Honey bees switch mechanisms to drink deep nectar efficiently

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Authors

Wei, Jiangkun
Rico-Guevara, Alejandro
Nicolson, Sue W.
Brau, Fabian
Damman, Pascal
Gorb, Stanislav N.
Wu, Zhigang
Wu, Jianing

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Abstract

The feeding mechanisms of animals constrain the spectrum of resources that they can exploit profitably. For floral nectar eaters, both corolla depth and nectar properties have marked influence on foraging choices. We report the multiple strategies used by honey bees to efficiently extract nectar at the range of sugar concentrations and corolla depths they face in nature. Honey bees can collect nectar by dipping their hairy tongues or capillary loading when lapping it, or they can attach the tongue to the wall of long corollas and directly suck the nectar along the tongue sides. The honey bee feeding apparatus is unveiled as a multifunctional tool that can switch between lapping and sucking nectar according to the instantaneous ingesting efficiency, which is determined by the interplay of nectar–mouth distance and sugar concentration. These versatile feeding mechanisms allow honey bees to extract nectar efficiently from a wider range of floral resources than previously appreciated and endow them with remarkable adaptability to diverse foraging environments.

Description

DATA, MATERIALS, AND SOFTWARE AVAILABILITY : All study data are included in the article and/or supporting information. The data will be accessible upon publication.

Keywords

Insect mouthparts, Feeding strategies, Plant–pollinator interactions, Fluid mechanics, Honeybee (Apis mellifera), SDG-15: Life on land

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-15:Life on land

Citation

Wei, J., Rico-Guevara, A., Nicolson, S.W. et al. 2023, 'Honey bees switch mechanisms to drink deep nectar efficiently', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 120, no. 30, art. 230543612, pp. 1-9. https://DOI.org/10.1073/pnas.2305436120.