushroom bodies in the honey bee, Apis mellifera

Sarah M. Farris; Gene E. Robinson; Ronald L. Davis; Susan E. Fahrbach

The mushroom bodies are paired neuropils in the insect brain that act as multimodal sensory integration centers and are involved in learning and memory. Our studies, by using 5‐bromo‐2‐deoxyuridine incorporation and the Feulgen technique, show that immediately before pupation, the brain of the developing honey bee (Apis mellifera) contains approximately 2,000 neuroblasts devoted to the production of the mushroom body intrinsic neurons (Kenyon cells). These neuroblasts are descended from four clusters of 45 or fewer neuroblasts each already present in the newly hatched larva. Subpopulations of Kenyon cells, distinct in cytoarchitecture, position, and immunohistochemical traits, are born at different, but overlapping, periods during the development of the mushroom bodies, with the final complement of these neurons in place by the mid‐pupal stage. The mushroom bodies of the adult honey bee have a concentric arrangement of Kenyon cell types, with the outer layers born first and pushed to the periphery by later born neurons that remain nearer the center of proliferation. This concentricity is further reflected in morphologic and immunohistochemical traits of the adult neurons, and is demonstrated clearly by the pattern of expression of Drosophila myocyte enhancer factor 2 (DMEF2)‐like immunoreactivity. This is the first comprehensive study of larval and pupal development of the honey bee mushroom bodies. Similarities to patterns of neurogenesis observed in the mushroom bodies of other insects and in the vertebrate cerebral cortex are discussed. J. Comp. Neurol. 414:97–113, 1999.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 1998

Timekeeping in the honey bee colony: integration of circadian rhythms and division of labor

Darrell Moore; Jennifer E. Angel; Iain M. Cheeseman; Susan E. Fahrbach; Gene E. Robinson

Abstract The daily patterns of task performance in honey bee colonies during behavioral development were studied to determine the role of circadian rhythmicity in age-related division of labor. Although it is well known that foragers exhibit robust circadian patterns of activity in both field and laboratory settings, we report that many in-hive tasks are not allocated according to a daily rhythm but rather are performed 24 h per day. Around-the-clock activity at the colony level is accomplished through the performance of some tasks by individual workers randomly with respect to time of day. Bees are initially arrhythmic with respect to task performance but develop diel rhythmicity, by increasing the occurrence of inactivity at night, prior to becoming foragers. There are genotypic differences for age at onset of rhythmicity and our results suggest that these differences are correlated with genotypic variation in rate of behavioral development: genotypes of bees that progressed through the age polyethism schedule faster also acquired behavioral rhythmicity at an earlier age. The ontogeny of circadian rhythmicity in honey bee workers ensures that essential in-hive behaviors are performed around the clock but also allows the circadian clock to be engaged before the onset of foraging.


Developmental Neuroscience | 1996

Juvenile hormone, behavioral maturation, and brain structure in the honey bee

Susan E. Fahrbach; Gene E. Robinson

Juvenile hormone regulates metamorphosis in insects, and its effects on the nervous system during the larval-pupal transition have been studied primarily in the hawk moth, Manduca sexta. The effects of juvenile hormone on the nervous system of adult insects have been little studied. Elucidating the role of juvenile hormone during behavioral development in adult honey bees provides an opportunity to study hormone regulation of nervous system structure and function in an insect with a rich behavioral repertoire and social life. A worker honey bee typically lives 30-60 days. During this time, she performs a sequence of different tasks that sustain the colony. A striking behavioral transition typically occurs at about 3 weeks of age. At this time, worker bees stop performing within-hive tasks such as rearing brood and building comb and begin to forage outside the hive. This behavioral development is accompanied by a marked increase in the production of juvenile hormone. The mushroom bodies of the protocerebrum, the region of the insect brain most often associated with learning and memory, also undergo an internal reorganization during behavioral development. High titers of juvenile hormone and an increased volume of neuropil associated with the mushroom bodies are characteristic of the forager. Importantly, the time of the behavioral transition to foraging is not fixed. Individual bees can respond to changing colony or environmental conditions by accelerating or delaying the switch from within-hive tasks to foraging. For example, in the absence of older workers, some bees will undergo precocious development and may forage as early as 4 days of age. These workers also experience a precocious rise in juvenile hormone and an earlier reorganization of the mushroom bodies. Our current studies investigate the roles played by juvenile hormone and experience in shaping the mushroom bodies of the adult honey bee, and the relationship of these changes to the bees ability to forage successfully. It is proposed that juvenile hormone may mediate neural plasticity in the brains of adult honey bees to support the demanding cognitive task of foraging.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2003

Patterns of PERIOD and pigment-dispersing hormone immunoreactivity in the brain of the European honeybee (Apis mellifera): age- and time-related plasticity.

