Bumblebees copy each other when looking for best flowers

Though they have tiny brains, bees are smart enough to pick out the most attractive flowers by watching other bees and learning from their behaviour, scientists have found.

Washington: Though they have tiny brains, bees are smart enough to pick out the most attractive flowers by watching other bees and learning from their behaviour, scientists have found.

By using simple logic, they see which coloured flowers are the most popular, and conclude that those of the same colour must also contain lots of energy-rich nectar, the scientists at Queen Mary, University of London and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) said.

"Learning where to find nectar by watching others seems fantastically complex for a tiny bee, but it`s something that almost any animal could do, in the right circumstances," said Dr Elli Leadbeater from ZSL`s Institute for Zoology and co-author of the study.

Most worker bees visit thousands of flowers every day in their search for nectar to feed their queen`s brood. Copying flower colour choices may be a shortcut to success, bypassing the exhausting process of exploring each flower to see if it contains hidden rewards.

Tests were carried out in wooden laboratory "flight arenas" stocked with artificial flowers. Bees were trained to know that sugar could be found on flowers where other foragers were present. The bees then watched through a screen as their companions chose a particular flower colour, and ignored another.

When later allowed to choose a flower colour alone, the test bees copied their companions` choices. "Naive foragers", who had never learnt to equate other bees with nectar, did not copy other bees` behaviour.

"Our study shows how bees use past associations to make decisions about when to copy others, but almost all other animals, including humans, are also capable of forming associations. For example, we might associate Easter with chocolate or injections with fear. This suggests that other species, not just bees, may also use this logical process when learning from others," said Erika Dawson, a PhD student at Queen Mary, University of London.

The scientists also found that bees consider whether their companions are making good choices.

In laboratory "flight arenas", test bees did not copy other bees if they knew that those bees were visiting bitter-tasting flowers. Instead, the test bees actively avoided the flower colours that other bees chose. The flowers were made bitter using quinine - a flavour used in tonic water, which bees typically dislike.

The finding was published this week in Current Biology.

ANI

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