By Xinhua Science Writer Yu Zheng
BEIJING, June 5 (Xinhua) -- Honeybees are able to
understand the foreign languages communicated through the dances of bees from
different continents, scientists from China, Australia and Germany have found.
Experiments showed a subspecies of Asian honeybees
could understand the dance of European honeybees and thus locate the food
sources when the bees were raised in the same hive.
Dr. Songkun Su, of Zhejiang University's College of
Animal Sciences, who headed the study, said the research team found the Asian
honeybee, Apis cerana cerana (Acc), could quickly grasp the distinctive dance of
the European Apis mellifera ligustica (Aml) subspecies, as they conveyed
information on the locations of food sources.
The research team included Shaowu Zhang, of the
Australian National University, Shenglu Chen, of Zhejiang University, and
Juergen Tautz from the University of Wuerzburg, Germany. Their findings were
published in the June issue of the Public Library of Science journal PLoS ONE.
The honeybee waggle dance was recognized as the only
known form of symbolic communication in an invertebrate, but whether "dialects"
existed was still unknown. Research on the dance language and orientation of
bees earned Austrian zoologist Karl von Frisch the Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine in 1973.
Previous studies showed honeybees performed different
dances to indicate distances between food sources and their habitats. A simple
round dance usually implied a close food source, a sickle dance a larger
distances, and a waggle even greater distances. Themost complicated, the waggle
dance, encodes both direction and distance of the food source.
In outdoor experiments on the Da-Mei canal banks near
the Agricultural School of Zhangzhou, Fujian Province, the Asian subspecies
often conducted a longer waggle dance at a steeper angle than their European
peers.
However, Dr. Su said, after being kept together, the
Asian bee quickly understood the unique way of European waggling and found the
precise location of the food. Despite understanding the European bees, the Asian
bees maintained their own dance. The study also shows the European species also
have the ability to learn, although strikingly low.
By successfully putting the different subspecies in
the same hive, the researchers excluded key influencing factors, such as
variants of temperature, humidity and environment.
Dr. Su said, "It was quite a tough job to mingle
honeybees of different subspecies, who hate to be put together in one colony
because of different odors and quickly kill each other."
The scientists successfully put the European worker
bees with the Asian queen and workers and kept harmony for 50 days. However,
they failed in experiments to keep Asian workers among the European queen and
workers in the Aml hive without them being killed.
To maintain the harmony in the Acc hive, the research
team isolated hostile bees and pacified the rest by spraying honey water, Dr. Su
said.
The scientists are discussing more intriguing
questions on the honeybee social learning. "Do Acc bees become more proficient
at decoding Aml dances with increasing foraging experience? If so, does the rate
of improvement in 'fluency' in another species' code differ significantly from
any ontogenetic improvements in the fluency in the code of one's own species in
a 'pure' colony?" Dr. Su asked.
"After 100 million years of evolution and
micro-social development, their behavior is a valuable reference for human
society."