Sons of Bees - American Entomologist
Transcription
Sons of Bees - American Entomologist
Sons of Bees May Berenbaum 212 three helpful tips (basically,document everything, respond publicly when disrespected and feel bad for the Queen Bee because she's probably a sad person with a lot of issues). I'm not sure how useful this advice actually is, and I wonder about the power of the metaphor because the article is illustrated by a photograph labeled "The Queen Bee"that is clearly and unmistakably a yellowjacket. It's certainly true that each honey bee colony has only one queen and that newly emerged queens aren't very nice to their sisters (seeking them out prior to eclosion and stinging them to death), but otherwise queen bee analogies biologically fall a bit short. Although she exerts a great deal of influence over other royals, the queen bee's authority over her ostensible subjects is severely limited. Once she establishes her preeminence in the hive, she flies offto mate (a process that involves being pursued by and coupling with numerous drones) and then she returns, no longer a virgin, to live out the remaining years of her life in the hive laying eggs and doing little else. She is tended continuously by a retinue of workers who ply her with food, groom her, and push and prod her to meet the needs of the hive. Not only does she have absolutely no privacy,were her retinue to abandon her she'd most likely die for want of any capacity to fend for herself. At least the workers get to fly out of the hive and check out the scenery on occasion-the queen doesn't see much beyond empty wax cells awaiting her eggs. Any breakdown in the production line-by virtue of exhaustion, boredom, or old age-invites a process called supersedure, whereby workers raise a new queen and then dispatch the old one by clustering around her, generating body heat, and cooking her to death (a process colorfully described as "balling the queen" or "cuddle death"). Whatever misconceptions still remain about the role of the queen in the beehive are at least not as egregious as they have been historically. The concept of male domination over females is so deeply ingrained in western culture that centuries passed during which, despite all evidence to the contrary, male scientists for centuries insisted that honey bee colonies are ruled over by males, as were most human societies at the time. To think otherwise, according to Prete (1991) necessitated challenging "the very idea of an orderly universe" and, starting in the sixteenth century, authors of scholarly beekeeping texts had to go through extraordinary contortions to ignore gathering evidence of the queen's femininity. In his 1607 History of Beasts, Topsell recognized that male bees lack stingers and do no apparent work in the hive; to reconcile the facts with his desire to hold up bees as a model for idealized (British) society, his tortuous explanation was that "The prince of philosophers confoundeth the sexe of Bees, but the greatest company of learned Writers do distinguish them: whereof they make the feminine sort to be the greater. Others again will have them the lesser with a sting: but the sounder sort (in my judgment) will neither know nor acknowledge any other males but their Dukes and Princes, who are more able & handsome, greater and stronger than any of the rest, who stay ever at home ...as those whom nature pointed out to be the fittest to be American Entomologist. Winter 2009 Downloaded from http://ae.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 15, 2016 Q ueen bees of the metaphorical sort have been much in the news oflate. Searching "Google News" with the term "queen bee" produces far more hits relating to television programs about teenage girls than to anything apicultural. The term has gained popularity in recent years as a name for adolescent girls that use their popularity ruthlessly to disenfranchise or shut out other girls who have in some way incurred their wrath (Wiseman 2002). Thus, E Online, premier Internet destination for gossip relating to the entertainment world, describes actress Leighton Meester (in a snarky article about her fashion faux pas) as "Gossip Girl's resident queen bee, Blair Waldorf" (http://www.eonline.com/uberblog/b 15432 7jashion_policeJeighton_ meester Josesjt.html). Gossip Girl,of course, is a television series relating the fictional adventures of wealthy teenagers attending an elite high school on Manhattan's Upper East Side. The implication of the metaphor is that the teen queen bee has absolute power over her subjects, presumably of the sort that honey bee queens exert over the 30,000 to 50,000 workers in the typical Apis mellifera colony. Psychologists have found the queen bee metaphor useful in other contexts as well. In 1973, the term "queen bee syndrome" (Staines et al. 1973) was coined to describe women who achieved success in a predominantly male work force by basically turning against other women, a negative stereotype that has subsequently not been validated. Notwithstanding the absence of evidence that such a syndrome exists, the metaphor persists. The eHowwebsite ("How ToDoJust About Everything") has a page on "How to AvoidFallingVictim to Queen Bee Syndrome" (http://www.ehow.com/howA862104jalling-victim-queen-bee-syndrome.html) with American Entomologist. Volume55, Number 4 protagonist; and most recently, the featured bee in The Bee Movie, although possessing a potentially androgynous name (Barry B. Benson), is voiced by the decidedly male Jerry Seinfeld and is smitten by a clearly female human (although interspecific sexual preference is difficult to analyze). The Pollen Jocks, the foragers in Barry B. Benson's home hive, are also clearly male, despite the fact that all foragers in any real beehive are female. As for bee gender in advertising, little progress has been made in the past halfcentury. Spokes-bees ranging from the Wheat Honey's Buffalo Bee of the 1950s to the Honey Nut Cheerios Bee of the present day are unmistakably male. Although they don't sport facial hair, their voices are male and they dress like guys (even down to the pointy cowboy boots in the case of Buffalo Bee). Antonio Banderas, about as masculine as any man alive today, voices the spokes-bee for Nasonex, a preparation for treating allergies. The Nasonex bee is apparently the most long-lived drug brandname icon/character in history (http://pharmamkting.blogspot. com/2 009/06 /nasonex- bee- may-usherin-whole-new-way.html), having survived a scandal a few years ago when Ruth Day of Duke University's Medical Cognition Laboratory testified at a Food and Drug Administration hearing that during commercials the Nasonex bee flutters its wings faster while the voiceover describes side effect information than when benefits are described, thereby distracting viewers and reducing their ability to remember negative information (http://pharmamkting. blogspot.com/2008 /05 /ruth-day-and-beesrepeat -performance-at.html). Although bee advertising icons appear to be exceptionally effective and durable, they shouldn't be. Selling honey-related products with boy bees makes no biological sense-male bees have nothing to do with honey except to eat it when it is handed to them by a female worker. A male bee has nothing to do with carrying pollen around, either, Antonio Banderas notwithstanding (or, for that matter, notwithstanding the fact that pollen that causes allergies is most likely not even from bee-pollinated plants). All male bees can do is inseminate the queen, and once that's done, they die (by virtue of the fact that their genitalia, firmly lodged in the queen's bursa copulatrix, tear off once the act is complete, leaving them to flyaway missing many essential internal organs). But maybe there are limits to how much reality Americans can take. According to an article in Fortune Small Business Magazine (Adler 2006), when Buzz the Honey Nut Cheerios bee was redrawn after 25 years to cut down on the anthropomorphism and make him more bee-like, the cereal leaped in U.S. sales from the No.5 cereal to No.2. The slogans changed accordingly, as well, shifting the emphasis from tempting tummies to more the bee-appropriate "The Hive That's Nuts About Honey." At least it's a shift in the right direction as far as bee gender goes-after all, drones are found in hives, so at least there's the germ of truth there. As for whether more realism would be a benefit, I can't see animated depictions of sexual suicide moving Honey Nut Cheerios to Number 1 any time soon. ••••• References Adler, c., 2006. Mascot makeover. Forbes Small Business Magazine 16: http:// money.cnn.com/magazines Ifs b Ifs b_archive12006 110101/8387296 lindex.htm Mavin, S., 2008. Queen Bees, Wannabees and Afraid to Bees: No More 'Best Enemies' for Women in Management? British Journal of Management 19 (s1), S75-S84. Prete, F. 1991. Can females rule the hive? The controversy over honey bee gender roles in British beekeeping texts of the sixteentheighteenth centuries. Journal of the History of Biology 24: 113-144. Staines, G., C. Travis, and T.E. Jayerante. (1973). "The queen bee syndrome," Psychology Today 7 (8): 55-60. Topsell, E., 1658 (reprinted 1967). History of Four-footed Beasts. London: Da Capo Press. Wiseman R.,2002. Queen Bees and Wannabes: Helping YourDaughter Survive Cliques,Gossip, Boyfriends,and Other RealitiesofAdolescence. New York:Three Rivers Press. Postscript: This essay derives in part from the chapter "Queen Bees,"in my book The Earwig's Tail: A Modern Bestiary of Multi-legged Legends, published by Harvard University Press. Most of the essays in the book are in turn derived from past "Buzzwords" columns. As of this writing, The Earwig's Tail ranks 33'd on Amazon.com's list oftop-selling books on invertebrates, three positions below Atlas of Marine Invertebrate Larvae by C.M.Young, M.A. Sewell, and M.E. Rice, and 12 positions above F.Harvey Pough's Vertebrate Life (7th Edition), a book that, given its title, is doingsurprisingly well onthe invertebrate best-seller list. May Berenbaum is a professor and head of the Department of Entomology, University of Illinois, 320 Morrill Hall, 505 South Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801. Currently, she is studying the chemical aspects ofinteraction between herbivorous insects and their hosts. 213 Downloaded from http://ae.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 15, 2016 stander-bearers ...and ever to be ready at the elbows of their loves to do them right ....If any Souldier looseth his sting in fight, like one that had his Sword or Spear taken from him, he is presently discouraged and dispaireth, not living long, through extreamity of griefe. Bees are governed and doe live under a Monarchy...admitting and receiving their King... by respective advise, considerate judgement, and a prudent election." Charles Butler's careful dissections and authoritative descriptions of honey bee biology in his 1612 book The Feminine Monarchie should have incontrovertibly resolved any gender confusion ("But heer' is bot' Reason and Sens consenting, doo plainly proov' ...dat bot' de Princ' and hir armed subjects are Shees ...Bees or breeders as deir leaders: and again, Bee's ...ar femal's"), but many contemporaries were reluctant to abandon their idealized views of society, irrespective ofleg number. In Theatre o/Political Flying Insects, a collection of300 sermons assembled by the Reverend Samuel Purchas in 1657 as a handbook both for beekeeping and clean living, references to the life of bees abound. Although he admitted that "Though a king in place and power ...[the monarch] is in sex a female;' he nonetheless refers to the queen as "he" (or, to be more accurate, "hee"): "Bees ...[live] under one commander who is not an elected Governor...nor hath hee his power by lot...nor is hee by hereditary succession placed in the throne ...but by Nature hath bee the SOVEREIGNTYover all, excelling all in goodliness and goodness, and mildness, and majesty." He even went so far as to suggest that the "queen" "injects a spermatical substance thick like cream" into the wax cells in which future queens are developing. Even today, people just can't seem to accept the idea that females contribute significantly to meeting the various and sundry non-reproductive demands of civilized life. Among the worst offenders in bee genderstereotyping today are animators and advertisers. In cartoons, bees who aren't clearly identified as a queen (usually by wearing a crown and sporting slightly longer eyelashes) are almost invariably depicted as male. A series of Disney cartoons released between 1940 and 1952 depicts Donald Duck facing off against an arch-nemesis bee variously called by such non-feminine names as Spike, Hector, and Claudius; Pixar's Andre and Wally-Bee (the first digitally animated short film with a plot) features yet another clearly male bee