Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Sci Adv. 2020 Feb 5;6(6):eaay3115. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aay3115. eCollection 2020 Feb.
Foraging bees fly with heavy loads of nectar and pollen, incurring energetic costs that are typically assumed to depend on load size. Insects can produce more force by increasing stroke amplitude and/or flapping frequency, but the kinematic response of a given species is thought to be consistent. We examined bumblebees () carrying both light and heavy loads and found that stroke amplitude increased in proportion to load size, but did not predict metabolic rate. Rather, metabolic rate was strongly tied to frequency, which was determined not by load size but by the bee's average loading state and loading history, with heavily loaded bees displaying smaller changes in frequency and smaller increases in metabolic rate to support additional loading. This implies that bees can increase force production through alternative mechanisms; yet, they often choose the energetically costly option of elevating frequency, suggesting associated performance benefits that merit further investigation.
觅食的蜜蜂带着大量的花蜜和花粉飞行,会产生能量成本,这些成本通常被认为取决于负载的大小。昆虫可以通过增加冲程幅度和/或拍打频率来产生更大的力,但给定物种的运动学反应被认为是一致的。我们研究了携带轻负载和重负载的熊蜂,发现冲程幅度与负载大小成比例增加,但不能预测代谢率。相反,代谢率与频率密切相关,而频率不是由负载大小决定的,而是由蜜蜂的平均加载状态和加载历史决定的,重负载的蜜蜂显示出较小的频率变化和较小的代谢率增加,以支持额外的加载。这意味着蜜蜂可以通过替代机制来增加力量的产生;然而,它们经常选择提高频率这一能量消耗大的方式,这表明与性能相关的好处值得进一步研究。