Trophallaxis

Signs or indications

Bees face-to-face with extended mouthparts pointed towards each other and touching.

Description

Two or more adult bees, facing each other, with antennaeantenna:
paired, slender, and jointed segmented appendages on the bee head; primary taste, touch and smell receptors. Antennation refers to how bees interact using their antennae to communicate various messages such as food exchange and distribution of queen pheromones.
and mouthparts in contact, usually inside the hive or at hive entrance. Common trophallaxis behavior witnessed includes: field bees passing nectar to hive bees, adult bees in hives sharing food or pheromones with queens, workers feeding drones, and workers (queen retinue) feeding their queen. Technically, trophallaxis is a two-way exchange, but in honey bees it is usually unidirectional.

Most closely resembles

queen retinue

Resources

Collison C. 2017. A Closer Look: Trophallaxis. Bee Culture. Accessed 2023. https://www.beeculture.com/a-closer-look-2/

“Trophallaxis”. YouTube, uploaded by MRJEberhardt, 9 June 2010, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KXCjUT1p-jA

 Trophallaxis at colony entrance; photo by The BeeMD photo collection
Trophallaxis at colony entrance; photo by The BeeMD photo collection
 Trophallaxis; photo by Honey Bee Biology & Beekeeping
Trophallaxis; photo by Honey Bee Biology & Beekeeping
 Trophallaxis; photo courtesy of Bee Culture Magazine
Trophallaxis; photo courtesy of Bee Culture Magazine
 Trophallaxis; photo by Zachary Huang, beetography.com
Trophallaxis; photo by Zachary Huang, beetography.com