North Alabama Beekeepers Symposium

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Human-Computer Interaction
Advertisements

EXAMPLES OF SENSE ORGANS
F exam 2 F learning in a natural environment F special case... flower learning F odor learning in the proboscis extension reflex F summary PART 4: BEHAVIORAL.
Sensation and Perception
Honeybee Communications: Dancing Bees. Dance Communication - Introduction Kinds of Dances – Round Dance – Wagtail Dance – Sickle Dance – Where to Live.
Sight The eye is the organ of vision. It has a complex structure consisting of a transparent lens that focuses light on the retina. The retina is.
COMMUNICATIONS Stimulus.
Ch 28-4 – Insects and Their Relatives. Uniramians – Centipedes, millipedes and insects Characterized by one pair of antennae and appendages that don’t.
Animal Senses How do animals sense stimuli? Sensory organs perceive stimuli (light, sounds, etc.) with a receptor cell. The receptor cell sends signals.
Alexander Galt Regional High School Science Secondary 3 September 6, 2008 Slide 1 Senses, Sensors, Sensory.
The Senses (nervous system)
The Senses Our SENSES tell us: What is out in the environment? How much is out there? Is there more or less of it than before? Where is it? Is it changing.
Communication Topic 2: The Electromagnetic Spectrum
End Show Slide 1 of 44 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Biology.
Light and Color. Light is a form of energy light travels extremely fast and over long distances light carries energy and information light travels in.
Sensation and Perception
Chapter 7 Light.
Chapter 29- The Senses Accommodation Aqueous humor Astigmatism Auditory canal Basilar membrane Blind spot Chemoreceptors Choroid Cochlea Compound eye Cones.
DO NOW: What do you know about our sense of sight and vision? What parts of the eye do you know? What do you know about light?
Review List three body systems that work together to create a response to a stimulus Sequence What is the correct sequence of the following in response.
Bee dissection. Bees are haploid-diploid Bee castes Queen: long abdomen, jaws help her make nest, smooth sting can be used repeatedly. Can lay 1500 eggs.
Unit 4: Sensation and Perception
3.2 VISION 70% of your receptor cells are in your eyes taste and touch need direct contact where as sight and smell don’t Sight can be experienced from.
Chapter 50.  What are the general functions of receptors?  Reception  Transduction  Amplification  Transmission  Integration.
Perception The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events.
Sensory Receptors.
Sensation and Perception
Animal senses: how they detect stimulus
Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception McGraw-Hill ©2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Images formed by mirrors –plane mirrors –curved mirrors concave convex Images formed by lenses the human eye –correcting vision problems nearsightedness.
Honeybee learning and memory. Honeybee brain AL Moth AL.
DO NOW : List the 5 senses and an organ associated with each sense. Then list an object detected by each sense. (Ex. Ear and a bell) Objectives: 1.List.
Fish Senses. Vision Eye position  Lateral to forward  Allows vision to side as well as forward  Monocular to side, some degree of binocular to front.
The Senses Chapter 35.4.
On Monday, you will review one of the five senses and provide an example of an animal with a modified version of that sense.
Perception The process of organizing and interpreting information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events.
Pollination 6th grade science.
Sensation Intro. to Psychology PSY-101 Instructor: Ms. Tahira Zafar.
Chapter 13 Senses.
Senses II. Science of Taste Article Read the article “A Natural History of the Senses” and complete questions: Responses and Analysis #1 and #2 Personal.
Arthropods Why So Successful? Why So Abundant?. Why So Successful? Why So Abundant? Fact: There are more than 1 million different species of arthropod.
Chapter 28 Arthropods Centipedes and Millipedes. 14. Subphylum Uniramia –Centipedes, millipedes and insects. A. Class Chilopoda 1. Centipedes a). One.
© 2011 South-Western | Cengage Learning A Discovery Experience PSYCHOLOGY Chapter 4Slide 1 LESSON 4.2 Vision OBJECTIVES Identify and illustrate the structures.
L 33 Light and Optics [4] Measurements of the speed of light  The bending of light – refraction  Total internal reflection  Dispersion Dispersion 
Lesson 1: Reflection and its Importance
SENSATION. SENSATION DEFINED Sensation is the process by which sensory systems (eyes, ears, and other sensory organs) and the nervous system receive stimuli.
Foraging behaviors Variability in wing color in Catocala sp. Development of search images increases effective foraging behavior Stable vs constant conditioning.
Animal and plant responses Homing and Migration (CB pg 216 – 222)
The Honeybee Dance By: Kaila Bishop 14 June 2011 Biology 3541.
Pollination.
HONEY BEES! BROUGHT TO YOU BY.
Human Computer Interaction Lecture 2 The Human
How do animals detect environmental stimuli?
Visual Perception Human Body Systems © 2014 Project Lead The Way, Inc.
Chapter 28 Insects 28-3.
Sensory Receptors.
Visual Perception Human Body Systems © 2014 Project Lead The Way, Inc.
How do organisms receive and respond to information from their environment? Yesterday and today you worked with your partners on stations that tested your.
Animal Behavior Taxonomy Mini-unit 9.
Insects.
Principles of Light.
Birds and Bees.
Chapter 28 Insects 28-3.
Visual Perception Human Body Systems © 2014 Project Lead The Way, Inc.
Visual Perception Human Body Systems © 2014 Project Lead The Way, Inc.
Chapter 4: Sensation and Perception
The Honeybee Dance By: Kaila Bishop 14 June 2011 Biology 3541.
Chapter Four Sensation
Experiencing the World
Nervous System: Part VI Specialized Receptors:
Presentation transcript:

