Social but not solitary bees reject dangerous flowers where a conspecific has recently been attacked

Archive ouverte

Llandres Lopez, Ana | Rodríguez-Gonzálvez, C. | Rodríguez-Gironés, Miguel A.

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. Social bees are known to avoid inflorescences marked with dead conspecifics or their smell. The avoidance response could be triggered by alarm signals actively given by attacked bees or by substances passively released through injuries as a by-product of the attack. To discriminate between these two options we note that both social and solitary bees are expected to react to nonsignalling cues associated with predation risk, while only social bees are expected to give alarm signals. We simulated risky inflorescences by pinching a landing bee with forceps, and compared the rate at which bees visited these experimental inflorescences and unmanipulated control inflorescences. We conducted the experiment with four species of social bees, Apis mellifera, Apis dorsata, Apis florea and Bombus terrestris and with three species of solitary bees, Eucera sp., Panurgus sp. and Nomia strigata. We found that while the three species of solitary bees responded similarly to control and experimental inflorescences, all four species of social bees strongly rejected inflorescences where we simulated a predation attempt. The finding that only social species avoided landing on dangerous inflorescences strongly suggests that the release of the alarm cue has been selected for its signalling value in social bees.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Environmental and hormonal factors controlling reversible colour change in crab spiders

Archive ouverte | Llandres Lopez, Ana | CCSD

National audience. Habitat heterogeneity that occurs within an individual's lifetime may favour the evolution of reversible plasticity. Colour reversibility has many different functions in animals, such as thermoreg...

Increasing metabolic rate despite declining body weight in an adult parasitoid wasp

Archive ouverte | Casas, Jérome | CCSD

National audience. Metabolic rate is a positive function of body weight, a rule valid for most organisms and the basis of several theories of metabolic ecology. For adult insects, however, the diversity of relations...

A dynamic energy budget for the whole life-cycle of holometabolous insects

Archive ouverte | Llandres Lopez, Ana | CCSD

International audience. Alterations of the amount and quality of food consumed during ontogeny can affect different life-history traits, such as growth rate, developmental time, survival, adult size, and fitness. Un...

Chargement des enrichissements...