Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
Within
nature, the compatibility of animals' feeding mechanisms with their food
sources determines the breadth of available resources and how successfully the
animals will feed. Those who feed on the nectar of flowers, such as honey bees
(Apis mellifera), encounter a range of corolla depths and sugar concentrations.
The nectar of flowers comprises the prime source of energy and water for honey
bees, who are dominant pollinators throughout the world.
Regional climate conditions contribute
to plants producing nectar in
various volumes and concentrations, and evaporation and pollinator feeding
frequently leaves the nectar reservoirs of flowers below capacity. Thus, honey
bees' ability to feed "profitably" under naturally varying resource
conditions is advantageous.
An international research team has
studied the feeding mechanisms of honey bees and has reported on how these bees
switch between using suction and lapping to derive maximum benefit from flowers
of varied sizes and concentrations of sugar. The team's study, titled
"Honey bees switch mechanisms to drink deep nectar efficiently," is
published in Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences(PNAS).
Prior research has studied suction and
lapping feeding behaviors in honey bees, but this paper notes that earlier
studies have included an "unnatural condition of virtually unlimited
nectar supplies. Such large nectar pools are rare in the flowers they visit in
the wild."
In this study, the team shows that during feeding, the distance between the honey bees' mouthparts and the nectar, as well as the concentration of sugar within the nectar, are determining factors in whether the bees procure it via suction or lapping.
Microparticles showing how a honey bee sucks deep
nectar. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2023).
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2305436120
The feeding mechanism of honey bees
consists of a long, thin proboscis that includes a pair of labial palpi inside
a pair of elongated galea (lobes). This structure serves as a feeding tube, and the bee's hairy glossa (tongue) is situated
inside.
For this
study, the researchers pre-starved honey bees, fed them sucrose solutions of
10%, 30%, and 50% w/w contained in capillary tubes, and used high-speed
videography to record the bees' feeding behavior with each. Blue dye, which had
no nutritional effect, was added to each solution for visual contrast, and the
bees tolerated it well.
At the 10% w/w
concentration, bees inserted their proboscides deep into the solution and
extended their tongues beyond the proboscis tubes to suction the liquid until
they could no longer reach the meniscus.
At 30% w/w—an
approximate concentration commonly found in nature, according to the
research—the bees began by quickly lapping the solution, slowing down as the
liquid level receded, and gradually switched to suction until the liquid
receded beyond their reach.
Microparticles showing how a honey bee sucks deep
nectar. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2023).
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2305436120
At 50% w/w, the bees lapped the
solution, beginning rapidly and slowing as the liquid receded, and did not
transition to suction at all. Notably, the bees showed a smaller decrease in
lapping frequency at 50% w/w than during their transitions to suction at 30%
w/w.
The researchers conclude that
short-distance lapping helps honey bees most efficiently gather nectar to fill
the maximum collection capacity of their tongues, but lapping at longer
distances would be less efficient than suction due to more time needed for
capillary filling. The decreased lapping frequency observed with the thickest
of the tested nectars indicates an allowance for the capillary rise needed for
maximum tongue-saturation capacity.
In summary, regardless of nectar
depth, lapping is a better strategy for honey bees collecting nectars of high
sugar concentrations, and suction is faster for those with lower concentrations
of sugar.
The team also believes that the
feeding mechanism switching behavior may be a unique ability among this
species. Noting a previous study published in Soft Matter in
which bumble bees (Bombus terrestris) did not switch between
feeding behaviors with nectars of varying viscosities, the team in this study
also used a solution of 10% w/w with bumble bees to test whether this would
change according to their distance from the liquid, but it did not; the bumble
bees only exhibited lapping.
Furthermore, previous research with
orchid bees (Euglossini) has shown that they mainly use their long proboscides
to procure nectar via suction, but that they have exhibited both suction and
lapping with small amounts (films) of nectar. However, there is currently no
evidence to show that orchid bees make this switch based on corolla depth or
nectar properties.
The research team included members
from China's Sun Yat-Sen University School of Aeronautics and Astronautics and
School of Advanced Manufacturing, The University of Washington Department of
Biology and Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture in the U.S., South
Africa's University of Pretoria Department of Zoology and Entomology; Belgium's
Université libre de Bruxelles, Nonlinear Physical Chemistry Unit and Université
de Mons, Laboratoire InFlux; and Kiel University's Department of Zoology in
Germany.
by Stephanie Baum , Phys.org
No comments:
Post a Comment