Arenas A, Farina W M
Grupo de Estudio de Insectos Sociales, Departamento de Biodiversidad y Biología Experimental, IFIBYNE-CONICET, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Grupo de Estudio de Insectos Sociales, Departamento de Biodiversidad y Biología Experimental, IFIBYNE-CONICET, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
J Insect Physiol. 2014 Jul;66:28-36. doi: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2014.05.010. Epub 2014 May 19.
In many pollinating insects, foraging preferences are adjusted on the basis of floral cues learned at the foraging site. In addition, olfactory experiences gained at early adult stages might also help them to initially choose food sources. To understand pollen search behavior of honeybees, we studied how responses elicited by pollen-based odors are biased in foraging-age workers according to (i) their genetic predisposition to collect pollen, (ii) pollen related information gained during foraging and (iii) different experiences with pollen gained at early adult ages. Bees returning to the hive carrying pollen loads, were strongly biased to unfamiliar pollen bouquets when tested in a food choice device against pure odors. Moreover, pollen foragers' orientation response was specific to the odors emitted by the pollen type they were carrying on their baskets, which suggests that foragers retrieve pollen odor information to recognize rewarding flowers outside the hive. We observed that attraction to pollen odor was mediated by the exposure to a pollen diet during the first week of life. We did not observe the same attraction in foraging-age bees early exposed to an artificial diet that did not contain pollen. Contrary to the specific response observed to cues acquired during foraging, early exposure to single-pollen diets did not bias orientation response towards a specific pollen odor in foraging-age bees (i.e. bees chose equally between the exposed and the novel monofloral pollen odors). Our results show that pollen exposure at early ages together with olfactory experiences gained in a foraging context are both relevant to bias honeybees' pollen search behavior.
在许多传粉昆虫中,觅食偏好是根据在觅食地点学到的花朵线索来调整的。此外,成年早期获得的嗅觉体验也可能有助于它们最初选择食物来源。为了了解蜜蜂的花粉搜索行为,我们研究了基于花粉的气味所引发的反应是如何在觅食年龄的工蜂中受到以下因素的影响而产生偏差的:(i)它们采集花粉的遗传倾向,(ii)觅食过程中获得的与花粉相关的信息,以及(iii)成年早期获得的不同花粉体验。当携带花粉负载返回蜂巢的蜜蜂在食物选择装置中针对纯气味进行测试时,它们对不熟悉的花粉束表现出强烈的偏好。此外,花粉采集者的定向反应对它们腿上携带的花粉类型所散发的气味具有特异性,这表明采集者会检索花粉气味信息以识别蜂巢外有回报的花朵。我们观察到,对花粉气味的吸引力是由在生命的第一周接触花粉饮食所介导的。我们在早期接触不含花粉的人工饮食的觅食年龄蜜蜂中没有观察到同样的吸引力。与在觅食过程中对所获得线索的特异性反应相反,早期接触单一花粉饮食并不会使觅食年龄的蜜蜂对特定花粉气味的定向反应产生偏差(即蜜蜂在接触过的和新的单花花粉气味之间做出同等选择)。我们的结果表明,早期接触花粉以及在觅食环境中获得的嗅觉体验都与使蜜蜂的花粉搜索行为产生偏差有关。