Abstract.
Honey bees store their large supply of honey at the top and, to a lesser extent, along the edges of their nests. Whether this pattern is the result of preferences for where nectar is deposited is unclear. Camazine, in a path breaking study of pattern formation, found evidence that workers deposit nectar at random, while Free and Williams in an earlier study found evidence that bees prefer to deposit nectar into particular types of comb. Here we reexamine this question. We tested three hypotheses, all of which posit that bees have adaptive biases which allow them to deposit nectar directly into the most useful locations. We found that bees have preferences for depositing nectar into cells at the top of the nest, into old vs. new comb, and into interior facing comb vs. comb facing the exterior environment. These preferences may ensure that nectar is placed directly into those regions where it will ultimately be stored. They may also result in an optimal pattern of comb usage with respect to brood rearing. This work, along with the results of previous studies, suggests that comb usage patterns may reflect competing selective pressures and be more complicated than previously thought.
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Received 17 May 2007; revised 15 June 2007; accepted 3 July 2007.
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Johnson, B.R., Baker, N. Adaptive spatial biases in nectar deposition in the nests of honey bees. Insect. Soc. 54, 351–355 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00040-007-0953-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00040-007-0953-6