Titelaufnahme

Titel
The desert bees (Apis mellifera L) of Libya / von Taher Ahmed Khalifa Shaibi
VerfasserShaibi, Taher Ahmed Khalifa
BetreuerMoritz, Robin F. A. Prof. ; Hepburn, Randall H. Prof. ; Schneider, Stan Prof.
Erschienen2009 ; Halle, Saale : Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt, 2009
UmfangOnline-Ressource (35 Bl. = 0,48 mb)
HochschulschriftHalle, Univ., Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät I, Diss., 2009
Anmerkung
Tag der Verteidigung: 27.07.2009
Sprache der Zusammenfassung: Deutsch
SpracheEnglisch
DokumenttypE-Book
SchlagwörterÄgyptische Biene / Tiergeografie / Mitochondriale DNS / Halle
URNurn:nbn:de:gbv:3:4-1003 
Zugriffsbeschränkung
 Das Dokument ist frei verfügbar.
Dateien
The desert bees (Apis mellifera L) of Libya [0.47 mb]
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Nachweis
Keywords
Apis mellifera North Africa Libya oases morphomtery mtDNA microsatellite conservation contact zone isolation.
Keywords (Englisch)
Apis mellifera is endemic to Africa Europe and western Asia. Its biogeography was addressed based on morphomtery. There was a gap of the biogeography in North Africa. In this thesis honeybee populations of A. mellifera in Saharan and coastal locations in Libya were investigated morphologically and using mitochondrial DNA to fill this gap. It is proved that the Libyan honeybees are distinctly different from both the adjacent A. m. intermissa bee populations of western northern Africa and those of A. m. lamarckii of Egypt in respect of morphology and mtDNA haplotypes. But more similar morphologically to A. m. sahariensis suggesting that those populations might be derived from a formerly extended Saharan honeybee population during the Holocene pluvial. In spite of large imports of A. m. ligustica these apparently had minor impact on the endemic Libyan honeybee populations. Moreover a contact zone between the evolutionary lineages A and O was identified in northwestern Libya. It was proven that the honeybee population of the Saharan oasis Kufra is isolated from the other locations for thousands years. In this thesis I presented a tool kit of 18 microsatellite DNA markers comprising a set of six unlinked loci and three sets of four tightly linked loci which can be run in two multiplex PCR reactions. It was proven to be most effective in determining the number of colonies in a honeybee population the parentage of workers in a colony and the mother genotypes of drones sampled in the wild.