Audio By Carbonatix
The earliest rising bee catches the best flower and ultimately the best meal, according to research.
A study has found that bees are better at learning new odours in the morning.
This early brain power may have evolved to help the insects sniff out flowering plants and forage for nectar more efficiently.
An experiment in which a team tested more than 1,000 bees is described in the journal Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology.
Previous research has shown that most flowers accumulate their nectar during the morning, so this would be the period during which learning many new odours would be most useful to the bees.
The process of memorising the new odours released by flowers is very energy-intensive for the bees' brains, so being a little "less clever" later in the day could help the insects to conserve that energy.
To study the bees' ability to learn, the scientists captured 1,000 forager honeybees (Apis mellifera). They trained groups of the insects at different times of the day to associate a new odour with a food reward.
The team, led by Professor Giovanni Galizia from the University of Konstanz in Germany, could then test each bee to see if it responded correctly to the odour.
The "correct" response to a smell was for the bee to extend its proboscis - the long appendage many pollinating insects use to draw nectar from flowers.
When the bees were trained early in the morning, they were much better at remembering which odours meant that they would receive a reward of sugary nectar.
Much earlier research had already established that bees' behaviour is very dependent upon the time of day. As far back as 1960, one researcher actually flew a group of bees from Paris to New York and found that the "jet-lagged" bees maintained their Paris-timed daily cycle of activity.
But this, the researchers say, is the first study to show that bees are better able to learn in the morning.
In their journal article, the team wrote that this effect was probably a result of bees and the flowers they pollinate "co-evolving".
"It might be evolutionarily advantageous to be the 'early bee' and to 'catch' the flower in order to out-compete possible competitors such as butterflies, flies and [bees from] other hives," the researchers wrote.
Dr Nigel Raine, a researcher from Royal Holloway, University of London, who specialises in the study of insect behaviour, said that bees were "hugely important to us".
"Not only do bees pollinate many crops we depend upon for food, but they also pollinate wild flowers which helps to maintain the beauty and diversity of the landscape in which we live," he told BBC News.
"These are key reasons why we need to increase our understanding of bee behaviour."
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
NADMO dismisses claims residents were not warned before Weija Dam spillage
55 minutes -
Government begins payment of 2020 batch of nurses and midwives arrears
58 minutes -
Controversial anti-LGBTQ bill presented to Parliament for second reading
1 hour -
Deloitte Partner urges clear, consistent policies to govern mining license renewals, local content
1 hour -
Xenophobic attacks: Ghana must pursue justice for victims beyond evacuation – Bosome Freho MP
1 hour -
BOPP positions sustainable agribusiness as investment frontier
2 hours -
Ga Mantse demands action against chiefs selling lands on waterways
2 hours -
South African Tourism condemns anti-immigrant attacks, reassures African travellers
2 hours -
APSU 2002 Year Group announces key leadership appointments for 97th anniversary hosting & BOLT Steering Committee
2 hours -
Government backs hybrid model for Ghana’s extractive sector, rejects move to shut out foreign investors
2 hours -
LMWG commends Heath Goldfields on 5-year community development plan for Prestea
2 hours -
Eswatini champions SiSwati stories in digital age at World Book Day 2026
2 hours -
Only weak men forgive cheating partner – Yul Edochie
2 hours -
Meta repeatedly snubs EU body over Facebook and Instagram user bans
2 hours -
Family wealth should be viewed as asset class for building transgenerational enterprises – Alex Dadey
2 hours