April 3, 2014

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Dancing bees reveal why summer isn't the season of plenty

A honey bee waggle dances for nest mates in the hive
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A honey bee waggle dances for nest mates in the hive

(Phys.org) —Summertime and the living is easy, we're told – but it's not so for the hungry honey bee, new research from the University of Sussex published this week reveals.

Researchers from the University of Sussex Laboratory of Apiculture and Social Insects (LASI) spent two years filming honey bees in the lab's glass-fronted observation hives and then decoding their waggle dances to discover how far the bees were having to fly to find sources of during different seasons.

The bees were able to access the surrounding downland countryside and the nearby city of Brighton and Hove via tube tunnels that opened to the outside of the lab.

The waggle dance is a unique behaviour found in honey bees, which a returning forager bee performs in the hive to tell its nest mates where to find good sources of pollen and nectar. The dance (in which the bee waggles its abdomen while moving in a figure of eight pattern) indicates the distance to a patch of flowers from the hive and the direction from the hive.

By examining the waggle dance data, the researchers found that in summer, honey bees were covering areas 22 times greater than in spring and six times greater in the autumn. Honey bees are savvy foragers and will not waste valuable time and energy travelling if they don't need to, so the results show that summer is the most challenging season for collecting the nectar and pollen from flowers that bees use for food.

The study, published in the journal PLOS One, concludes that:

The results, say the researchers, can be used to focus efforts to help bees better. Bees fare worse in summer partly because agricultural intensification means that there are fewer suitable summer wild flowers in the countryside for bees. The research findings could therefore be used to better inform government and private initiatives to increase available bee forage and to create recommended lists of garden flowers that grow in the greatest time of need (ie, the summer) and that are suitable for bees and other pollinators,.

Dr Margaret Couvillon, who led the research, says: "We eavesdropped on what the bees were communicating to each other about where to find good food. What they told each other shows that they are finding it harder to find food in the summer than in the spring or autumn.

"In any conservation work, it is important to know where the animal collects its food. Some researchers attach tracking devices to the animals they study, which we cannot do because the honey bees are too small. But we also don't have to because the honey bee is the only animal that tells you directly where it has collected food."

Professor Francis Ratnieks, who supervised the study, says: "The honey bee dance language was one of the most unexpected scientific discoveries of the 20th century. In 1973 the discoverer, Austrian scientist Karl von Frisch, was awarded a Nobel Prize for the discovery. It's good to be following his lead, and using this amazing behaviour to help bees."

How can research help the honey bee?

One major challenge facing honey bees and many other species is , which has changed the landscape and reduced the presence of flower-rich areas, such as hay meadows. Because lack of forage is a challenge for honey bees and other insect pollinators, one way to help, therefore, is to provide more flowers. But when would this be most beneficial? We set out to study variation in monthly foraging distance by decoding waggle dances to make a 2-year survey of where honey bees forage.

Bee declines and their link to landscape changes have generated much attention, including initiatives by governments to increase forage. However, the information on how to help bees appears not always to be soundly based on scientific data. Gardeners are even given recommendations to grow winter-blooming garden plants, when most bee species (including honey bees) are dormant. Increasing the availability of forage would be more manageable and cost-effective if aid could be better targeted. The LASI study suggests that in a particular location, the greatest challenge for finding food will be concentrated in a portion of the much longer foraging season. The question then becomes how do we identify these periods of relative food dearth? Here we use the itself as a tool to understand when it would be most helpful to provide them with additional forage.

More information: Couvillon MJ, Schürch R, Ratnieks FLW (2014) "Waggle Dance Distances as Integrative Indicators of Seasonal Foraging Challenges." PLoS ONE 9(4): e93495. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0093495

Journal information: PLoS ONE

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