0000000001312348
AUTHOR
Maximilian Schroeder
Octopamine increases individual and collective foraging in a neotropical stingless bee
The biogenic amine octopamine (OA) is a key modulator of individual and social behaviours in honeybees, but its role in the other group of highly eusocial bees, the stingless bees, remains largely unknown. In honeybees, OA mediates reward perception and affects a wide range of reward-seeking behaviours. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that OA increases individual foraging effort and collective food source exploitation in the neotropical stingless bee Plebeia droryana . OA treatment caused a significant increase in the number of bees at artificial sucrose feeders and a 1.73-times higher individual foraging frequency. This effect can be explained by OA lowering the sucrose response threshold …
Marked Plebeia droryana is on the feed dispenser (image3) from Octopamine increases individual and collective foraging in a neotropical stingless bee
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Plebeia droryana visits the flowers of Euphorbia milii (image2) from Octopamine increases individual and collective foraging in a neotropical stingless bee
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Plebeia droryana is in the colony (image 1) from Octopamine increases individual and collective foraging in a neotropical stingless bee
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