Suppr超能文献

自由觅食的熊蜂学习速度与一生的资源采集量呈负相关。

Fast learning in free-foraging bumble bees is negatively correlated with lifetime resource collection.

机构信息

School of Biological Sciences, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX, UK.

The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research, Hamilton, 3240, New Zealand.

出版信息

Sci Rep. 2017 Mar 29;7(1):496. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-00389-0.

Abstract

Despite widespread interest in the potential adaptive value of individual differences in cognition, few studies have attempted to address the question of how variation in learning and memory impacts their performance in natural environments. Using a novel split-colony experimental design we evaluated visual learning performance of foraging naïve bumble bees (Bombus terrestris) in an ecologically relevant associative learning task under controlled laboratory conditions, before monitoring the lifetime foraging performance of the same individual bees in the field. We found appreciable variation among the 85 workers tested in both their learning and foraging performance, which was not predicted by colony membership. However, rather than finding that foragers benefited from enhanced learning performance, we found that fast and slow learners collected food at comparable rates and completed a similar number of foraging bouts per day in the field. Furthermore, bees with better learning abilities foraged for fewer days; suggesting a cost of enhanced learning performance in the wild. As a result, slower learning individuals collected more resources for their colony over the course of their foraging career. These results demonstrate that enhanced cognitive traits are not necessarily beneficial to the foraging performance of individuals or colonies in all environments.

摘要

尽管人们普遍关注认知个体差异的潜在适应性价值,但很少有研究试图解决学习和记忆的变化如何影响它们在自然环境中的表现。我们使用一种新颖的分群实验设计,在受控的实验室条件下评估了觅食新手熊蜂(Bombus terrestris)在一项生态相关的联想学习任务中的视觉学习表现,然后在野外监测同一批个体蜜蜂的终身觅食表现。我们发现,在 85 只接受测试的工蜂中,它们的学习和觅食表现都存在显著的差异,而这种差异不能用群体归属来预测。然而,我们并没有发现觅食者从增强的学习表现中受益,而是发现快速学习者和慢速学习者以相似的速度采集食物,并且在野外每天完成相似数量的觅食活动。此外,学习能力更好的蜜蜂在野外觅食的天数更少;这表明在野外,增强的学习表现存在成本。因此,学习较慢的个体在其整个觅食生涯中为其群体收集了更多的资源。这些结果表明,在所有环境中,增强的认知特征不一定对个体或群体的觅食表现有益。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ef3e/5428240/202c0e5b1dde/41598_2017_389_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验