Honeybees assess changes in nectar flow within a single foraging bout

Forager honeybees returning to the hive after a successful foraging trip unload the collected liquid to recipient hivemates through mouth-to-mouth food exchange contacts (trophallaxis). The speed at which the liquid is transferred (unloading rate) from donor to recipient is related to the profitabil...

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Autor principal: Wainselboim, A.J
Otros Autores: Roces, F., Farina, W.M
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Academic Press 2002
Acceso en línea:Registro en Scopus
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100 1 |a Wainselboim, A.J. 
245 1 0 |a Honeybees assess changes in nectar flow within a single foraging bout 
260 |b Academic Press  |c 2002 
270 1 0 |m Farina, W.M.; Departamento de Ciencias Biologicas, Facultad de Cie. Exact. y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, C1428EHA Buenos Aires, Argentina; email: walter@bg.fcen.uba.ar 
506 |2 openaire  |e Política editorial 
504 |a Farina, W.M., Food-exchange by foragers in the hive: A means of communication among honey bees? (1996) Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 38, pp. 59-64 
504 |a Farina, W.M., The interplay between dancing and trophallactic behavior in the honey bee Apis mellifera (2000) Journal of Comparative Physiology A, 186, pp. 239-245 
504 |a Farina, W.M., Núñez, J.A., Trophallaxis in the honeybee, Apis mellifera (L.) as related to the profitability of food sources (1991) Animal Behaviour, 42, pp. 389-394 
504 |a Farina, W.M., Núñez, J.A., Trophallaxis in honey bees: Transfer delay and daily modulation (1993) Animal Behaviour, 45, pp. 1227-1231 
504 |a Farina, W.M., Núñez, J.A., Trophallaxis in Apis mellifera: Effects of sugar concentration and crop load on food distribution (1995) Journal of Apicultural Research, 34 (2), pp. 99-102 
504 |a Farina, W.M., Wainselboim, A.J., Changes in the thoracic temperature of honeybees while receiving nectar from foragers collecting at different reward rates (2001) Journal of Experimental Biology, 204, pp. 1653-1658 
504 |a Von Frisch, K., (1965) Tanzsprache und Orientierung der Bienen, , Berlin: Springer Verlag 
504 |a Greggers, U., Kuettner, A., Mauelshagen, J., Menzel, R., Optimization of honeybees with balanced US-qualities (1993) Gene-Brain-Behaviour. Proceedings of the 21st Goettingen Neurobiology Conference, p. 841. , (Ed. by N. Elsner & M. Heisenberg). Stuttgart: Georg Thieme Verlag 
504 |a Istomina-Tsvetkova, K.P., Contribution to the study of trophic relations in adult worker bees (1960) XVII International Beekeeping Congress, Bologna-Roma 1958, 2, pp. 361-365 
504 |a Menzel, R., Memory dynamics in the honeybee (1999) Journal of Comparative Physiology A, 185, pp. 323-340 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., Quantitative beziehungen zwischen den eigenschaften von futterquellen und dem verhalten von sammelbienen (1966) Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Physiologie, 53, pp. 142-164 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., A simulator for learning studies in the bee Apis mellifera L. (1971) Acta Cientifica Venezolana Supplement, 22, pp. 101-106 
504 |a Núñez, J.A., Nectar flow by melliferous flora and gathering flow by Apis mellifera Ligustica (1977) Journal of Insect Physiology, 23, pp. 265-275 
504 |a Raveret-Richter, M., Waddington, K.D., Past foraging experience influences honey bee dancing behaviour (1993) Animal Behaviour, 46, pp. 123-128 
504 |a Schmaranzer, S., Stabentheiner, A., Variability of the thermal behavior of honeybees on a feeding place (1988) Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 158, pp. 135-141 
504 |a Seeley, T.D., Social foraging by honeybees: How colonies allocate foragers among patches of flowers (1986) Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 19, pp. 343-354 
504 |a Seeley, T.D., Social foraging in honey bees: How nectar foragers assess their colony's nutritional status (1989) Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 24, pp. 181-199 
504 |a Seeley, T.D., Tovey, A., Why search time to find a food-storer bee accurately indicates the relative rates of nectar collecting and nectar processing in honey bee colonies (1994) Animal Behaviour, 47, pp. 311-316 
504 |a Seeley, T.D., Camazine, S., Sneyd, J., Collective decision-making in honey bees: How colonies choose among nectar sources (1991) Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 28, pp. 277-290 
