Pesticides Affect Bee Learning And Memory (Bees Are Normally Very Smart)
A dumb bee is less likely to survive.

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Pesticides Affect Bee Learning And Memory (Bees Are Normally Very Smart)
A dumb bee is less likely to survive.
Bumblebees appear to be capable of coming up with creative solutions to new problems to get a sugary rewardâand their strategies include che
âThe number of neurons is not correlating with cognitive abilities,â says Olli Loukola, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Turku in Finland and a co-author of the new study. âIt might be that animals with bigger bodies require bigger brains, or it could be that animals that need more long-term memory require bigger brains, whereas bees are living in rapidly changing environments.â
Research shows that bees possess a mathematical ability once thought to exist only in dolphins, primates, birds and humans who are beyond the preschool years.
Honeybees understand that "nothing" can be "something" that has numerical meaning, showing that they have a primitive grasp of the concept of zero.Â
Scientists Are Abuzz About Insect Intelligence
By Dan Nosowitz, Atlas Obscura, June 23, 2016
You kind of know, going into it, that scientists who have spent their lives studying animal behavior are not going to love being asked, âWhat is the smartest bug?â
âItâs a tricky question and I donât think anyone will give you a straight answer to it, unfortunately,â laughs Marc Srour, a biologist who specializes in invertebrates. Heâs being nice: it is, I fully acknowledge, a pretty stupid question. But scientists themselves have, without using that phrasing, been attempting to answer it, and have been making progress. Insect intelligence is an under-studied field, but a particularly weird and dynamic one where huge discoveries are being made almost every year.
The biggest problem with asking about animal intelligence is defining what we even mean by âintelligence.â The animals generally thought of as smartest--among them the great apes, dolphins, and the octopus--are believed to be intelligent because they demonstrate some of the behaviors that we associate with our own superiority as humans. These qualities include problem solving, advanced communication, social skills, adaptability, and memory, and also physical traits like the comparative size of the brain or number of neurons in the brain.
Insects are a particularly difficult group of animals to study for these traits, because theyâre just so different from us. Srour walked me through the basics of an insectâs brain, and they are so weird. Insects are extremely modular creatures, not like us at all: the easiest way to understand an insectâs nervous system is that an insect has many different sub-brains in different parts of its body, which feed into and can be controlled by a slightly larger central brain but can actually also operate separately. The antennae of an insect has its own brain. So does the mouth, the eyes, and each leg. Even if the central brain of an insect stops working, its legs still have their own sub-brains, and can keep walking.
Insects have, even considering their small size, a comparatively smaller central brain than we do, and with a much, much smaller neural count. Lars Chittka, perhaps the foremost researcher on the behavior of bees, told me that a bee has under a million neurons in its main brain. Humans? About a hundred billion.
Whether the amount of neurons or the physical size of the brain is related to intelligence is not really clear; researchers have no idea what humans are doing with all those neurons. But certainly there is a correlation between comparative brain size and the amount of those âintelligentâ behaviors an animal can perform.
Thereâs another angle as well, one thatâs a little more complicated than just âbig brain equals big smarts.â âGeneralist insects tend to be the most intelligent,â says Srour. What he means is that insects, and animals in general, demonstrate more intelligence when they are equipped to adapt to all kinds of food sources and habitats. An animal that only eats one kind of leaf in one kind of tree doesnât have to know very much; it can ignore all other information besides that which is directly related to that one leaf. âYou can say in general that fleas and ticks, theyâre not very intelligent,â says Srour. âThey only have one purpose in life, and thatâs to find their host and feed on their blood. They donât have to do anything sophisticated so they donât need very high brain functions.â
But a generalist animal has to do all kinds of intense thought to survive. Everything it sees can be a potential home, threat, or food source, and the animal has to constantly evaluate new stimuli to see if it can make use of it. A bee can feed on dozens of kinds of flowers, and must figure out the best bang for its buck as well as figuring out how to take advantage of it. The same goes for ants, which can feed on a wide variety of plant and animal matter. Ants leave scent trails for other ants to follow, a clear demonstration of social intelligence. Beetles donât do that kind of thing; a beetle is a lone creature that doesnât need to work with others for survival.
This all ties in with the âsocial brain hypothesis,â a theory put forth by anthropologist Robin Dunbar in 1998. The social brain hypothesis is basically that living in a group forces an individual to become smarter, rather than a smart individual choosing to live in a group.
âAnts, bees, and termites all have very high intelligence,â says Srour. âThey have to recognize nest mates, communicate with them often.â The challenges of living within a large community require intelligence.
Unlike most insects, the honey bee is a social animal, which forces it to have many intelligent abilities that non-social insects (like, say, flies, or beetles) donât need. And its smarts are legion: the insects are able to recognize and distinguish between human faces, a surprising trait given that it isnât really necessary for their survival. Another one: bees can count. In an experiment, honey bees were rewarded for stopping at the third in a series of landmarks, and proved able to remember this location and to thus count. (The distance was altered, while keeping the same number of landmarks, to discourage the bees from using their sense of distance.) Further study indicated their maximum counting abilities go to about four.
Bees are capable of observation, learning, and memory to solve problems. âEvery bee is entirely flower-naive at the beginning of its foraging career,â says Chittka, meaning that the bee has no instinctive knowledge about how to score nectar or pollen from flowers. Thatâs trouble, because flowers are wildly divergent: different flowers will need entirely different strategies to exploit, and itâs up to each individual bee to figure out how to attack each different flower.
Bees can learn new strategies for getting food from other bees, something few other insects are capable of doing. Chittka told me about a technique called ânectar robbing,â in which bees figure out that it can be easier to bite a hole in a flowerâs spur to suck out the nectar rather than figuring out how to get inside the flower. Other bees have proven able to observe this strategy, understand its purpose, master it themselves, and remember it for future flowers. Thatâs pretty smart!
But perhaps the best-known and most insane bit of intelligence from bees is whatâs known as the âwaggle dance.â This is a method of communication that the bee uses to tell other bees in the hive the location of a flower or source of food. Hereâs how it works: a bee performs the dance on a vertical surface inside the hive. The dance is shaped like a coffee bean: roughly, an oval with a line down the middle. Dancing straight up means to fly in the direction of the sun, straight down means away from the sun, and left and right mean to fly to the left or the right of the sun.
The bee travels in a figure-eight pattern, tracing the line in the middle before performing the loops around the outside of the coffee bean shape. The amount of time it takes the bee to make its circuit around the outside of the coffee bean tells other bees how far away the food source is: a one-second loop means, roughly, that the food source is a kilometer away. The longer the loop, the farther away the food source is.
The bee will repeat this dance many times to indicate the quality of the food source: a really great one will find the bee doing this over and over again, yelling âITâS A KILOMETER NORTHWEST OF HERE, ITâS A KILOMETER NORTHWEST OF HERE, ITâS A KILOMETER NORTHWEST OF HEREâ for minutes on end.
âThe honey bee dance is unique insomuch as theyâre using symbols,â says Chittka. âNo other animal besides humans has that.â Even other primates donât use symbols: an ape like a chimpanzee may point at a desired object, or lead others to it, but it wonât use an abstract symbol or message to indicate what it wants to convey. The honey beeâs waggle dance is a wildly intelligent attribute; it enables a bee to very efficiently convey detailed information to a large group, and also can be done in the safety of the hive, where other animals canât overhear.
These behaviors are far above and beyond what most people would assume an insect is capable of. Without exaggerating, the honey bee is capable of advanced symbolic communication, language, facial recognition, number use, observation and mimicry, understanding of rules, and high-level problem-solving. They are, in some senses, significantly smarter than many mammals. Amazing.