Making honey bees lie: experimental dissociation of flight experience and dance communication.

2018 
Honey bees use their dance to communicate flight distance and direction of a food source to their nest mates in the hive. How bees transpose flight information to generate a corresponding walking (dance) behavior is still unknown. We now present a detailed study of the changes in dance duration of individual bees after shifting feeder distance. Our experiments indicated that most bees needed two or more foraging trips to the new position before showing an updated dance duration. In addition, only a few bees significantly changed dance duration immediately, whereas most bees first produced intermediary durations. Double shift experiments showed that under certain conditions bees do not update dance duration but continued to perform dance duration for the previously visited feeder position. We propose that generation of dance information involves two memory contents one for newly acquired and one for previously stored distance information.
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