Do small swarms have an advantage when house hunting? The effect of swarm size on nest-site selection by Apis mellifera
Authored by T M Schaerf, J C Makinson, M R Myerscough, M Beekman
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2013.0533
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.b6091
Abstract
Reproductive swarms of honeybees are faced with the problem of finding a
good site to establish a new colony. We examined the potential effects
of swarm size on the quality of nest-site choice through a combination
of modelling and field experiments. We used an individual-based model to
examine the effects of swarm size on decision accuracy under the
assumption that the number of bees actively involved in the
decision-making process (scouts) is an increasing function of swarm
size. We found that the ability of a swarm to choose the best of two
nest sites decreases as swarm size increases when there is some time-lag
between discovering the sites, consistent with Janson \& Beekman (Janson
\& Beekman 2007 Proceedings of European Conference on Complex Systems, pp. 204-211.). However, when simulated swarms were faced with a
realistic problem of choosing between many nest sites discoverable at
all times, larger swarms were more accurate in their decisions than
smaller swarms owing to their ability to discover nest sites more
rapidly. Our experimental fieldwork showed that large swarms invest a
larger number of scouts into the decision-making process than smaller
swarms. Preliminary analysis of waggle dances from experimental swarms
also suggested that large swarms could indeed discover and advertise
nest sites at a faster rate than small swarms.
Tags
Model
collective decision-making
information
Accuracy
Colonies
Choice
Honey-bee swarms
Scouts guide
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