Iridescence untwined: honey bees can separate hue variations in space and time

Author:

Ng Leslie12ORCID,Ospina-Rozo Laura2ORCID,Garcia Jair E1ORCID,Dyer Adrian G13,Stuart-Fox Devi2

Affiliation:

1. Bio-inspired Digital Sensing (BIDS) Lab, School of Media and Communication, RMIT University , 124 La Trobe St, Melbourne, Victoria , Australia

2. School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne , Parkville, Victoria , Australia

3. Department of Physiology, Monash University , Wellington Rd, Melbourne, Clayton, Victoria , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Iridescence is a phenomenon whereby the hue of a surface changes with viewing or illumination angle. Many animals display iridescence but it currently remains unclear whether relevant observers process iridescent color signals as a complex collection of colors (spatial variation), or as moving patterns of colors and shapes (temporal variation). This is important as animals may use only the spatial or temporal component of the signal, although this possibility has rarely been considered or tested. Here, we investigated whether honey bees could separate the temporal and spatial components of iridescence by training them to discriminate between iridescent disks and photographic images of the iridescent patterns presented by the disks. Both stimuli therefore contained spatial color variation, but the photographic stimuli do not change in hue with varying angle (no temporal variation). We found that individual bee observers could discriminate the variable patterns of iridescent disks from static photographs during unrewarded tests. Control experiments showed that bees reliably discriminated iridescent disks from control silver disks, showing that bees were processing chromatic cues. These results suggest that honey bees could selectively choose to attend to the temporal component of iridescent signals to make accurate decisions.

Funder

Australian Research Council

University of Melbourne

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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