Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Colour preference and constancy in the giant Asian honey bee Apis dorsata
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Tropical pollinators forage in environments where floral resources vary in space and time, requiring flexible strategies to optimise foraging efficiency. One such strategy, floral constancy - the temporary restriction to a single flower type - strongly influences foraging success and plant-pollinator interactions. We aimed to: (1) quantify spontaneous colour preferences and constancy in the Asian giant honeybee
Apis dorsata
, (2) test whether reward concentration modulates these preferences, (3) evaluate how quickly learned associations override spontaneous biases, (4) determine whether bees can use multiple colour associations simultaneously, and (5) assess whether local floral spectral patterns correlate with bee preferences.
Bees trained to a neutral UV-grey stimulus showed a strong spontaneous preference and high constancy to blue, revealing a robust short-wavelength bias. Crucially, the strength of this spontaneous bias depended on reward concentration; Low-reward conditions elicited strong blue constancy, whereas high-reward conditions weakened it, demonstrating that reward expectation shapes spontaneous colour choices. This bias was flexible. When bees learned that yellow was rewarding they switched their preferences. Bees sequentially trained to both colours visited blue and yellow, showing no overall bias, or effect of the last-trained colour, indicating that recent experiences disrupt colour-specific constancy and generate largely random foraging choices. Bees were capable of learning and retaining two colours simultaneously, effectively suppressing the influence of spontaneous preferences. Finally, analysis of the community’s floral spectral distribution revealed a strong dominance of short-wavelength flowers, suggesting that long-term selection by the local floral environment may underlie the spontaneous blue preference observed in
A. dorsata
.
Title: Colour preference and constancy in the giant Asian honey bee
Apis dorsata
Description:
Abstract
Tropical pollinators forage in environments where floral resources vary in space and time, requiring flexible strategies to optimise foraging efficiency.
One such strategy, floral constancy - the temporary restriction to a single flower type - strongly influences foraging success and plant-pollinator interactions.
We aimed to: (1) quantify spontaneous colour preferences and constancy in the Asian giant honeybee
Apis dorsata
, (2) test whether reward concentration modulates these preferences, (3) evaluate how quickly learned associations override spontaneous biases, (4) determine whether bees can use multiple colour associations simultaneously, and (5) assess whether local floral spectral patterns correlate with bee preferences.
Bees trained to a neutral UV-grey stimulus showed a strong spontaneous preference and high constancy to blue, revealing a robust short-wavelength bias.
Crucially, the strength of this spontaneous bias depended on reward concentration; Low-reward conditions elicited strong blue constancy, whereas high-reward conditions weakened it, demonstrating that reward expectation shapes spontaneous colour choices.
This bias was flexible.
When bees learned that yellow was rewarding they switched their preferences.
Bees sequentially trained to both colours visited blue and yellow, showing no overall bias, or effect of the last-trained colour, indicating that recent experiences disrupt colour-specific constancy and generate largely random foraging choices.
Bees were capable of learning and retaining two colours simultaneously, effectively suppressing the influence of spontaneous preferences.
Finally, analysis of the community’s floral spectral distribution revealed a strong dominance of short-wavelength flowers, suggesting that long-term selection by the local floral environment may underlie the spontaneous blue preference observed in
A.
dorsata
.
Related Results
Physical, Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Sri Lankan Bee Honey Varieties
Physical, Chemical and Biological Characteristics of Sri Lankan Bee Honey Varieties
Objectives: Honey has abundant medicinal properties. It is formed by floral nectar, swaps of plants, and the secretions of bees. The current study determined the physical, chemical...
Pemberdayaan Petani Lebah Madu Desa Kutosari melalui Diversifikasi Madu
Pemberdayaan Petani Lebah Madu Desa Kutosari melalui Diversifikasi Madu
One of the advantages of Kutosari Village is that it is a village that produces pure honey, because many of its people work as honey bee farmers. Honey bee farmers use existing for...
Social communication between microbes colonizing the social honey bee Apis mellifera
Social communication between microbes colonizing the social honey bee Apis mellifera
AbstractThe European honey bee (Apis mellifera) is a charismatic species that plays a critical role in the pollination of agriculturally important crops and native flora. One emerg...
Honey bulk DNA metagenomic analysis to identify honey biological composition and monitor honey bee pathogens
Honey bulk DNA metagenomic analysis to identify honey biological composition and monitor honey bee pathogens
Abstract
Honey’s DNA mixture originates from various organisms like plants, arthropods, fungi, bacteria, and viruses. Conventional methods like melissopalynological analy...
Honey bulk DNA metagenomic analysis to identify honey biological composition and monitor honey bee pathogens
Honey bulk DNA metagenomic analysis to identify honey biological composition and monitor honey bee pathogens
Abstract
Honey’s DNA mixture originates from various organismal groups like plants, arthropods, fungi, bacteria, and viruses. Conventional method...
Determinants of Export Performance of Honey Industry in Ethiopia
Determinants of Export Performance of Honey Industry in Ethiopia
The study was conducted to identify the determinants of export performance of honey industry in Ethiopia and to establish trends of the Ethiopian honey export volume and honey expo...
Size and Shape Constancy are Cognitive Rather than Perceptual: Linton Size Constancy Illusion and Linton Shape Constancy Illusion
Size and Shape Constancy are Cognitive Rather than Perceptual: Linton Size Constancy Illusion and Linton Shape Constancy Illusion
We present two new illusions that challenges our understanding of size and shape constancy, with implications for how we should think about feedback to the primary visual cortex (V...
Service Learning Program In Giant Bee, Malaka-Malaysia
Service Learning Program In Giant Bee, Malaka-Malaysia
Giant Bee Gallery is one of the galleries that can be visited by tourists in Malacca, Malaysia. Giant Bee was founded in 1978 by Mr Ong Kang Peng. The aim of establishing the Giant...

