Woodgate Joseph L, Makinson James C, Lim Ka S, Reynolds Andrew M, Chittka Lars
Department of Biological and Experimental Psychology, School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Agroecology, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2016 Aug 4;11(8):e0160333. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160333. eCollection 2016.
Insect pollinators such as bumblebees play a vital role in many ecosystems, so it is important to understand their foraging movements on a landscape scale. We used harmonic radar to record the natural foraging behaviour of Bombus terrestris audax workers over their entire foraging career. Every flight ever made outside the nest by four foragers was recorded. Our data reveal where the bees flew and how their behaviour changed with experience, at an unprecedented level of detail. We identified how each bee's flights fit into two categories-which we named exploration and exploitation flights-examining the differences between the two types of flight and how their occurrence changed over the course of the bees' foraging careers. Exploitation of learned resources takes place during efficient, straight trips, usually to a single foraging location, and is seldom combined with exploration of other areas. Exploration of the landscape typically occurs in the first few flights made by each bee, but our data show that further exploration flights can be made throughout the bee's foraging career. Bees showed striking levels of variation in how they explored their environment, their fidelity to particular patches, ratio of exploration to exploitation, duration and frequency of their foraging bouts. One bee developed a straight route to a forage patch within four flights and followed this route exclusively for six days before abandoning it entirely for a closer location; this second location had not been visited since her first exploratory flight nine days prior. Another bee made only rare exploitation flights and continued to explore widely throughout its life; two other bees showed more frequent switches between exploration and exploitation. Our data shed light on the way bumblebees balance exploration of the environment with exploitation of resources and reveal extreme levels of variation between individuals.
诸如大黄蜂之类的昆虫传粉者在许多生态系统中发挥着至关重要的作用,因此了解它们在景观尺度上的觅食活动非常重要。我们使用谐波雷达记录了 Bombus terrestris audax 工蜂在其整个觅食生涯中的自然觅食行为。记录了四只觅食者在巢穴外的每一次飞行。我们的数据以前所未有的详细程度揭示了蜜蜂飞行的地点以及它们的行为如何随经验而变化。我们确定了每只蜜蜂的飞行如何分为两类——我们将其命名为探索飞行和利用飞行——研究了这两种飞行类型之间的差异以及它们的出现频率在蜜蜂觅食生涯中的变化。对已了解资源的利用发生在高效、直线的行程中,通常是前往单一的觅食地点,很少与对其他区域的探索相结合。对景观的探索通常发生在每只蜜蜂最初的几次飞行中,但我们的数据表明,在蜜蜂的整个觅食生涯中都可能会有进一步的探索飞行。蜜蜂在探索环境的方式、对特定斑块的忠诚度、探索与利用的比例、觅食周期的持续时间和频率方面表现出显著的差异。一只蜜蜂在四次飞行内就找到了一条通往觅食斑块的直线路径,并在完全放弃它转而前往更近的地点之前,仅沿着这条路线飞行了六天;而第二个地点自九天前它第一次探索飞行以来就再也没有被访问过。另一只蜜蜂只进行了很少的利用飞行,并在其一生中持续广泛探索;另外两只蜜蜂在探索和利用之间的切换更为频繁。我们的数据揭示了大黄蜂在环境探索与资源利用之间取得平衡的方式,并揭示了个体之间存在的极端差异程度。