Honeybee navigation: critically examining the role of the polarization compass

Author:

Evangelista C.12,Kraft P.12,Dacke M.123,Labhart T.24,Srinivasan M. V.152

Affiliation:

1. Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia

2. Australian Research Council Centre for Excellence in Vision Science, Lund University, Lund, Helgonovaagen, Sweden

3. Department of Cell and Organism Biology, Lund University, Lund, Helgonovaagen, Sweden

4. Department of Neurobiology, Institute of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

5. School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia

Abstract

Although it is widely accepted that honeybees use the polarized-light pattern of the sky as a compass for navigation, there is little direct evidence that this information is actually sensed during flight. Here, we ask whether flying bees can obtain compass cues derived purely from polarized light, and communicate this information to their nest-mates through the ‘waggle dance’. Bees, from an observation hive with vertically oriented honeycombs, were trained to fly to a food source at the end of a tunnel, which provided overhead illumination that was polarized either parallel to the axis of the tunnel, or perpendicular to it. When the illumination was transversely polarized, bees danced in a predominantly vertical direction with waggles occurring equally frequently in the upward or the downward direction. They were thus using the polarized-light information to signal the two possible directions in which they could have flown in natural outdoor flight: either directly towards the sun, or directly away from it. When the illumination was axially polarized, the bees danced in a predominantly horizontal direction with waggles directed either to the left or the right, indicating that they could have flown in an azimuthal direction that was 90° to the right or to the left of the sun, respectively. When the first half of the tunnel provided axial illumination and the second half transverse illumination, bees danced along all of the four principal diagonal directions, which represent four equally likely locations of the food source based on the polarized-light information that they had acquired during their journey. We conclude that flying bees are capable of obtaining and signalling compass information that is derived purely from polarized light. Furthermore, they deal with the directional ambiguity that is inherent in polarized light by signalling all of the possible locations of the food source in their dances, thus maximizing the chances of recruitment to it.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference37 articles.

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