Abstract

Endothermic heat production is a crucial evolutionary adaptation that is, amongst others, responsible for the great success of honeybees. Endothermy ensures the survival of the colonies in harsh environments and is involved in the maintenance of the brood nest temperature, which is fundamental for the breeding and further development of healthy individuals and thus the foraging and reproduction success of this species. Freshly emerged honeybees are not yet able to produce heat endothermically and thus developed behavioural patterns that result in the location of these young bees within the warm brood nest where they further develop and perform tasks for the colony. Previous studies showed that groups of young ectothermic honeybees exposed to a temperature gradient collectively aggregate at the optimal place with their preferred temperature of 36°C but most single bees do not locate themselves at the optimum. In this work we further investigate the behavioural patterns that lead to this collective thermotaxis. We tested single and groups of young bees concerning their ability to discriminate a local from a global temperature optimum and, for groups of bees, analysed the speed of the decision making process as well as density dependent effects by varying group sizes. We found that the majority of tested single bees do not locate themselves at the optimum whereas sufficiently large groups of bees are able to collectively discriminate a suboptimal temperature spot and aggregate at 36°C. Larger groups decide faster than smaller ones, but in larger groups a higher percentage of bees may switch to the sub-optimum due to crowding effects. We show that the collective thermotaxis is a simple but well evolved, scalable and robust social behaviour that enables the collective of bees to perform complex tasks despite the limited abilities of each individual.

Highlights

  • Temperature is one of the most important environmental factors for insects, as most insect species can only survive and reproduce within narrow temperature ranges [1,2]

  • To answer the question whether or not the thermal gradient influences the spatial distribution of the bees, we analysed the zonation of the bees in the arena and compared it to the predicted zonation of the uniform distribution model (UDM) and the attraction fields model (AFM)

  • 30% of the single bees located themselves at the optimum, 20% were in the sub-optimum and the ramaining 50% were located outside of the optima

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Summary

Introduction

Temperature is one of the most important environmental factors for insects, as most insect species can only survive and reproduce within narrow temperature ranges [1,2]. Whereas most insects can regulate their body temperature only indirectly by the environmental temperature they locate themselves at, the Western honeybee (Apis mellifera) is able to produce heat endothermically [3,4,5] This adaptation is one main reason for the wide distribution of this species as it allows the whole colony to survive cold winters [6,7]. Most individuals of a colony, both worker bees and drones, contribute to this social thermogenesis, whereas freshly emerged bees are not yet able to do so [4,14] Such young bees are located within the warmer areas of the hive [15], the brood nest. There they find the appropriate thermal conditions and pheromone supply for their further development

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