Japanese
honeybees not only co-operate to attack their enemies, researchers now say
their brains may actually be processing and responding to the threat.
When
confronted with their arch-enemy, the aggressive giant Asian hornet, the
honeybees will attack it by swarming en masse around the hornet and forming
what scientists call a "hot defensive bee ball" – a move unique to
their species.
With
up to 500 bees all vibrating their flight muscles at once, the bee ball cooks
the hornet to death.
While
this defensive manoeuvre has been known for some time, the mechanism behind it
has been shrouded in mystery. But researchers at Japan's University of Tokyo,
through study of the bees' brains, have now found that neural activity in bees
taking part in the attack picks up.
"When
the hornet, the Japanese honeybee's natural enemy, enters a colony, the bees
quickly form a 'hot defensive bee ball,' trapping the hornet inside and heating
it up to 46 degrees C (115F) with their collective body heat," said
Atsushi Ugajin, a University of Tokyo graduate student.
He
said that while the high temperature phase lasts about 20 minutes, it often
takes up to an hour before the hornet dies inside the ball.
Set
off if bees posted as "guards" at the entrance to the colony detect
an intruder, the move evolved because the bee's stingers aren't strong enough
to penetrate the hornet's tough exoskeleton, researchers said.
The
research team, whose latest research on the phenomenon appeared in the
scientific journal PLoS ONE in mid-March, was astounded by the fact that the
collective heat generated by the group, while fatal for the hornet, leaves the
bees unaffected.
They
were also surprised that the bees used perfectly coordinated teamwork during
the process, said Takeo Kubo, a professor at the University of Tokyo graduate
school.
"When
an outsider enters, the honeybees are immediately on their guard. Then, all at
once, they gather to attack," he said.
"So,
it isn't one commanding all the rest, we believe in this moment of emergency
they're acting collectively."
Curious
about why the bees attack this way, the researchers examined their brains and
found that neural activity increased in the bees involved with the bee ball,
apparently reflecting processing of thermal stimuli.
The
group also said that while this discovery may seem to demonstrate that the
Japanese honeybee is "smarter" than its European counterpart, this is
not the case – it's merely a matter of development in response to environmental
factors.
"When
a member of the colony, a worker drone, is killed, this is a grievous loss for
the hive. Evolution has reacted in this way (for their survival)," said
Masato Ono, a Japanese honeybee and hornet expert who was also part of the
study.
And
many fundamental unknowns remain.
"One
of the great mysteries for us is how animals' brains have evolved and how they
operate," Kubo said. "This will be for us the next great puzzle to
examine."
Source:
Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment