Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees

Since forager honeybees change their food-unloading behavior according to nectar-source profitability, an experiment was performed in order to analyze whether food-receivers modify their within-hive tasks related to different reward conditions. We offered individual foragers two reward conditions at...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez
Aporte de:
id paper:paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez
record_format dspace
spelling paper:paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez2023-06-08T15:34:00Z Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees Apis mellifera Food source profitability Nectar processing Task partitioning Trophallaxis behavioral ecology food quality foraging behavior honeybee intraspecific interaction social behavior trophallaxis Apis Apis mellifera Apoidea Since forager honeybees change their food-unloading behavior according to nectar-source profitability, an experiment was performed in order to analyze whether food-receivers modify their within-hive tasks related to different reward conditions. We offered individual foragers two reward conditions at a rate feeder while an additional feeder offered a constant reward and was of free access to the rest of the hive. Both feeders were the only food sources exploited by the colony during the assays since a flight chamber was used. After receiving nectar, hive bees performed processing cycles that involved several behaviors and concluded when they returned to the delivery area to receive a new food sample. During these cycles, receivers mainly performed oral contacts offering food, or inspected cells, and often both. In the latter case, both behaviors occurred simultaneously and at the same distance from the hive entrance. When they performed a single task, either the occurrence of cell inspections increased or contact offerings decreased for the highest reward rate offered to the donor-forager. Receivers also begged for food more often after interacting with low-profit foragers. Thus, the profitability of the food source exploited by nectar-forager honeybees could affect receiver behaviors within the hives based on individual-to-individual interactions. 2004 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Apis mellifera
Food source profitability
Nectar processing
Task partitioning
Trophallaxis
behavioral ecology
food quality
foraging behavior
honeybee
intraspecific interaction
social behavior
trophallaxis
Apis
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
spellingShingle Apis mellifera
Food source profitability
Nectar processing
Task partitioning
Trophallaxis
behavioral ecology
food quality
foraging behavior
honeybee
intraspecific interaction
social behavior
trophallaxis
Apis
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees
topic_facet Apis mellifera
Food source profitability
Nectar processing
Task partitioning
Trophallaxis
behavioral ecology
food quality
foraging behavior
honeybee
intraspecific interaction
social behavior
trophallaxis
Apis
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
description Since forager honeybees change their food-unloading behavior according to nectar-source profitability, an experiment was performed in order to analyze whether food-receivers modify their within-hive tasks related to different reward conditions. We offered individual foragers two reward conditions at a rate feeder while an additional feeder offered a constant reward and was of free access to the rest of the hive. Both feeders were the only food sources exploited by the colony during the assays since a flight chamber was used. After receiving nectar, hive bees performed processing cycles that involved several behaviors and concluded when they returned to the delivery area to receive a new food sample. During these cycles, receivers mainly performed oral contacts offering food, or inspected cells, and often both. In the latter case, both behaviors occurred simultaneously and at the same distance from the hive entrance. When they performed a single task, either the occurrence of cell inspections increased or contact offerings decreased for the highest reward rate offered to the donor-forager. Receivers also begged for food more often after interacting with low-profit foragers. Thus, the profitability of the food source exploited by nectar-forager honeybees could affect receiver behaviors within the hives based on individual-to-individual interactions.
title Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees
title_short Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees
title_full Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees
title_fullStr Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees
title_full_unstemmed Nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees
title_sort nectar-receiver behavior in relation to the reward rate experienced by foraging honeybees
publishDate 2004
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03405443_v55_n6_p574_Pirez
_version_ 1768546677009940480