Beekeeping with the western honey bee (
Apis mellifera) is important in 
tropical regions but scant information is available on the possible consequences of 
global warming for tropical beekeeping. We evaluated the effect of 
heat stress
 on developmental stability, the age at onset of foraging (AOF) and 
longevity in Africanized honey bees (AHBs) in the Yucatan Peninsula of 
Mexico, one of the main honey producing areas in the 
Neotropics, where high temperatures occur in spring and summer. To do so, we reared worker AHB 
pupae
 under a fluctuating temperature regime, simulating current tropical 
heatwaves, with a high temperature peak of 40.0 °C for 1 h daily across 
six days, and compared them to control pupae reared at stable 
temperatures of 34.0–35.5 °C. Heat stress did not markedly affect 
overall body size, though the forewing of heat-stressed bees was 
slightly shorter than controls. However, bees reared under heat stress 
showed significantly greater fluctuating asymmetry (FA) in forewing 
shape. Heat stress also decreased AOF and reduced longevity. Our results
 show that changes occur in the phenotype and behavior of honey bees 
under heat stress, with potential consequences for colony fitness.
 
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