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All bees were returned to the hive.
No imaged bees were returned to the flight arena.
Each bee in the control group was subjected to three such backward trials, separated by 6 min. At the end of their three trials both the conditioned and the control bees were returned to the incubator for 3 hours.
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Most of these revisits by inexperienced bees were immediate returns to the flower just visited (68·51% of all revisits, n=3474), rather than returns to different flower locations and were therefore uninformative with respect to the core structure of routes.
The bees were fooled: Upon returning to the hive from their excursion down the 6-meter tube, the bees performed a waggle dance that lasted as long as a dance they would ordinarily do for a 200-meter flight, the researchers report in today's Science.
Following a one hour 'rest', bees were allowed to return to the test arena for a second unrewarded preference test (Test 2).
For instance, the sugared-up bees returned to foraging faster after being momentarily caught and lightly squeezed in a trap that simulated a predatory crab spider's attack than did the control bees.
One simple measure many farmers have adopted to give the bee a break is to do any spraying of pesticides or fungicides early in the morning before the bees show up for work and then start up again late afternoon when the bees have returned to the hive.
After each test trial bees also returned to the flight net and could enter the hive.
Many of these bees returned to the greenhouse with visible pollen loads, indicating that they were foraging on wild flowers nearby.
When the attacked bees returned to their hives, they made stop signals that increased in pitch according to the size of the predator (as the bee with the red dot is doing in the video above), inhibiting other bees' waggle dances (which tell bees where to forage), the scientists report online today in PLOS Biology.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com