Department of Environmental Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada NIG 2W1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1985 Jul;82(14):4750-2. doi: 10.1073/pnas.82.14.4750.
Honeybees are shown to be able to detect, learn, and discriminate between microsculptured epidermes of flower petals. The sensilla trichodea at the tips of the bees' antennae are in the same size range as the microsculptural features of the petals (ca. 10 mum), which presumably deflect these mechanoreceptive sensilla in characteristic ways. Honeybees were trained to associate reward with one floral texture and to choose that over another. Further, the bees also recognized differences in textures at different ends of petals of the same species. The phenomenon is significant in that it suggests another way in which insect pollinators can discriminate between the flowers of different plant species and so act as species isolators. Also, the microsculptural patterns differ from one end of a petal to the other and, therefore, can be used as nectar-guides by foraging bees. This study presents a previously unreported conditioned response to texture by insects and shows the functional significance of a floral character used in plant taxonomy.
研究表明,蜜蜂能够探测、学习并区分花瓣微刻表皮。蜜蜂触角末端的感觉毛与花瓣的微刻特征(约 10 微米)在同一尺寸范围内,这些微刻特征可能会以特征性的方式使这些机械感受毛发生偏转。蜜蜂被训练将奖励与一种花朵纹理联系起来,并选择这种纹理而不是其他纹理。此外,蜜蜂还能识别同一物种花瓣不同末端的纹理差异。这一现象意义重大,它表明昆虫传粉媒介可以通过另一种方式来区分不同植物物种的花朵,从而起到物种隔离的作用。此外,微刻图案从花瓣的一端到另一端有所不同,因此,觅食蜜蜂可以将其用作蜜源指南。本研究首次报道了昆虫对纹理的条件反应,并展示了用于植物分类学的花朵特征的功能意义。