Skip to content
Cape bees

Image -

Cape bees

An isolated population of honeybees, the Cape bees, living in South Africa has evolved a strategy to reproduce without males. A research team from Uppsala University has sequenced the entire genomes of a sample of Cape bees and compared them with other populations of honeybees to find out the genetic mechanisms behind their asexual reproduction.
Mike Allsopp
License:
Creative Commons Attribution, no derivatives
With a Creative Commons license, you keep your copyright but allow people to copy and distribute your work provided they give you credit. You permit others to copy, distribute and transmit only unaltered copies of the work — not derivative works based on it.
By:
Mike Allsopp
File format:
.jpg
Size:
698 x 465, 124 KB
Download

Topics

Contacts

Related content

  • How honeybees do without males

    An isolated population of honeybees in South Africa, the Cape bees, has evolved a strategy to reproduce without males. A team of researchers at Uppsala University and in South Africa has sequenced the entire genomes of a sample of Cape bees and compared them with other populations of honeybees to find out the genetic mechanisms behind their asexual reproduction.