Abstract

This study investigates the honeybee's ability to learn routes based on visual stimuli presented to a single eye, and to then navigate these routes using the other (naive) eye. Bees were trained to walk through a narrow tunnel carrying visual stimuli on the two walls. At the end of the tunnel the bees had to choose between two arms, one of which led to a feeder. In a first experiment, bees had to learn to choose the left arm to get a reward when the right wall carried a yellow grating, but the right arm when the left wall carried a blue grating. The bees learned this task well, indicating that stimuli encountered by different eyes could be associated with different routes. In a second experiment, bees had to turn left when the right eye saw a blue grating, but to the right when the same eye saw a yellow grating. They also learned this task well. In subsequent tests, they chose the correct arm even when these gratings were presented to the untrained eye. These results suggest that there is interocular transfer of route-specific learning with respect to visual stimuli that function as navigational “signposts”.

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