Artificial Life Laboratory of the Department of Zoology, Karl-Franzens University Graz, Graz, Austria.
PLoS One. 2013 Oct 16;8(10):e76250. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076250. eCollection 2013.
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.
吸热产热是一种至关重要的进化适应,它是蜜蜂取得巨大成功的原因之一。温血确保了蜂群在恶劣环境中的生存,并参与维持巢温,这对于健康个体的繁殖和进一步发育至关重要,也是该物种觅食和繁殖成功的关键。刚出房的蜜蜂还不能进行吸热产热,因此发展出了行为模式,使这些幼蜂能够在温暖的巢中找到位置,在那里它们进一步发育并为蜂群执行任务。先前的研究表明,暴露在温度梯度下的一群群幼龄冷血蜜蜂会集体聚集在最佳位置,它们的最佳温度为 36°C,但大多数单独的蜜蜂并不能找到最佳位置。在这项工作中,我们进一步研究了导致这种集体趋热性的行为模式。我们测试了单个和成群的幼蜂,以确定它们是否有能力区分局部和全局最佳温度,并分析了群体决策过程的速度以及通过改变群体大小的密度依赖性效应。我们发现,大多数测试的单个蜜蜂并没有找到最佳位置,而足够大的蜜蜂群体能够集体区分出次优温度点,并聚集在 36°C。较大的群体比较小的群体决策速度更快,但在较大的群体中,由于拥挤效应,可能会有更高比例的蜜蜂转而选择次优温度点。我们表明,集体趋热性是一种简单但经过良好进化、可扩展和稳健的社会行为,使蜜蜂群体能够执行复杂的任务,尽管每个个体的能力有限。