Does Imprecision in The Waggle Dance Fit Patterns Predicted by The Tuned-Error Hypothesis?

The waggle dance of the honey bee is used to recruit nest mates to a resource, though direction indicated for a resource may vary greatly within a single dance. Some authors suggest that this variation exits as an adaptation to distribute recruits across a patch of flowers, and that, due to the variation’s inverse relationship with distance, the shape of the recruit distribution will remain constant for resources at different distances. In this study, we test this hypothesis by examining how variation in the indication of direction and distance changes with respect to distance. We find that imprecision in the communication of direction does not diminish rapidly enough to accommodate an adaptive-error hypothesis, and we also find that variation in the indication of distance has a positive relationship with the distance of a resource from the hive.

[1]  A. Dornhaus,et al.  Why do honey bees dance? , 2004, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.

[2]  R. Morse The Dance Language and Orientation of Bees , 1994 .

[3]  H. Esch,et al.  Sound: An Element Common to Communication of Stingless Bees and to Dances of the Honey Bee , 1965, Science.

[4]  George C. Williams,et al.  Adaptation and Natural Selection , 2018 .

[5]  A. Dornhaus,et al.  Benefits of recruitment in honey bees: effects of ecology and colony size in an individual-based model , 2006 .

[6]  Thomas D. Seeley,et al.  Imprecision in waggle dances of the honeybee (Apis mellifera) for nearby food sources: error or adaptation? , 1999, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.

[7]  K. Frisch The dance language and orientation of bees , 1967 .

[8]  William F. Towne,et al.  The spatial precision of the honey bees' dance communication , 1988, Journal of Insect Behavior.

[9]  N. Pierce Origin of Species , 1914, Nature.

[10]  S. Gould,et al.  The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme , 1979, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[11]  J. L. Gould Honey bee communication , 1974, Nature.

[12]  P. Visscher,et al.  Honeybee colonies achieve fitness through dancing , 2002, Nature.

[13]  J. Haldane,et al.  A statistical analysis of communication in “Apis mellifera” and a comparison with communication in other animals , 1954, Insectes Sociaux.

[14]  Adrian M. Wenner,et al.  Sound production during the waggle dance of the honey bee , 1962 .

[15]  W. Edrich The waggle dance of the honey bee; a new formulation. , 1975, Fortschritte der Zoologie.

[16]  J. L. Gould,et al.  Honey bee recruitment: the dance-language controversy. , 1975, Science.

[17]  E. Wilson Chemical communication among workers of the fire ant Solenopsis saevissima (Fr. Smith) 1. The Organization of Mass-Foraging , 1962 .

[18]  P. Visscher,et al.  Do honey bees average directions in the waggle dance to determine a flight direction? , 2008, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.