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Innate colour preferences of the Australian native stingless bee Tetragonula carbonaria Sm.

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:28 authored by Adrian Dyer, Skye Boyd-Gerny, Mani Shrestha, Klaus Lunau, Jair Eduardo Garcia Mendoza, Sebastian Koethe, Bob Wong
Innate preferences promote the capacity of pollinators to find flowers. Honeybees and bumblebees have strong preferences for 'blue' stimuli, and flowers of this colour typically present higher nectar rewards. Interestingly, flowers from multiple different locations around the world independently have the same distribution in bee colour space. Currently, however, there is a paucity of data on the innate colour preferences of stingless bees that are often implicated as being key pollinators in many parts of the world. In Australia, the endemic stingless bee Tetragonula carbonaria is widely distributed and known to be an efficient pollinator of both native plants and agricultural crops. In controlled laboratory conditions, we tested the innate colour responses of na < ve bees using standard broadband reflectance stimuli representative of common flower colours. Colorimetric analyses considering hymenopteran vision and a hexagon colour space revealed a difference between test colonies, and a significant effect of green contrast and an interaction effect of green contrast with spectral purity on bee choices. We also observed colour preferences for stimuli from the blue and blue-green categorical regions of colour space. Our results are discussed in relation to the similar distribution of flower colours observed from bee pollination around the world.

Funding

Pollination in a new climate: evolutionary simulation of bee and flower interactions for predicting impacts of climate change on pollination

Australian Research Council

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A World Without Bees: simulating important agricultural insect pollinators

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology

Volume

202

Issue

42652

Start page

603

End page

613

Total pages

11

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© Springer 2016

Former Identifier

2006067306

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-09-05

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