Date: April 18, 2016
Source: University of Stirling
At a time when the need to
understand how declining bee populations influence the environment has never
been more urgent, University of Stirling scientists have discovered that wild
bumblebees are born with the ability to remove pollen from nectarless flowers
using high-frequency vibrations.
The study, published in
the Journal of Insect Behavior, is the first to show that the ability to
vibrate flowers to extract pollen is an innate behaviour in bumblebees and one
that is refined over time and gives a rare insight into the complexity of the
pollination services provided by these creatures.
The research was carried out by
evolutionary biologist Dr Mario Vallejo-Marin of the Faculty of Natural
Sciences, alongside other colleagues including former undergraduate student Tan
Morgan who began the project as part of her dissertation.
Dr Mario Vallejo-Marin said:
"We studied captive bumblebees from their very first exposure to flowers
that need to be vibrated to extract pollen and found the creatures
instinctively and almost immediately begin vibrating.
"We also found that over
time and with practice, bees are able to tune down their vibrations, removing
pollen while potentially saving energy. Initially bees tend to vibrate on the
flower petals, but after two or three visits they focus their efforts
exclusively on the part of the flower where pollen is produced. This shows the
extensive capacity of these insects to learn complex motor skills to maximise
their rewards from each flower they come into contact with."
Although bumblebees' ability to
learn how best to collect nectar is well documented, this study is the first to
show how vibrations change while foraging pollen. The study also proves that
the buzz bees produce during flight and during pollen collection have clearly
distinct acoustic signals.
Dr Vallejo-Marin explained:
"Our research suggests that bumblebees learn to reduce the frequency of
the vibration they are using during pollen extraction as they gain more
experience manipulating flowers that require vibrations to release pollen.
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