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An exploration of the relationship between recruitment communication and foraging in stingless bees
- Source :
- I'Anson Price, R, Segers, F H I D, Berger, A, Nascimento, F & Grueter, C 2021, ' An exploration of the relationship between recruitment communication and foraging in stingless bees ', Current Zoology, vol. 67, no. 5, pp. 551-560 . https://doi.org/10.1093/cz/zoab043, Current Zoology
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Social information is widely used in the animal kingdom and can be highly adaptive. In social insects, foragers can use social information to find food, avoid danger, or choose a new nest site. Copying others allows individuals to obtain information without having to sample the environment. When foragers communicate information they will often only advertise high-quality food sources, thereby filtering out less adaptive information. Stingless bees, a large pantropical group of highly eusocial bees, face intense inter- and intra-specific competition for limited resources, yet display disparate foraging strategies. Within the same environment there are species that communicate the location of food resources to nest-mates and species that do not. Our current understanding of why some species communicate foraging sites while others do not is limited. Studying freely foraging colonies of several co-existing stingless bee species in Brazil, we investigated if recruitment to specific food locations is linked to 1) the sugar content of forage, 2) the duration of foraging trips, and 3) the variation in activity of a colony from 1 day to another and the variation in activity in a species over a day. We found that, contrary to our expectations, species with recruitment communication did not return with higher quality forage than species that do not recruit nestmates. Furthermore, foragers from recruiting species did not have shorter foraging trip durations than those from weakly recruiting species. Given the intense inter- and intraspecific competition for resources in these environments, it may be that recruiting species favor food resources that can be monopolized by the colony rather than food sources that offer high-quality rewards.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Forage (honey bee)
Stingless bee
AcademicSubjects/SCI01320
media_common.quotation_subject
Foraging
stingless bee
Pantropical
Biology
010603 evolutionary biology
01 natural sciences
Competition (biology)
Intraspecific competition
foraging
ddc:590
media_common
Special Column: Uncovering Variation in Social Insect Communication
Copying
Ecology
communication
AcademicSubjects/SCI01130
biology.organism_classification
Eusociality
social information
010602 entomology
Guest Editors: Alessandro CINI, Luca Pietro CASACCI, Volker NEHRING
Animal Science and Zoology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- I'Anson Price, R, Segers, F H I D, Berger, A, Nascimento, F & Grueter, C 2021, ' An exploration of the relationship between recruitment communication and foraging in stingless bees ', Current Zoology, vol. 67, no. 5, pp. 551-560 . https://doi.org/10.1093/cz/zoab043, Current Zoology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b73fbcc7c53ae5040b4568f83a247508