4.5 Article

Environment-dependent benefits of interindividual variation in honey bee recruitment

Journal

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Volume 192, Issue -, Pages 9-26

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2022.07.011

Keywords

division of labour; recruitment; repeatability of behaviour; response intensity; response probability; response threshold; waggle dance

Funding

  1. National Centre for Biological Sciences-Tata Institute of Fundamental Research Graduate school
  2. National Centre for Biological Sciences-Tata Institute of Fundamental Research institutional funds [12P4167]
  3. Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India [12-R D-TFR-5.04-0800]

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Interindividual differences in behaviour can affect social group productivity. This study extends an agent-based model on honey bee foraging and highlights the importance of response intensity in recruitment behaviour. Individual variation in recruitment behaviour leads to greater energy yield per forager, particularly in abundant food conditions.
Interindividual differences in behaviour within the members of a social group can affect the group's productivity. In eusocial insects, individual differences between workers in a colony play a central role in division of labour and task allocation. Extensive empirical and theoretical work has highlighted variation in response thresholds as a proximate mechanism underlying individual behavioural differences and hence division of labour. However, other response parameters, like response probability and intensity, can also affect these differences. In this study, we first extended a previously published agent-based model on honey bee, Apis mellifera, foraging to understand the relative importance of response (dance) probability and response (dance) intensity in the task of recruitment. Comparing variation obtained from the simulations with previously published empirical data, we found that response intensity played a more important role than probability in producing consistent interindividual differences in recruitment behaviour. We then explored the benefits provided by this individual variation in recruitment behaviour to the colony's collective foraging effort under different environmental conditions. We found that individual variation led to a greater energy yield per forager, but only when food was abundant. Our study highlights the need to consider all response parameters while studying division of labour and adds to the growing body of evidence linking individual variation in behavioural responses to the success of social groups. (C) 2022 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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