...
首页> 外文期刊>Insectes Sociaux >Assessment of pollen stores by foragers in colonies of the honey bee, Apis mellifera L.
【24h】

Assessment of pollen stores by foragers in colonies of the honey bee, Apis mellifera L.

机译:觅食者对蜜蜂Apis mellifera L蜂群中花粉储藏的评估。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Colonies of social insects coordinate many activities in response to changing colony needs. One example is the maintenance of pollen stores in the nest by honey bees (Apis mellifera L.). To adjust pollen intake in an appropriate manner, individual foragers must assess the colony's need for pollen. This assessment could be done either directly, through physical contact with larvae and stored pollen, or indirectly, using information obtained from other bees in the colony. We investigated the mechanisms by which foragers assess their colony's need for pollen. We segregated foragers from non-foragers using either a single screen that permitted contact between the two groups of bees, or a double screen that prevented contact. We supplied the segregated foragers in colonies of both of the screen treatment groups with either a comb containing 300 g pollen (P+) or a comb without pollen (P-). To create a need for pollen in the non-forager compartment of each colony, we provided that compartment with combs bearing 3-5 d old larvae but without any pollen. Foragers on combs with pollen returned 3.5% of the time with pollen, while foragers on combs without pollen returned with pollen 20.7% of the time (P < 0.005). Foragers able to contact their non-foraging nestmates through a single screen (S1) returned with pollen 12.6% of the time, while foragers prevented from contacting nestmates by a double screen (S2) returned with pollen loads 11.7% of the time (P > 0.80). The interaction between the pollen and screen treatments was not significant. These results suggest that foragers adjust their foraging behavior based on their direct assessment of the amount of pollen stored in the colony, and that non-foragers do not provide an excitatory indirect stimulus to foragers.
机译:为了适应不断变化的殖民地需求,社交昆虫的殖民地协调了许多活动。一个例子是蜜蜂(Apis mellifera L.)在巢中维护花粉储存。为了以适当的方式调整花粉的摄入量,各个觅食者必须评估菌落对花粉的需求。可以通过与幼虫和储存的花粉的物理接触直接进行评估,也可以使用从殖民地其他蜜蜂获得的信息间接进行评估。我们调查了觅食者评估其殖民地对花粉需求的机制。我们使用允许两群蜜蜂接触的单一筛网或防止接触的双筛网将觅食者与非觅食者分开。我们在两个筛选处理组的菌落中为隔离的觅食者提供了包含300 g花粉的梳子(P +)或没有花粉的梳子(P-)。为了在每个菌落的非觅食性隔室中产生花粉需求,我们为该隔室提供了带有3-5 d老幼虫的梳子,但没有任何花粉。带有花粉的梳子觅食者的花粉返回时间为3.5%,而没有花粉的梳子觅食者的花粉返回时间为20.7%(P <0.005)。能够通过单一筛网(S1)与花粉负荷返回12.6%的觅食者能够通过单筛(S1)联系其非觅食的巢伙伴,而通过通过花粉负荷返回11.7%的双筛(S2)能够阻止觅食者与巢伙伴的接触(P> 0.80)。花粉和筛选处理之间的相互作用并不显着。这些结果表明,觅食者基于对菌落中花粉量的直接评估来调整其觅食行为,并且非觅食者不会向觅食者提供刺激性的间接刺激。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号