March 31, 2017
Research from the School of
Biological Sciences at Royal Holloway has found that being smart does not
necessarily mean you are bringing home the most bacon, if you are a bumble bee
at least.
Scientists at Royal Holloway,
Plant & Food Research, and the University of Guelph have been studying how
the learning ability of bumblebees influences their foraging performance and
contribution to the colony.
What they found was that
fast-learning bumble bees had a much shorter foraging lifespan than their slow-learning
co-workers.
They also found that the
fast-learning bumblebees collected food at rates similar rates to the
slower-learning bees.
Explaining the unexpected
"Our results are surprising,
because we typically associate enhanced learning performance and cognitive
ability with improved fitness, because it is considered beneficial to the
survival of an individual or group," says Royal Holloway graduate and
Plant & Food Research scientist Dr Lisa Evans.
"This study provides the
first evidence of a learning-associated cost in the wild."
The researchers evaluated the
visual learning performance of 85 individual foraging bumble bees across five
different colonies – subjecting them to an ecologically realistic colour and
reward association task in the laboratory and then monitoring their performance
in the wild using radio frequency identification tagging technology.
Observers were also on hand to
monitor the quantity of nectar and pollen brought back to the nests.
The results reveal that slower
learning bumble bees collected more resources for the colony over the course of
their foraging career.
"This is particularly
interesting because we know that learning is really important for bees. They
learn which flowers provide the most rewards, when and where to find them –
often in habitats containing dozens of flower species," says Professor
Nigel Raine, Visiting Professor at Royal Holloway.
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