Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera

Honeybees, . Apis mellifera, show learned odour preferences for flowers that provide nectar as a reward. However, little is known about such behavioural plasticity when bees exploit pollen sources. Furthermore, the question about whether nectar and pollen foragers use the same learned strategy to im...

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Autores principales: Arenas, A., Farina, W.M.
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00033472_v83_n4_p1023_Arenas
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spelling todo:paper_00033472_v83_n4_p1023_Arenas2023-10-03T13:56:13Z Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera Arenas, A. Farina, W.M. Apis mellifera Decision making Honeybee Olfactory learning Pollen bioassay decision making fatty acid foraging behavior honeybee nectar odor olfactory cue plant-pollinator interaction pollen pollination sucrose Apis mellifera Apoidea Honeybees, . Apis mellifera, show learned odour preferences for flowers that provide nectar as a reward. However, little is known about such behavioural plasticity when bees exploit pollen sources. Furthermore, the question about whether nectar and pollen foragers use the same learned strategy to improve foraging efficiency remains untested. Here, we demonstrate that honeybee foragers are able to learn odour cues associated with pollen as a reward. This was tested in free-flying bees in a dual-choice feeding device after the bees had gathered pollen from a scented feeder. Free-flying bees that associated odour with pollen successfully recalled these memories in olfactometer odour choice tests in a Y-maze, but they failed to show extension of the proboscis to learned odour cues when restrained (proboscis extension reflex, PER, assay). In addition, odour cues associated with pollen at the feeding site induced foraging reactivation when bees were blown into the hive. In PER assays, after fatty acids were applied to the bees' antennae, pollen foragers were more responsive than nectar foragers. This, in turn, allowed pollen foragers in the PER assay to associate an odour cue with pollen in some trials. On the other hand, the unconditioned response (UR) and the odour-conditioned response (CR) to sucrose and amino acids were similar for both types of foragers. Pollen foragers also showed more URs to fresh pollen of different flower species and even performed better during conditioning with some pollen types as the reward than did nectar foragers. By studying biases in pollen-foraging responses after learning, we provide new insights to help comprehend and characterize the search for food between pollen and nonpollen honeybee foragers. © 2012 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Fil:Arenas, A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Farina, W.M. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00033472_v83_n4_p1023_Arenas
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
Decision making
Honeybee
Olfactory learning
Pollen
bioassay
decision making
fatty acid
foraging behavior
honeybee
nectar
odor
olfactory cue
plant-pollinator interaction
pollen
pollination
sucrose
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
spellingShingle Apis mellifera
Decision making
Honeybee
Olfactory learning
Pollen
bioassay
decision making
fatty acid
foraging behavior
honeybee
nectar
odor
olfactory cue
plant-pollinator interaction
pollen
pollination
sucrose
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
Arenas, A.
Farina, W.M.
Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera
topic_facet Apis mellifera
Decision making
Honeybee
Olfactory learning
Pollen
bioassay
decision making
fatty acid
foraging behavior
honeybee
nectar
odor
olfactory cue
plant-pollinator interaction
pollen
pollination
sucrose
Apis mellifera
Apoidea
description Honeybees, . Apis mellifera, show learned odour preferences for flowers that provide nectar as a reward. However, little is known about such behavioural plasticity when bees exploit pollen sources. Furthermore, the question about whether nectar and pollen foragers use the same learned strategy to improve foraging efficiency remains untested. Here, we demonstrate that honeybee foragers are able to learn odour cues associated with pollen as a reward. This was tested in free-flying bees in a dual-choice feeding device after the bees had gathered pollen from a scented feeder. Free-flying bees that associated odour with pollen successfully recalled these memories in olfactometer odour choice tests in a Y-maze, but they failed to show extension of the proboscis to learned odour cues when restrained (proboscis extension reflex, PER, assay). In addition, odour cues associated with pollen at the feeding site induced foraging reactivation when bees were blown into the hive. In PER assays, after fatty acids were applied to the bees' antennae, pollen foragers were more responsive than nectar foragers. This, in turn, allowed pollen foragers in the PER assay to associate an odour cue with pollen in some trials. On the other hand, the unconditioned response (UR) and the odour-conditioned response (CR) to sucrose and amino acids were similar for both types of foragers. Pollen foragers also showed more URs to fresh pollen of different flower species and even performed better during conditioning with some pollen types as the reward than did nectar foragers. By studying biases in pollen-foraging responses after learning, we provide new insights to help comprehend and characterize the search for food between pollen and nonpollen honeybee foragers. © 2012 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
format JOUR
author Arenas, A.
Farina, W.M.
author_facet Arenas, A.
Farina, W.M.
author_sort Arenas, A.
title Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera
title_short Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera
title_full Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera
title_fullStr Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera
title_full_unstemmed Learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, Apis mellifera
title_sort learned olfactory cues affect pollen-foraging preferences in honeybees, apis mellifera
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00033472_v83_n4_p1023_Arenas
work_keys_str_mv AT arenasa learnedolfactorycuesaffectpollenforagingpreferencesinhoneybeesapismellifera
AT farinawm learnedolfactorycuesaffectpollenforagingpreferencesinhoneybeesapismellifera
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