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A Bee C: Scientists translate honeybee queen duets | A Bee C: Scientists translate honeybee queen duets |
(about 11 hours later) | |
Scientists using highly sensitive vibration detectors have decoded honeybee queens' "tooting and quacking" duets in the hive. | Scientists using highly sensitive vibration detectors have decoded honeybee queens' "tooting and quacking" duets in the hive. |
Worker bees make new queens by sealing eggs inside special cells with wax and feeding them royal jelly. | Worker bees make new queens by sealing eggs inside special cells with wax and feeding them royal jelly. |
The queens quack when ready to emerge - but if two are free at the same time, they will fight to the death. | The queens quack when ready to emerge - but if two are free at the same time, they will fight to the death. |
So when one hatches, its quacks turn to toots, telling the workers to keep the others - still quacking - captive. | So when one hatches, its quacks turn to toots, telling the workers to keep the others - still quacking - captive. |
The findings are published in the journal Scientific Reports. | The findings are published in the journal Scientific Reports. |
Dr Martin Bencsik, from Nottingham Trent University, who led this study, described the tooting and quacking of these "wonderful animals" as "extraordinary". | Dr Martin Bencsik, from Nottingham Trent University, who led this study, described the tooting and quacking of these "wonderful animals" as "extraordinary". |
"You can hear the queens responding to each other," he said. | "You can hear the queens responding to each other," he said. |
"It has been assumed that the queens were talking to other queens - possibly sizing one another up vocally to see who is strongest. | "It has been assumed that the queens were talking to other queens - possibly sizing one another up vocally to see who is strongest. |
"But we now have proof for the alternative explanation." | "But we now have proof for the alternative explanation." |
Tooting, the researchers found, is a queen moving around the colony - announcing her presence to the workers. | Tooting, the researchers found, is a queen moving around the colony - announcing her presence to the workers. |
The quacking is from queens that are ready to come out but are still captive inside their cells. | The quacking is from queens that are ready to come out but are still captive inside their cells. |
The queens are not talking to each other, explained Dr Bencsik, "it's communication between the queen and the worker bees - an entire society of tens of thousands of bees trying to release one queen at a time. | The queens are not talking to each other, explained Dr Bencsik, "it's communication between the queen and the worker bees - an entire society of tens of thousands of bees trying to release one queen at a time. |
"Quacking queens are purposefully kept captive by the worker bees - they will not release the quacking queens because they can hear the tooting. | "Quacking queens are purposefully kept captive by the worker bees - they will not release the quacking queens because they can hear the tooting. |
"When the tooting stops, that means the queen would have swarmed [split the colony and set out to find a new nest] and this triggers the colony to release a new queen." | "When the tooting stops, that means the queen would have swarmed [split the colony and set out to find a new nest] and this triggers the colony to release a new queen." |
Dr Bencsik said bee society was "absolutely splendid" to observe. | Dr Bencsik said bee society was "absolutely splendid" to observe. |
"All decisions are group decisions," he said. | "All decisions are group decisions," he said. |
"It's the worker bees that decide if they want a new queen or not." | "It's the worker bees that decide if they want a new queen or not." |
Pollinating insects face numerous threats, including from pesticides, habitat loss and climate change. And Dr Bencsik pointed out that beekeepers - and the hives they provide - are crucial for honeybee survival in the UK. | |
The researchers hope this eavesdropping exercise will help beekeepers avoid interfering with this delicate collective decision-making and to predict when their own colonies might be about to swarm. | |
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