Hasenjager Matthew J, Hoppitt William, Cunningham-Eurich Iona, Franks Victoria R, Leadbeater Ellouise
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.
National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2024 Jan;93(1):71-82. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14029. Epub 2023 Nov 27.
Collective behaviour by eusocial insect colonies is typically achieved through multiple communication networks that produce complex behaviour at the group level but often appear to provide redundant or even competing information. A classic example occurs in honeybee (Apis mellifera) colonies, where both the dance communication system and robust scent-based mechanisms contribute to the allocation of a colony's workforce by regulating the flow of experienced foragers among known food sources. Here we analysed social connectivity patterns during the reactivation of experienced foragers to familiar feeding sites to show that these social information pathways are not simply multiple means to achieve the same end but intersect to play complementary roles in guiding forager behaviour. Using artificial feeding stations, we mimicked a natural scenario in which two forager groups were simultaneously collecting from distinct patches containing different flowering species. We then observed the reactivation of these groups at their familiar feeding sites after interrupting their foraging. Social network analysis revealed that temporarily unemployed individuals interacted more often and for longer with foragers that advertised a familiar versus unfamiliar foraging site. Due to such resource-based assortative mixing, network-based diffusion analysis estimated that reactivation events primarily resulted from interactions among bees that had been trained to the same feeding station and less so from different-feeder interactions. Both scent- and dance-based interactions strongly contributed to reactivation decisions. However, each bout of dance-following had an especially strong effect on a follower's likelihood of reactivation, particularly when dances indicated locations familiar to followers. Our findings illustrate how honeybee foragers can alter their social connectivity in ways that are likely to enhance collective outcomes by enabling foragers to rapidly access up-to-date information about familiar foraging sites. In addition, our results highlight how reliance on multiple communication mechanisms enables social insect workers to utilise flexible information-use strategies that are robust to variation in the availability of social information.
群居性昆虫群体的集体行为通常是通过多个通讯网络实现的,这些网络在群体层面产生复杂行为,但往往似乎提供冗余甚至相互竞争的信息。一个经典的例子发生在蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)群体中,舞蹈通讯系统和强大的基于气味的机制都通过调节经验丰富的觅食者在已知食物源之间的流动,来促进群体劳动力的分配。在这里,我们分析了经验丰富的觅食者重新激活前往熟悉觅食地点时的社会连接模式,以表明这些社会信息途径并非简单地是实现同一目的的多种手段,而是相互交叉,在引导觅食者行为中发挥互补作用。我们使用人工喂食站,模拟了一种自然场景,即两个觅食者群体同时从含有不同开花植物物种的不同斑块采集食物。然后,我们在中断它们的觅食后,观察这些群体在其熟悉的觅食地点的重新激活情况。社会网络分析表明,暂时失业的个体与宣传熟悉觅食地点而非不熟悉觅食地点的觅食者互动更频繁、时间更长。由于这种基于资源的分类混合,基于网络的扩散分析估计,重新激活事件主要源于在同一喂食站接受训练的蜜蜂之间的互动,而较少源于不同喂食器之间的互动。基于气味和舞蹈的互动都对重新激活决策有很大贡献。然而,每一次跟随舞蹈的行为对跟随者重新激活的可能性都有特别强烈的影响,尤其是当舞蹈指示的是跟随者熟悉的地点时。我们的研究结果说明了蜜蜂觅食者如何通过使觅食者能够快速获取有关熟悉觅食地点的最新信息,以可能增强集体结果的方式改变其社会连接。此外,我们的结果突出了依赖多种通讯机制如何使群居性昆虫工蚁能够利用灵活的信息使用策略,这些策略对社会信息可用性的变化具有鲁棒性。