Guy Bloch; Sonya M. Solomon; Gene E. Robinson; Susan E. Fahrbach

We explored the neural basis of age‐ and task‐related plasticity in circadian patterns of activity in the honeybee. To identify putative circadian pacemakers in the bee brain, we used antibodies against Drosophila melanogaster and Antheraea pernyi PERIOD and an antiserum to crustacean pigment‐dispersing hormone (PDH) known to cross‐react with insect pigment‐dispersing factors (PDFs). In contrast to previous results from Drosophila, PDH and PER immunoreactivity (‐ir) were not colocalized in bee neurons. The most intense PER‐ir was cytoplasmic, in two groups of large neurons in the protocerebrum. The number of protocerebral PER‐ir neurons and PER‐ir intensity within individual cells were highest in brains collected during subjective night and higher in old bees than in young bees. These results are consistent with previous analyses of brain per mRNA in honeybees. Nuclear PER‐ir was found throughout the brain, including the optic and antennal lobes. A single group of PDH‐ir neurons (approximately 20/optic lobe) was consistently and intensely labeled at the medial margin of the medulla, independent of age or time of day. The processes of these neurons extended to specific neuropils in the protocerebrum and the optic lobes but not to the deutocerebrum. The patterns displayed by PER‐ and PDH‐ir do not completely match any patterns previously described. This suggests that, although clock proteins are conserved across insect groups, there is no universal pattern of coexpression that allows ready identification of pacemaker neurons within the insect brain. J. Comp. Neurol. 464:269–284, 2003.


Annual Review of Entomology | 2012

Insect Nuclear Receptors

Susan E. Fahrbach; Guy Smagghe; Rodrigo A. Velarde

The nuclear receptors (NRs) of metazoans are an ancient family of transcription factors defined by conserved DNA- and ligand-binding domains (DBDs and LBDs, respectively). The Drosophila melanogaster genome project revealed 18 canonical NRs (with DBDs and LBDs both present) and 3 receptors with the DBD only. Annotation of subsequently sequenced insect genomes revealed only minor deviations from this pattern. A renewed focus on functional analysis of the isoforms of insect NRs is therefore required to understand the diverse roles of these transcription factors in embryogenesis, metamorphosis, reproduction, and homeostasis. One insect NR, ecdysone receptor (EcR), functions as a receptor for the ecdysteroid molting hormones of insects. Researchers have developed nonsteroidal ecdysteroid agonists for EcR that disrupt molting and can be used as safe pesticides. An exciting new technology allows EcR to be used in chimeric, ligand-inducible gene-switch systems with applications in pest management and medicine.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2003

Juvenile hormone and division of labor in honey bee colonies: effects of allatectomy on flight behavior and metabolism.

Joseph P. Sullivan; Susan E. Fahrbach; Jon F. Harrison; Elizabeth A. Capaldi; Jennifer H. Fewell; Gene E. Robinson

SUMMARY Three experiments were performed to determine why removal of the corpora allata (the glands that produce juvenile hormone) causes honey bees to fail to return to their hive upon initiating flight. In Experiment 1, the naturally occurring flights of allatectomized bees were tracked with radar to determine whether the deficit is physical or cognitive. The results indicated a physical impairment: allatectomized bees had a significantly slower ground speed than sham and untreated bees during orientation flights, but otherwise attributes such as flight range and area were normal. Flight impairment was confirmed in Experiment 2, based on observations of takeoff made in the field at the hive entrance. The allatectomized group had a significantly smaller percentage of flightworthy bees than did the sham and untreated groups. Experiment 3 confirmed the flight impairment in laboratory tests and showed that allatectomy causes a decrease in metabolic rate. Allatectomized bees had significantly lower metabolic rates than untreated and sham bees, while allatectomized bees receiving hormone replacement had intermediate values. These results indicate that allatectomy causes flight impairment, probably partly due to effects on metabolic rate. They also suggest that juvenile hormone plays an additional, previously unknown, role in coordinating the physiological underpinning of division of labor in honey bee colonies.


Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology | 2002

Integration of Endocrine Signals That Regulate Insect Ecdysis

Karen A. Mesce; Susan E. Fahrbach

The extremely large number of insects and members of allied groups alive today suggests that molting--shedding of an old cuticle--may be one of the most commonly performed behaviors on our planet. Removal of an old cuticle in insects is associated with stereotyped, species-specific patterns of behavior referred to as ecdysis. It has been recognized for decades that the initiation of ecdysis is under hormonal control, but until recently many of the key peptides that regulate ecdysis were unknown. The report in 1996 of a new ecdysis-triggering hormone (ETH) sparked an era of significant advances in our understanding of the regulation of molting. This article summarizes the current model of peptide regulation of ecdysis, a model that is based on a positive feedback loop between ETH and a brain peptide, eclosion hormone. Then the relationship of these regulatory peptides to the neural circuitry that is the ultimate driver of the behavior are described. Because insects can undergo both status quo (larval-larval) and metamorphic (larval-pupal and pupal-adult) molts, differences in ecdysis behavior at different life stages are described and potential sources of these differences are identified. Most of the work described is based on studies of ecdysis in the hawkmoth, Manduca sexta, but results from studies of ecdysis in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster are also discussed.


Insect Molecular Biology | 2006

Nuclear receptors of the honey bee: Annotation and expression in the adult brain

Rodrigo A. Velarde; Gene E. Robinson; Susan E. Fahrbach

The Drosophila genome encodes 18 canonical nuclear receptors. All of the Drosophila nuclear receptors are here shown to be present in the genome of the honey bee (Apis mellifera). Given that the time since divergence of the Drosophila and Apis lineages is measured in hundreds of millions of years, the identification of matched orthologous nuclear receptors in the two genomes reveals the fundamental set of nuclear receptors required to ‘make’ an endopterygote insect. The single novelty is the presence in the A. mellifera genome of a third insect gene similar to vertebrate photoreceptor‐specific nuclear receptor (PNR). Phylogenetic analysis indicates that this novel gene, which we have named AmPNR‐like, is a new member of the NR2 subfamily not found in the Drosophila or human genomes. This gene is expressed in the developing compound eye of the honey bee. Like their vertebrate counterparts, arthropod nuclear receptors play key roles in embryonic and postembryonic development. Studies in Drosophila have focused primarily on the role of these transcription factors in embryogenesis and metamorphosis. Examination of an expressed sequence tag library developed from the adult bee brain and analysis of transcript expression in brain using in situ hybridization and quantitative RT‐PCR revealed that several members of the nuclear receptor family (AmSVP, AmUSP, AmERR, AmHr46, AmFtz‐F1, and AmHnf‐4) are expressed in the brain of the adult bee. Further analysis of the expression of AmUSP and AmSVP in the mushroom bodies, the major insect brain centre for learning and memory, revealed changes in transcript abundance and, in the case of AmUSP, changes in transcript localization, during the development of foraging behaviour in the adult. Study of the honey bee therefore provides a model for understanding nuclear receptor function in the adult brain.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2009

Coordinated responses to developmental hormones in the Kenyon cells of the adult worker honey bee brain (Apis mellifera L.)

Rodrigo A. Velarde; Gene E. Robinson; Susan E. Fahrbach

The brains of experienced forager honey bees exhibit predictable changes in structure, including significant growth of the neuropil of the mushroom bodies. In vertebrates, members of the superfamily of nuclear receptors function as key regulators of neuronal structure. The adult insect brain expresses many members of the nuclear receptor superfamily, suggesting that insect neurons are also likely important targets of developmental hormones. The actions of developmental hormones (the ecdysteroids and the juvenile hormones) in insects have been primarily explored in the contexts of metamorphosis and vitellogenesis. The cascade of gene expression activated by 20-hydroxyecdysone and modulated by juvenile hormone is strikingly conserved in these different physiological contexts. We used quantitative RT-PCR to measure, in the mushroom bodies of the adult worker honey bee brain, relative mRNA abundances of key members of the nuclear receptor superfamily (EcR, USP, E75, Ftz-f1, and Hr3) that participate in the metamorphosis/vitellogenesis cascade. We measured responses to endogenous peaks of hormones experienced early in adult life and to exogenous hormones. Our studies demonstrate that a population of adult insect neurons is responsive to endocrine signals through the use of conserved portions of the canonical ecdysteroid transcriptional cascade previously defined for metamorphosis and vitellogenesis.

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Lawrence M. Schwartz

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Darrell Moore

East Tennessee State University

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James W. Truman

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Alan G. Watts

University of Southern California

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