Navigation and dance communication of the honey bee
Social insects like the honey
bees (Apis mellifera) cooperate and communicate with each other.
Nest mates are informed by the waggle dance about the distance,
direction and quality of resources. Recruited bees have to solve the
task to find the indicated resource using the information it has
acquired during orientation flights and foraging flights. Bees are known
to refer to visual (sun compass, landmarks), olfactory and magnetic
cues. Karl von Frisch was the first who realized that bees use several
mechanisms for navigation, and it is believed that these are organized
hierarchically. Although a lot of research has been performed to unravel
the mechanisms of navigation and dance communication in bees it is still
not known what knowledge base bees are referring to when navigating
according to the information transmitted by the dance and their former
experience.
We will try to answer some of
these questions using the harmonic radar technique which enables us to
track the flight paths of the bees over a distance of about 1 km radius.
A dipole radar transponder will be attached to the thorax of the bee.
This transponder receives a signal sent out by one radar antenna and
sends the signal of different frequency back to the second antenna of
the radar.
In a first series of experiments
we shall focus on the structure of the orientation flights of
inexperienced bees. Then we shall address the question whether
reorientation of these bees depends on which region of the landscape
they have explored in their orientation flights.
This work is funded by the
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG Me 365/34-1)
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