Bee reverse-learning behavior and intra-colony differences: Simulations based on behavioral experiments reveal benefits of diversity
Authored by A G Dyer, A Dorin, V Reinhardt, J E Garcia, M G P Rosa
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2014.01.009
Sponsors:
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Foraging bees use color cues to help identify rewarding from unrewarding
flowers. As environmental conditions change, bees may require behavioral
flexibility to reverse their learnt preferences. Learning to
discriminate perceptually similar colors takes bees a long time, and
thus potentially poses a difficult task to reverse-learn. We trained
free-flying honeybees to learn a fine color discrimination task that
could only be resolved (with about 70\% accuracy) following extended
differential conditioning. The bees were then tested for their ability
to reverse-learn this visual problem. Subsequent analyses potentially
identified individual behavioral differences that could be broadly
classified as: `Deliberative-decisive' bees that could, after several
flower visits, decisively make a large change to learnt preferences;
`Fickle-circumspect' bees that changed their preferences by a small
amount every time they received a reward, or failed to receive one, on a
particular color; and `Stay' bees that did not change from their
initially learnt preference. To understand the ecological implications
of the observed behavioral diversity, agent-based computer simulations
were conducted by systematically varying parameters describing flower
reward switch oscillation frequency, flower handling time, and fraction
of defective `target' stimuli that contained no reward. These
simulations revealed that when the frequency of reward reversals is
high, Fickle-circumspect bees are more efficient at nectar collection, but as reward reversal frequency decreases, the performance of
Deliberative-decisive bees becomes most efficient. As the reversal
frequency continues to fall, Fickle-circumspect and
Deliberative-decisive strategies approach one another in efficiency. In
no tested condition did Stay bees outperform the other groups. These
findings indicate there is a fitness benefit for honeybee colonies
containing individuals exhibiting different strategies for managing
changing resource conditions. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights
reserved.
Tags
ecology
discrimination
Plant
Social
insects
Individual-based
model
Honeybee apis-mellifera
Bumblebees bombus-terrestris
Recognize images
Flower constancy
Foraging speed