Group-foraging animals can coordinate their activities by performing positive signals that increase foraging or inhibitory signals that decrease recruitment when foragers detect danger. However, it is unclear whether foragers tune their excitatory and inhibitory signalling according to food value and predation risk. We therefore studied the signals that honeybee foragers perform before and after being attacked by live predators (wasps and spiders) or a robo-predator at a nectar source. Predator attacks significantly reduced recruitment dancing and increased stop signalling, which inhibits dancing for the dangerous resource. Attack equally reduced dancing for all sucrose concentrations. However, foragers factored travel costs into their posi...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
The honey bee's ability to communicate it's foraging experience is a valuable tool that allows the h...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and decrease plant fitness through fear: prey avoiding predator...
Alarm communication is a key adaptation that helps social groups resist predation and rally defenses...
The honey bee stop-signal may decrease recruitment by causing waggle dancers to cease danc...
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 ...
Abstract – The honey bee stop-signal may decrease recruitment by causing waggle dancers to cease dan...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Alarm communication is a key adaptation that helps social groups resist predation and rally defenses...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Alarm communication is a key adaptation that helps social groups resist predation and rally defenses...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
The honey bee's ability to communicate it's foraging experience is a valuable tool that allows the h...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and decrease plant fitness through fear: prey avoiding predator...
Alarm communication is a key adaptation that helps social groups resist predation and rally defenses...
The honey bee stop-signal may decrease recruitment by causing waggle dancers to cease danc...
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 ...
Abstract – The honey bee stop-signal may decrease recruitment by causing waggle dancers to cease dan...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Alarm communication is a key adaptation that helps social groups resist predation and rally defenses...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Fear can have strong ecosystem effects by giving predators a role disproportionate to their actual k...
Alarm communication is a key adaptation that helps social groups resist predation and rally defenses...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...
Predators can reduce bee pollination and plant fitness through successful predation and non-consumpt...