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. 1988;9(3):275-84.
doi: 10.1002/bem.2250090309.

Exposure scheme separates effects of electric shock and electric field for honey bees, Apis mellifera L

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Exposure scheme separates effects of electric shock and electric field for honey bees, Apis mellifera L

V P Bindokas et al. Bioelectromagnetics. 1988.

Abstract

Mechanisms to explain disturbance of honey bee colonies under a 765-kV, 60-Hz transmission line [electric (E) field = 7 kV/m] fall into two categories: direct bee perception of enhanced in-hive E fields, and perception of shock from induced currents. The same adverse biological effects previously observed in honey bee colonies exposed under a 765-kV transmission line can be reproduced by exposing worker bees to shock or E field within elongated hive entranceways (= tunnels). Exposure to intense E field caused disturbance only if bees were in contact with a conductive substrate. E-field and shock exposure can be separated and precisely defined within tunnels, eliminating dosimetric vagaries that occur when entire hives are exposed to E field.

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