Authors
Margaret J Couvillon, Katherine A Fensome, Shaun KL Quah, Roger Schürch
Publication date
2014/5/1
Journal
Communicative & integrative biology
Volume
7
Issue
3
Pages
e93495
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
A successful honey bee forager tells her nestmates the location of good nectar and pollen with the waggle dance, a symbolic language that communicates a distance and direction. Because bees are adept at scouting out profitable forage and are very sensitive to energetic reward, we can use the distance that bees communicate via waggle dances as a proxy for forage availability, where the further the bees fly, the less forage can be found locally. Previously we demonstrated that bees fly furthest in the summer compared with spring or autumn to bring back forage that is not necessarily of better quality. Here we show that August is also the month when significantly more foragers return with empty crops (P = 7.63e-06). This provides additional support that summer may represent a seasonal foraging challenge for honey bees.
Total citations
2015201620172018201920202021202220232024423264833
Scholar articles
MJ Couvillon, KA Fensome, SKL Quah, R Schürch - Communicative & integrative biology, 2014