The use of waggle dance information by honey bees throughout their foraging careers

被引:0
|
作者
Jacobus C. Biesmeijer
Thomas D. Seeley
机构
[1] School of Biology,Centre for Biodiversity & Conservation
[2] University of Leeds,Department of Neurobiology and Behavior
[3] Cornell University,undefined
来源
关键词
Animal communication; Honeybees; Recruitment; Scouting; Waggle dance;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We studied the extent to which worker honey bees acquire information from waggle dances throughout their careers as foragers. Small groups of foragers were monitored from time of orientation flights to time of death and all in-hive behaviors relating to foraging were recorded. In the context of a novice forager finding her first food source, 60% of the bees relied, at least in part, on acquiring information from waggle dances (being recruited) rather than searching independently (scouting). In the context of an experienced forager whose foraging has been interrupted, 37% of the time the bees resumed foraging by following waggle dances (being reactivated) rather than examining the food source on their own (inspecting). And in the context of an experienced forager engaged in foraging, 17% of the time the bees initiated a foraging trip by following a waggle dance. Such dance following was observed much more often after an unsuccessful than after a successful foraging trip. Successful foragers often followed dances just briefly, perhaps to confirm that the kind of flowers they had been visiting were still yielding forage. Overall, waggle dance following for food discovery accounted for 12–25% of all interactions with dancers (9% by novice foragers and 3–16% by experienced foragers) whereas dance following for reactivation and confirmation accounted for the other 75–88% (26% for reactivation and 49–62% for confirmation). We conclude that foragers make extensive use of the waggle dance not only to start work at new, unfamiliar food sources but also to resume work at old, familiar food sources.
引用
收藏
页码:133 / 142
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Dance Communication Affects Consistency, but Not Breadth, of Resource Use in Pollen-Foraging Honey Bees
    Donaldson-Matasci, Matina
    Dornhaus, Anna
    PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (10):
  • [22] One-strided waggle dance in bees
    Tautz, J
    Rohrseitz, K
    Sandeman, DC
    NATURE, 1996, 382 (6586) : 32 - 32
  • [23] Using the waggle dance to determine the spatial ecology of honey bees during commercial crop pollination
    Balfour, Nicholas J.
    Ratnieks, Francis L. W.
    AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, 2017, 19 (02) : 210 - 216
  • [24] Do honey bees modulate dance following according to foraging distance?
    Hasenjager, Matthew J.
    Hoppitt, William
    Leadbeater, Ellouise
    ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2022, 184 : 89 - 97
  • [25] Importance of wing movements for information transfer during honey bee waggle dance
    Lopuch, Sylwia
    Tofilski, Adam
    ETHOLOGY, 2017, 123 (12) : 974 - 980
  • [26] Does the waggle dance help honey bees to forage at greater distances than expected for their body size?
    Ratnieks, Francis L. W.
    Shackleton, Kyle
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2015, 3
  • [27] Geolocating Bees by Translating the Waggle Dance Into Spatial Coordinates
    Galopin, Sylvain
    Richard, Freddie-Jeanne
    Touya, Guillaume
    27TH AGILE CONFERENCE ON GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SCIENCE GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SCIENCE FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE, 2024, 5
  • [28] WATCH AND WAGGLE: LESSONS HELP BEES TO DANCE BETTER
    不详
    NATURE, 2023, 615 (7952) : 376 - 376
  • [29] Error in the Honeybee Waggle Dance Improves Foraging Flexibility
    Ryuichi Okada
    Hidetoshi Ikeno
    Toshifumi Kimura
    Mizue Ohashi
    Hitoshi Aonuma
    Etsuro Ito
    Scientific Reports, 4
  • [30] Survivorship of foraging honey bees
    Visscher, PK
    Dukas, R
    INSECTES SOCIAUX, 1997, 44 (01) : 1 - 5