| Literature DB >> 24031117 |
Adam J Siegel1, M Kim Fondrk, Gro V Amdam, Robert E Page.
Abstract
Honey bee workers exhibit an age-based division of labor (temporal polyethism, DOL). Younger bees transition through sets of tasks within the nest; older bees forage outside. Components of temporal polyethism remain unrevealed. Here, we investigate the timing and pattern of pre-foraging behavior in distinct strains of bees to (1) determine if a general pattern of temporal DOL exists in honey bees, (2) to demonstrate a direct genetic impact on temporal pacing, and (3) to further elucidate the mechanisms controlling foraging initiation. Honey bees selected for differences in stored pollen demonstrate consistent differences in foraging initiation age. Those selected for increased pollen storage (high pollen hoarding strain, HSBs) initiate foraging earlier in life than those selected for decreased pollen storage (low pollen hoarding strain, LSBs). We found that HSBs both initiate and terminate individual pre-foraging tasks earlier than LSBs when housed in a common hive environment. Unselected commercial bees (wild type) generally demonstrated intermediate behavioral timing. There were few differences between genotypes for the proportion of pre-foraging effort dedicated to individual tasks, though total pre-foraging effort differences differed dramatically. This demonstrates that behavioral pacing can be accelerated or slowed, but the pattern of behavior is not fundamentally altered, suggesting a general pattern of temporal behavior in honey bees. This also demonstrates direct genetic control of temporal pacing. Finally, our results suggest that earlier HSB protein (pollen) consumption termination compared to LSBs may contribute to an earlier decline in hemolymph vitellogenin protein titers, which would explain their earlier onset of foraging.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral pacing; Behavioral pattern; Division of labor; Honey bee worker; Pre-foraging behavior; Temporal polyethism
Year: 2013 PMID: 24031117 PMCID: PMC3767893 DOI: 10.1007/s00265-013-1573-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Ecol Sociobiol ISSN: 0340-5443 Impact factor: 2.980
Behavioral catalog including task codes and descriptions
| Task | Code | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Cell cleaning | CC | Removing debris from used brood cells (cocoons, larvae excretion), cleaning cell walls. Takes place in a cell not currently being used |
| General nest sanitation | NS | Removing debris from nest (moldy pollen, old cappings, dead brood, and dead adults) |
| Brood care | BC | Feeding larvae (head in brood cell >1.3 min), attending queen |
| Construction | CT | Smoothing wooden hive parts with mandibles and manipulating wax and propolis in cracks and corners of the hive |
| Fanning wings | FA/FAe | Flapping wings while standing in hive/at entrance |
| Food care | FC | Insertion of head into a cell containing nectar, receiving nectar-on bridge |
| Grooming a nestmate | GG | Running nestmate body parts through mandibles |
| Grooming self | GS | Running own body parts through mandibles |
| Inspecting a cell | IC | The momentary insertion of the anterior portion of the head into an empty cell |
| Nest care | NC | Manipulating wax of cells (not cappings), building new empty cells |
| Patrolling | PT | Walking around nest |
| Standing and chaining | ST | Standing stationary or hanging on nestmates while stationary (lack of activity) |
| Brood cap manipulation | TB | Trimming or smoothing wax cappings on brood cells and capping brood with wax |
| Honey cap manipulation | TH | Trimming or smoothing wax cappings on cells of honey and capping honey with wax |
| Trophallaxis | TR | Nestmate exchange of food (not near entrance), receiver thrusts tongue at donators mouthpart, donator opens mouthparts pushes tongue forward, and regurgitates a drop which is lapped up |
| Vibrating | VB | Fast rhythmic body vibrations (non-dance) |
| Head in pollen | HP | Insertion of head into a cell containing pollen |
| Inspecting brood | IB | Head in brood cell, <1.3 min |
| Dancing | DA/DA+ | Dancing without/with pollen |
| Washboarding/plaining | WA | Standing and rocking back and forth with mouthparts open |
| Attending dance | AD/AD+ | Dance attendance without/with pollen |
Fig. 1Number of foragers/incoming bees of each strain returning with and without pollen. Replicate 1 (top); replicate 2 (bottom). HSBs are more likely to collect pollen than LSBs (contingency table G test, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001, NS not significant)
Fig. 2Mean (+SE) foraging initiation age for bees of each strain. Replicate 1 (top); replicate 2 (bottom) 2. HSBs forage earlier than LSBs in both replicates (Student’s t test, letters represent significant difference p < 0.0001)
Fig. 3Median common task initiation and termination age for bees from each strain. Replicate 1 (top); replicate 2 (bottom). Left-hand stars represent significant difference in initiation age. Right-hand stars represent significant difference in termination age. Refer to Table 1 for task codes. Note that the HSBs typically initiate and terminate tasks earlier than the LSBs with the wild-type bees falling intermediate. For some tasks with very short performance duration, a large number of individual bees were observed performing the task only one time each (e.g., HSBs-BC in replicate 2: N = 82). Note also the temporal trend between tasks represented by the dashed trend lines (log-rank test; N min = 11, N max = 113, N median = 56.5; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.005, ****p < 0.001, *****p < 0.0001)
Fig. 4Proportion of the total observations, bees of each strain were recorded performing common tasks. Each shade of gray represents a different task. “Other” category represents pooled observations of infrequently performed tasks (tasks listed in Table 1 that are not individually represented here). Replicate 1 (top); replicate 2 (bottom). Most tasks show that no difference in the proportion of total records individuals was observed performing each task. Refer to Table 1 for task codes (Kruskal–Wallis test; N min = 11, N max = 113, N median = 56.5; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001)