Human environmental modifications have outpaced honey bees' ability to evolve adaptive regulation of foraging tactics, possibly including a tactic associated with extreme food shortage, honey robbing. Honey robbing is a high risk, high reward, and understudied honey bee tactic whereby workers attack and often kill neighboring colonies to steal honey. Humans have exacerbated the conditions that provoke such robbing and its consequences. We describe robbing as an individual-level and colony-level behavioral syndrome, implicating worker bees specialized for foraging, food processing, and defense. We discuss how colony signaling mechanisms could regulate this syndrome and then explore the ecological underpinnings of robbing-highlighting its unu...
BackgroundSocial insect colonies routinely face large vertebrate predators, against which they need ...
Apis mellifera bees perform dances to communicate the presence of desirable nectar sources. The regu...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Human environmental modifications have outpaced honey bees' ability to evolve adaptive regulation of...
International audienceHoney bee foragers must supply their colony with a balance of pollen and necta...
Honeybees (Apis mellifera) are insects living in colonies with a complex social organization. Their ...
<div><p>The negative effects on adult behavior of juvenile undernourishment are well documented in v...
The combined behaviours of individuals within insect societies determine the survival and developmen...
Bees encounter multiple flower species and may use different strategies to forage on them. For sempe...
The combined behaviours of individuals within insect societies determine the survival and developmen...
Investigations into animal behavior can have two different forms of inquiry. Proximate questions ar...
Researchers in many fields would like to understand the determinants of risk-taking. Social insects ...
How do nectar-feeding animals choose among alternative flower-handling tactics? Such decisions have ...
Honey bees (Apis mellifera) live in colonies that reproduce by fissioning. When a colony divides its...
SummaryDecision making in superorganisms such as honey bee colonies often uses self-organizing behav...
BackgroundSocial insect colonies routinely face large vertebrate predators, against which they need ...
Apis mellifera bees perform dances to communicate the presence of desirable nectar sources. The regu...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Human environmental modifications have outpaced honey bees' ability to evolve adaptive regulation of...
International audienceHoney bee foragers must supply their colony with a balance of pollen and necta...
Honeybees (Apis mellifera) are insects living in colonies with a complex social organization. Their ...
<div><p>The negative effects on adult behavior of juvenile undernourishment are well documented in v...
The combined behaviours of individuals within insect societies determine the survival and developmen...
Bees encounter multiple flower species and may use different strategies to forage on them. For sempe...
The combined behaviours of individuals within insect societies determine the survival and developmen...
Investigations into animal behavior can have two different forms of inquiry. Proximate questions ar...
Researchers in many fields would like to understand the determinants of risk-taking. Social insects ...
How do nectar-feeding animals choose among alternative flower-handling tactics? Such decisions have ...
Honey bees (Apis mellifera) live in colonies that reproduce by fissioning. When a colony divides its...
SummaryDecision making in superorganisms such as honey bee colonies often uses self-organizing behav...
BackgroundSocial insect colonies routinely face large vertebrate predators, against which they need ...
Apis mellifera bees perform dances to communicate the presence of desirable nectar sources. The regu...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...