North Alabama Beekeepers Symposium Honey Bee Senses North Alabama Beekeepers Symposium August 13 2011 www.OwensBeeCompany.com

“When one comes to fully understand all that is represented in the combs within his hives, he is well on his way toward success.” Dr. C.C. Miller 1831-1920 www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Communications Vision & Color Sense Smell & Taste Touch & Hearing Orientation Mental Capacity www.OwensBeeCompany.com

How do Bees Communicate? Language Honey Bees communicate the Source, Productiveness, Direction, and Distance, of forage from the hive by using a unique Waggle Dance. Chemical Pheromones secreted by the bees results in a specific behavioral response in the individual bee and sometimes the entire hive. Vision Honey Bees use a set of compound eyes for polarized light vision, and three Ocelli eyes located on top of her head for light sensitivity. Sensory Honey Bees use body hairs, and specialized Receptors to perceive their environment . www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Vision and Color Sense Bees have two spherical shaped Compound Eyes to distinguish high contrast shapes and patterns. The Honey Bee also has three eyes located in the top of its head called Ocelli. These eyes are believed used for navigation, and are useful to the bee in varying light conditions. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Vision and Color Sense A bees compound eye has over 6900 facets. Each lens is transparent with a fixed focal length. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Vision and Color Sense No image can be formed on the bee’s retina. The complete captured image is a mosaic of small dots of varying degrees of brightness 1/100th of the perception of Human sight. The bees fusion frequency, a measure of sensitivity to flicker is about 300 cycles per second as compared to a human of 30 cycles per second. This allows her to recognize the shape of objects while she is in rapid flight. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Vision and Color Sense A Honey Bee sees movement five times faster than the human eye. The Bees compound eye is efficient enough to enable the bee to recognize landmarks as she approaches the hive. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Vision and Color Sense The compound eye of the bee can differentiate with one degree of accuracy. Compared To the human eye which has a 1/16th degree of accuracy. Bees can distinguish between patterns as long as they are sufficiently different in amount of brokenness. Bees cannot distinguish between the shapes in the top row, nor between those in the bottom row. But they can distinguish those in the top from those in the bottom. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Vision and Color Sense Bees are red blind, and visualize this color as a light shade of Grey or Black. Bee Color vision is shifted to the to the shorter wavelengths giving them vision into the Ultra Violet range. Bees are particularly sensitive to blue, yellow and blue-green and can detect light intensity only 1/20 as well as humans. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Vision and Color Sense The bees ability to see into the Ultra Violet region allows them to see special patterns on flowers that can direct bees to the nectar sources. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Smell & Taste How do they do it? The Antenna is extremely important to the honey bee, providing the means of smell, touch and taste. Bees perceive smell much the same way as we do, except olfactory receptors are on the antennae of the insect. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Smell & Taste Each Antenna consist of 12 segments. The first segment is the longest and it is followed by an elbow. (Johnston’s Organ) The exoskeleton of each antenna is completely covered with feather like hairs, pore plates, pits, pegs, and other structures that perceive stimuli. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Smell & Taste Nature has created the honey-bee with taste organs insensitive to sweetness. Bees use only flowers that have a 40% - 75% nectar sugar content because it will meet her nutritional value. Honey Bees sweetness detection as compared to other species: 1. Butterfly 3. Man 2. Fish 4. Honey-Bee Each colony has their own odor and is distinguishable by bees, and is the social cement that holds the hive together. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Smell & Taste The honey bee society can not function without effective communications. Dance notwithstanding, most honey bee communications occur by use of smell and taste. The bee has the capability to select odor communication clues over dance language information. If several kinds of plants are in bloom at the same time, those with the most and sweetest nectar causes the liveliest dances. (Species Diversity Preference) www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Smell & Taste Smell receptors are general and others may receive very specific chemicals odors of food or pheromones. The antenna receptors have been tested and can detect over 700 floral scents. The tongue (Glossa) has many taste, smell, and touch sense organs. Bees have an innate preference for sweet citrus-like smelling monoterpenes. