| Literature DB >> 31775270 |
Abstract
The notion of the waggle dance simulating a flight towards a goal in a walking pattern has been proposed in the context of evolutionary considerations. Behavioral components, like its arousing effect on the social community, the attention of hive mates induced by this behavior, the direction of the waggle run relative to the sun azimuth or to gravity, as well as the number of waggles per run, have been tentatively related to peculiar behavioral patterns in both solitary and social insect species and are thought to reflect phylogenetic pre-adaptations. Here, I ask whether these thoughts can be substantiated from a functional perspective. Communication in the waggle dance is a group phenomenon involving the dancer and the followers that perform partially overlapping movements encoding and decoding the message respectively. It is thus assumed that the dancer and follower perform close cognitive processes. This provides us with access to these cognitive processes during dance communication because the follower can be tested in its flight performance when it becomes a recruit. I argue that the dance message and the landscape experience are processed in the same navigational memory, allowing the bee to fly novel direct routes, a property understood as an indication of a cognitive map.Entities:
Keywords: Apis mellifera; intentions; navigation; social communication; symbolic communication
Year: 2019 PMID: 31775270 PMCID: PMC6955924 DOI: 10.3390/insects10120424
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 1Common memory structure for experienced and dance-indicated location. A group of forager bees was trained to the feeder FT either 300 or 650 m away from the hive. Two or three bees were subsequently trained to FD also 300 or 650 m away from the hive. A few days before the bees danced, FT was closed, and the forager bees followed the dances. When they left the hive, they were equipped with a transponder for harmonic radar tracking. The three figures show representative flight trajectories of recruits that were exposed to three different test conditions (from left to right): 300 m distance, 30° between FT and FD; 300 m distance, 60° between FT and FD; and 650 m distance, 30° between FT and FD (after [43]).