Abstract

While there is a distinction between that intensity of illumination which permits social wasps to forage, and that to which a sessile worker can respond, nevertheless illumination is the most critical of the environmental factors which control the activity of wasps. Low temperatures, high winds, and heavy rain all reduce activity but unless exceptionally severe do not wholly stop it. At dawn, when the critical level of illumination is attained, workers leave the nest, but at dusk they will not leave should the same critical level be due in the course of the foraging flight, after which they could not return. The three species of wasp,Vespula vulgaris, V. rufa, andV. germanica have a common threshold of illumination, although the hornet,Vespa crabro can forage in moonlight at an altogether lower illumination. Honey-bees normally need a still higher illumination than do wasps. In all these species, the thresholds of illumination are related to the length of the compound eyes, so that species with large eyes need less light by which to forage. Moreover, there is a slight difference between the threshold at dawn when workers leave the nest, and that at dusk, when they must needs have sufficient light by which to return. This difference is almost constant for each species, when, as is customary, one measures it on a logarithmic scale. Lastly, the estimates, which these experiments provide, of the threshold illuminations depend stochastically on the number of workers foraging. A correction for this bias is given.

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