How Honey Bees Communicate
The Waggle Dance and Other Ways Bees
Talk
As social insects living in a
colony, honey bees must communicate with one another. Honey bees use movement,
odor cues, and even food exchanges to share information.
Movement
(Dance Language):
Honey bee
workers perform a series of movements, often referred to as the "waggle
dance," to teach other workers the location of food sources more than 150
meters from the hive. Scout bees
fly from the colony in search of pollen and nectar.
The honey bee first walks straight
ahead, vigorously shaking its abdomen and producing a buzzing sound with the
beat of its wings. The distance and speed of this movement communicates the
distance of the foraging site to the others.
Communicating direction becomes more
complex, as the dancing bee aligns her body in the direction of the food,
relative to the sun. The entire dance pattern is a figure-eight, with the bee
repeating the straight portion of the movement each time it circles to the
center again.
Honey bees also use two variations
of the waggle dance to direct others to food sources closer to home. The round
dance, a series of narrow circular movements, alerts colony members to the
presence of food within 50 meters of the hive. This dance only communicates the
direction of the supply, not the distance. The sickle dance, a crescent-shaped
pattern of moves, alerts workers to food supplies within 50-150 meters from the
hive.
The honey bee dance was observed and
noted by Aristotle as early as 330 BC. Karl von Frisch, a professor of zoology
in Munich, Germany, earned the Nobel Prize in 1973 for his groundbreaking
research on this dance language. His book The Dance Language and Orientation
of Bees, published in 1967, presents fifty years of research on honey bee
communication.
Odor
Cues (Pheromones):
Odor cues also transmit important
information to members of the honey bee colony.Pheromones
produced by the queen control reproduction in the hive. She emits pheromones
that keep female workers disinterested in mating, and also uses pheromones to
encourage male drones to mate with her. The queen bee
produces a unique odor that tells the community she is alive and well. When a
beekeeper introduces a new queen
to a colony, she must keep the queen in a separate cage within the hive for
several days, to familiarize the bees with her smell.
Pheromones play a role in the
defense of the hive as well. When a worker honey bee stings, it produces a
pheromone that alerts her fellow workers to the threat. That's why a careless
intruder may suffer numerous stings if a honey bee colony is disturbed.
In addition to the waggle dance,
honey bees use odor cues from food sources to transmit information to other
bees. Some researchers believe the scout bees carry the unique smells of
flowers they visit on their bodies, and that these odors must be present for
the waggle dance to work. Using a robotic honey bee programmed to perform the
waggle dance, scientists noticed the followers could fly the proper distance
and direction, but were unable to identify the specific food source present
there. When the floral odor was added to the robotic honey bee, other workers
could locate the flowers.
Sharing
Food:
After performing the waggle dance,
the scout bees may share some of the foraged food with the following workers,
to communicate the quality of the food supply available at the location.
Sources:
- The Honey Bee Dance Language, published by North Carolina Cooperative Extension
Service
- Information Sheets published by The University of Arizona Africanized Honey Bee Education Project
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