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Touch & Hearing Touch sense is achieved by Mechanoreceptors located on the antenna, mouth parts, and on the exoskeleton of the Honey Bee. These Mechanoreceptors number in the millions and most are invisible except under a microscope. They can be very general, such as body hairs for touch, or very specific such as Proprioreceptors, that provide information of the relative position of parts of the body. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Touch & Hearing Bees use touch information to detect Gravity, and use their gravity detection ability to transform the suns angle into a magnetic angle within their dark hive. Bees also measure distance by walking, which they use in measuring the internal dimensions of a potential cavity for a new site, or during comb building. Flying bees have not been shown to respond to airborne sounds, but bees on comb respond to very loud sounds. Bees are extremely sensitive to any hive vibration. (Queens Piping by placing the thorax against the comb.) www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Orientation Honey bees are able to communicate distance, source smell, taste, profitability of the source, and even direction using the waggle dance. The dance shows complexities of the honey bee to talk to each other abstractly. The dance does have it’s limitations. Bees cannot communicate to foragers whether to search in the trees, or at ground level for forage, or even a favorable flight path, but they do exchange odor clues that are on the body. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Orientation Absolute distance however, is not important to the bee. All that matters is that she can remember the perceived distance in a certain direction. They use landmarks such as lakes, trees, etc. These land marks will take precedence over the position of the sun. The bees change the suns optical angle outside the hive to a gravity orientation inside the hive. If the food source is directly toward the sun, the straight of the wiggle dance run is upward away from the gravity. If the comb is placed in a horizontal position, the dance portion will point directly to the food source. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Distance Communications Orientation Honey bees have different dialects between the various races in the distance communication dances, but the directional information is conveyed in the same manner. Distance Communications Race of Bees Round Sickle Wagtail Italian 0 - 6 6 – 8 34 – 36 Caucasian 0 - 10 10 35 German 0 - 20 20 64 – 66 Carniolan 0 - 80 None 80 - 90 Distance in Meters www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Orientation The straight portion is always performed with the bee orienting her body at the same position relative to gravity on the vertical comb. The orientation of the waggle axis relative to gravity specifies the azimuth direction of the food source, relative to the direction of the sun. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Orientation Bees measure distance by energy expended in flight. They convey the distance information on energy expenditure rather than in a linear measure. Flight conditions like a strong headwind or tailwind are automatically taken into account. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Orientation The length of the waggle run increases with the distance flown to reach the food source www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Mental Capacity Time Awareness Bees some how can measure the time segment and translate it into distance. In memory experiments, bees retain scent information for at least five days but quickly forget visual clues. Newest discoveries is that bees have the ability to detect magnetic and electrical fields. Bees use it to align their parallel beeswax combs. How they detect and use electrical field information is poorly understood. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Mental Capacity Time Awareness Bees are able to make measurements by walking inside the hive. It is amazing to be able to measure bee space, and comb building dimensions. Honey bees prefer to use all their sense in combinations and simultaneously to perceive their environment. Bees are able to account for the movement of the sun by using their internal clocks. A bee can remember and separate up to nine feeding appointments per day. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Mental Capacity Time Awareness The sense of time is not well understood in bees, but they can accurately measure the timing of the waggle dance. Their internal clock is accurate to within 15 minutes and since flowers typically release nectar through the course of the day bees turn up at the same location at exactly the right time every day.. Bees remember their experience of their terrain from previous flights. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Mental Capacity Time Awareness Remarkably, if bees are imprisoned on their way back from a foraging trip, they accurately compensate for the passage of time in their waggle dance when returning to the hive. www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Eat Fermented Honey Responsibly! Don’t Fly Drunk! www.OwensBeeCompany.com

Thank You ! www.OwensBeeCompany.com