504 |a Sokal, R., Rohlf, F., (1981) Biometry. 2nd edn., , New York: W. H. Freeman 
504 |a Stabentheiner, A., Effect of foraging distance on the thermal behaviour of honeybees during dancing, walking and trophallaxis (1996) Ethology, 102, pp. 360-370 
504 |a Stabentheiner, A., Hagmüller, K., Sweet food means 'hot dancing' in honeybees (1991) Naturwissenschaften, 78, pp. 471-473 
504 |a Stabentheiner, A., Kovac, H., Hagmüller, K., Thermal behavior of round and wagtail dancing honeybees (1995) Journal of Comparative Physiology B, 165, pp. 433-444 
504 |a Tezze, A.A., Farina, W.M., Trophallaxis in the honeybee, Apis mellifera (L.): The interaction between viscosity and sucrose concentration of the transferred solution (1999) Animal Behaviour, 57, pp. 1319-1326 
504 |a Varjú, D., Núñez, J.A., What do foraging honeybees optimize? (1991) Journal of Comparative Physiology A, 169, pp. 729-736 
504 |a Wainselboim, A.J., Farina, W.M., Trophallaxis in the honeybee Apis mellifera (L.): The interaction between flow of solution and sucrose concentration of the exploited food sources (2000) Animal Behaviour, 59, pp. 1177-1185 
504 |a Wainselboim, A.J., Farina, W.M., Trophallaxis in filled-crop honeybees (Apis mellifera L.): Food-loading time affects unloading behaviour (2000) Naturwissenschaften, 87, pp. 280-282 
520 3 |a Forager honeybees returning to the hive after a successful foraging trip unload the collected liquid to recipient hivemates through mouth-to-mouth food exchange contacts (trophallaxis). The speed at which the liquid is transferred (unloading rate) from donor to recipient is related to the profitability offered by the recently visited food source. Two of the main characteristics that define food source profitability are the flow of solution delivered by the feeder and the time invested by the forager feeding at the source (feeding time). To investigate which of these two variables is related to unloading rate, we individually trained donor foragers to a regulated-flow feeder that presented changes in the delivered flow of solution within a single foraging bout, while feeding time remained constant. With the range of flows used, bees attained maximum crop loads in all experiments. During the subsequent trophallactic encounter with an unfed recipient hivemate, unloading rate was differentially affected by the changes in flow of solution presented during the previous foraging trip at the source, depending on whether there had been an increase or a decrease of flow rate within that visit. Foragers unloaded at lower rates when they experienced a decrease in flow rate, but did not increase the unloading rate when presented with an increase at the food source. Thus, forager honeybees seem to be able to detect variations in the delivered flow of solution, since they modulate unloading rate in relation to these changes, although decreases in food value seem to be perceptually weighted in relation to increases, independently of the time invested in the food-gathering process. © 2002 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.  |l eng 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica, PICT 98-03103 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: This study was performed during a visit by A.J.W. to the University of Würzburg in the frame of a PWA-Program (DAAD-Fundación Antorchas) to J. A. Núñez and W.M.F (Argentina) and B. Hölldobler and F.R. (Germany). Additional financial support was provided by ANPCYT (PICT 98-03103) to W.M.F. and CONICET (Argentine Research Council) to A.J.W. and W.M.F. The present study complies with the current laws of the country in which the experiments were performed. 
593 |a Departamento De Ciencias Biológicas, Facultad De Ciencias Exactas Y Naturales, Universidad De Buenos Aires, Argentina 
593 |a Theodor-Boveri-Institut, Lehrstuhl Für Verhaltensphysiologie und Soziobiologie, Universität Würzburg, Germany 
690 1 0 |a FORAGING BEHAVIOR 
690 1 0 |a HONEYBEE 
690 1 0 |a NECTAR 
690 1 0 |a TROPHALLAXIS 
690 1 0 |a UNLOADING 
690 1 0 |a APIDAE 
690 1 0 |a APIS MELLIFERA 
690 1 0 |a APOIDEA 
690 1 0 |a HYMENOPTERA 
700 1 |a Roces, F. 
700 1 |a Farina, W.M. 
773 0 |d Academic Press, 2002  |g v. 63  |h pp. 1-6  |k n. 1  |p Anim. Behav.  |x 00033472  |w (AR-BaUEN)CENRE-218  |t Animal Behaviour 
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