Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance

The honeybee (Apis mellifera) waggle dance is one of the most intriguing animal communication signals. A dancing bee communicates the location of a profitable food source and its odour. Followers may often experience situations in which dancers indicate an unfamiliar location but carry the scent of...

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Publicado: 2008
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter
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id paper:paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter
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spelling paper:paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter2023-06-08T15:58:05Z Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance Communication Honeybee Private information Social information Waggle dance flower honeybee odor preference behavior scent marking animal communication animal experiment article controlled study food forager honeybee nonhuman odor priority journal waggle dance Animalia Apis mellifera Apoidea The honeybee (Apis mellifera) waggle dance is one of the most intriguing animal communication signals. A dancing bee communicates the location of a profitable food source and its odour. Followers may often experience situations in which dancers indicate an unfamiliar location but carry the scent of a flower species the followers experienced previously at different locations. Food scents often reactivate bees to resume food collection at previously visited food patches. This double function of the dance creates a conflict between the social vector information and the private navigational information. We investigated which kind of information followers with field experience use in this situation and found that followers usually ignored the spatial information encoded by the waggle dance even if they followed a dance thoroughly (five waggle runs or more). They relied on private information about food source locations instead (in 93% of all cases). Furthermore, foragers preferred to follow dancers carrying food odours they knew from previous field trips, independently of the spatial information encoded in the dance. Surprisingly, neither odour identity nor the location indicated by the dancer was an important factor for the reactivation success of a dance. Our results contrast with the assumption that (i) followers usually try to decode the vector information and (ii) dances indicating an unfamiliar location are of little interest to experienced foragers. © 2008 The Royal Society. 2008 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Communication
Honeybee
Private information
Social information
Waggle dance
flower
honeybee
odor
preference behavior
scent marking
animal communication
animal experiment
article
controlled study
food
forager
honeybee
nonhuman
odor
priority journal
waggle dance
Animalia
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
spellingShingle Communication
Honeybee
Private information
Social information
Waggle dance
flower
honeybee
odor
preference behavior
scent marking
animal communication
animal experiment
article
controlled study
food
forager
honeybee
nonhuman
odor
priority journal
waggle dance
Animalia
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance
topic_facet Communication
Honeybee
Private information
Social information
Waggle dance
flower
honeybee
odor
preference behavior
scent marking
animal communication
animal experiment
article
controlled study
food
forager
honeybee
nonhuman
odor
priority journal
waggle dance
Animalia
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
description The honeybee (Apis mellifera) waggle dance is one of the most intriguing animal communication signals. A dancing bee communicates the location of a profitable food source and its odour. Followers may often experience situations in which dancers indicate an unfamiliar location but carry the scent of a flower species the followers experienced previously at different locations. Food scents often reactivate bees to resume food collection at previously visited food patches. This double function of the dance creates a conflict between the social vector information and the private navigational information. We investigated which kind of information followers with field experience use in this situation and found that followers usually ignored the spatial information encoded by the waggle dance even if they followed a dance thoroughly (five waggle runs or more). They relied on private information about food source locations instead (in 93% of all cases). Furthermore, foragers preferred to follow dancers carrying food odours they knew from previous field trips, independently of the spatial information encoded in the dance. Surprisingly, neither odour identity nor the location indicated by the dancer was an important factor for the reactivation success of a dance. Our results contrast with the assumption that (i) followers usually try to decode the vector information and (ii) dances indicating an unfamiliar location are of little interest to experienced foragers. © 2008 The Royal Society.
title Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance
title_short Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance
title_full Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance
title_fullStr Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance
title_full_unstemmed Informational conflicts created by the waggle dance
title_sort informational conflicts created by the waggle dance
publishDate 2008
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09628452_v275_n1640_p1321_Gruter
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