<div><p>Flying insects constantly face the challenge of choosing efficient, safe and collision-free routes while navigating through dense foliage. We examined the route-choice behavior of foraging honeybees when they encountered a barrier which could be traversed by flying through one of two apertures, positioned side by side. When the bees’ choice behavior was averaged over the entire tested population, the two apertures were chosen with equal frequency when they were equally wide. When the apertures were of different width, the bees, on average, showed a preference for the wider aperture, which increased sharply with the difference between the aperture widths. Thus, bees are able to discriminate the widths of oncoming gaps and choose the ...
International audienceThe mechanism underlying lateral collision avoidance in flying insects was inv...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
Central place foraging pollinators, such as bees, tend to learn multi-destination routes (traplines)...
Flying insects constantly face the challenge of choosing efficient, safe and collision-free routes w...
<p><b>Equal apertures: Probability of choosing the right-hand aperture for individual bees for (A) t...
Bees flying through natural landscapes frequently encounter physical challenges, such as wind and cl...
Bees flying through natural landscapes frequently encounter physical challenges, such as wind and cl...
Flying insects use the optic flow to navigate safely in unfamiliar environments, especially by adjus...
<div><p>Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will ...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
A number of insects fly over long distances below the natural canopy, where the physical environment...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
Ravi S, Bertrand O, Siesenop T, et al. Gap perception in bumblebees. The Journal of experimental bio...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
International audienceThe mechanism underlying lateral collision avoidance in flying insects was inv...
International audienceThe mechanism underlying lateral collision avoidance in flying insects was inv...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
Central place foraging pollinators, such as bees, tend to learn multi-destination routes (traplines)...
Flying insects constantly face the challenge of choosing efficient, safe and collision-free routes w...
<p><b>Equal apertures: Probability of choosing the right-hand aperture for individual bees for (A) t...
Bees flying through natural landscapes frequently encounter physical challenges, such as wind and cl...
Bees flying through natural landscapes frequently encounter physical challenges, such as wind and cl...
Flying insects use the optic flow to navigate safely in unfamiliar environments, especially by adjus...
<div><p>Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will ...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
A number of insects fly over long distances below the natural canopy, where the physical environment...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
Ravi S, Bertrand O, Siesenop T, et al. Gap perception in bumblebees. The Journal of experimental bio...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
International audienceThe mechanism underlying lateral collision avoidance in flying insects was inv...
International audienceThe mechanism underlying lateral collision avoidance in flying insects was inv...
Birds flying through a cluttered environment require the ability to choose routes that will take the...
Central place foraging pollinators, such as bees, tend to learn multi-destination routes (traplines)...