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Friday, May 20, 2011

How Do Honeybees Attract Nestmates Using Waggle Dances in Dark and Noisy Hives?

How Do Honeybees Attract Nestmates Using Waggle Dances in Dark and Noisy Hives?


Yuji Hasegawa1*, Hidetoshi Ikeno2
1 Honda Research Institute Japan Co. Ltd., Wako-shi, Saitama, Japan, 2 School of Human Science and Environment, University of Hyogo, Honmachi, Shinzaike, Himeji-shi, Japan

Abstract 

It is well known that honeybees share information related to food sources with nestmates using a dance language that is representative of symbolic communication among non-primates. Some honeybee species engage in visually apparent behavior, walking in a figure-eight pattern inside their dark hives. It has been suggested that sounds play an important role in this dance language, even though a variety of wing vibration sounds are produced by honeybee behaviors in hives. It has been shown that dances emit sounds primarily at about 250–300 Hz, which is in the same frequency range as honeybees' flight sounds. Thus the exact mechanism whereby honeybees attract nestmates using waggle dances in such a dark and noisy hive is as yet unclear. In this study, we used a flight simulator in which honeybees were attached to a torque meter in order to analyze the component of bees' orienting response caused only by sounds, and not by odor or by vibrations sensed by their legs. We showed using single sound localization that honeybees preferred sounds around 265 Hz. Furthermore, according to sound discrimination tests using sounds of the same frequency, honeybees preferred rhythmic sounds. Our results demonstrate that frequency and rhythmic components play a complementary role in localizing dance sounds. Dance sounds were presumably developed to share information in a dark and noisy environment.

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