Male Bumblebees More Active, Adaptable Than Females

  • New research has found male bumblebees are more active and adaptable than female worker bees when exploring unfamiliar environments and responding to changing food rewards
  • Using a series of specially designed tasks, researchers compared how male and female bees explored new environments, learned colour-reward associations and adapted when those rewards changed
  • The study showed that while males and females learned colour-reward associations equally well, males adapted more quickly when the rewarded flower colour changed, suggesting greater behavioural flexibility
  • Scientists believe these differences reflect the bees' distinct roles in nature, with female workers benefiting from repeatedly visiting reliable food sources for the colony, while males may gain an advantage by quickly switching to new flowers as they search for food and mates

Male bumblebees are more active and behaviourally flexible than female bees, according to new research that uses a series of specially designed tasks to test how the insects explore unfamiliar environments, recognise colours and learn to earn rewards.

The study, by researchers from the University of Sheffield in collaboration with the University of Chester, Newcastle University and Toyota Motor Manufacturing UK Ltd (Deeside), examined how the different roles of female workers and male drones influence their behaviour.

While previous research has established bees as a highly intelligent species capable of complex learning, most studies have largely focused on female bees.

This latest research compared male and female bumblebees' (Bombus terrestris) active time in a novel environment, using an 'activity' task as well as their ability to learn to associate a colour with a reward (sucrose), in a colour learning task. Researchers also examined the bees' behavioural flexibility with a final task by reversing the colour that led to a reward.

To do this, the team developed a series of experiments using large, rectangular-shaped boxes with 10 equally divided compartments. Each compartment had a hole in the middle of the wall separating it from the next meaning the bees were free to visit any compartment, with the time from entry to exit recorded.

Next, shutters between compartments were added, and bees were presented with pairs of artificial flowers - one blue and one yellow. Bees learned which colour was linked to a sucrose reward, with shutters opening only after a correct choice was made. In the final stage, the rewarded flower colour was reversed to test how quickly bees could adapt to the change.

The tests revealed that males spent more time actively exploring unfamiliar environments than females. While both sexes performed similarly when learning the initial colour-reward association, males demonstrated enhanced behavioural flexibility when the colour changed.

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