نتایج جستجو برای: bumblebees

تعداد نتایج: 906  

Journal: :Biology letters 2014
Christine Scholtyssek Marie Dacke Ronald Kröger Emily Baird

To detect and avoid collisions, animals need to perceive and control the distance and the speed with which they are moving relative to obstacles. This is especially challenging for swimming and flying animals that must control movement in a dynamic fluid without reference from physical contact to the ground. Flying animals primarily rely on optic flow to control flight speed and distance to obs...

Journal: :Biology letters 2016
Andrew M Mountcastle Teressa M Alexander Callin M Switzer Stacey A Combes

Previous work has shown that wing wear increases mortality in bumblebees. Although a proximate mechanism for this phenomenon has remained elusive, a leading hypothesis is that wing wear increases predation risk by reducing flight manoeuvrability. We tested the effects of simulated wing wear on flight manoeuvrability in Bombus impatiens bumblebees using a dynamic obstacle course designed to push...

Journal: :The American naturalist 2007
Robert J Gegear James G Burns

Biologists have long assumed that pollinator behavior is an important force in angiosperm speciation, yet there is surprisingly little direct evidence that floral preferences in pollinators can drive floral divergence and the evolution of reproductive (ethological) isolation between incipient plant species. In this study, we expose computer-generated plant populations with a wide variation in f...

2008
M. E. Hanley S. Pichon B. Darvill D. Goulson

1. Although it is well established that different plant species vary considerably in the quality of pollinator rewards they offer, it is unclear how plant reproductive systems, in particular an obligate dependence on insects for pollination, might influence the evolution of pollinator rewards. Moreover, unlike the interaction between nectar reward and pollinator visitation, we have a limited un...

2004
Paul Williams

Recent studies of British bumblebees have proposed a seemingly simple explanation for the decline in some species: that greater dietary specialization among the rarer species has put them at greater risk. However, comparisons of dietary specialization require: (1) that bees have access to the same dietary options among which to make their choices; (2) that the differing relative breadths of die...

Journal: :Journal of insect physiology 2000
Schoeters Billen

The elongated spermathecal duct of bumblebees has been studied in hibernating queens, queens shortly after hibernation, mature egg-laying queens and uninseminated queens captured during summer, and workers. Only rather small size differences are found when comparing spermathecae of queens and workers. Clear differences between bumblebee queens and workers are found when comparing the histochemi...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2009
Thomas C Ings Lars Chittka

Predators of pollinators can influence pollination services and plant fitness via both consumptive (reducing pollinator density) and non-consumptive (altering pollinator behaviour) effects. However, a better knowledge of the mechanisms underlying behaviourally mediated indirect effects of predators is necessary to properly understand their role in community dynamics. We used the tripartite rela...

2016
Emma Thompson Catherine Plowright

Picture-object correspondence provides an alternate method of investigating delayed matching by providing a cue (picture) which may be spontaneously perceived as similar but different from a corresponding target. Memory for, and corresponding choice of, a target corresponding to a cue could be facilitated by the use of a picture. Bumblebees have been found to both easily differentiate images fr...

2013
Juliet L. Osborne Alan Smith Suzanne J. Clark Don R. Reynolds Mandy C. Barron Ka S. Lim Andy M. Reynolds

Understanding strategies used by animals to explore their landscape is essential to predict how they exploit patchy resources, and consequently how they are likely to respond to changes in resource distribution. Social bees provide a good model for this and, whilst there are published descriptions of their behaviour on initial learning flights close to the colony, it is still unclear how bees f...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2015
Andrew M Mountcastle Sridhar Ravi Stacey A Combes

Bumblebee foragers spend a significant portion of their lives transporting nectar and pollen, often carrying loads equivalent to more than half their body mass. Whereas nectar is stored in the abdomen near the bee's center of mass, pollen is carried on the hind legs, farther from the center of mass. We examine how load position changes the rotational moment of inertia in bumblebees and whether ...

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