Bees have irrational biases when choosing which flowers to feed on

Bees have irrational biases when choosing which flowers to feed on
Bee on a flower (Photo: Keith McDuffee/flickr/cc)

Just like people confronted with a sea of options at the grocery store, bees foraging in meadows encounter many different flowers at once. They must decide which ones to visit for food, but it isn’t always a straightforward choice.

Flowers offer two types of food: nectar and pollen, which can vary in important ways. Nectar, for instance, can fluctuate in concentration, volume, refill rate and accessibility. It also contains secondary metabolites, such as caffeine and nicotine, which can be either disagreeable or appealing, depending on how much is present. Similarly, pollen contains proteins and lipids, which affect nutritional quality.

When confronted with these choices, you’d think bees would always pick the flowers with the most accessible, highest-quality nectar and pollen. But they don’t. Instead, just like human grocery shoppers, their decisions about which flowers to visit depend on their recent experience with similar flowers and what other flowers are available.

I find these behaviors fascinating. My research looks at how animals make daily choices – especially when looking for food. It turns out that bees and other pollinators make the same kinds of irrational “shopping” decisions humans make.

Predictably irrational

Humans are sometimes illogical. For instance, someone who wins $5 on a scratch ticket immediately after winning $1 on one will be thrilled – whereas that same person winning $5 on a ticket might be disappointed if they’re coming off a $10 win. Even though the outcome is the same, perception changes depending on what came before.

Perceptions are also at play when people assess product labels. For instance, a person may expect an expensive bottle of wine with a fancy French label to be better than a cheap, generic-looking one. But if there’s a mismatch between how good something is and how good someone expects it to be, they may feel disproportionately disappointed or delighted.

Humans are also very sensitive to the context of their choice. For example, people are more likely to pay a higher price for a television when a smaller, more expensive one is also available.

These irrational behaviors are so predictable, companies have devised clever ways to exploit these tendencies when pricing and packaging goods, creating commercials, stocking shelves, and designing websites and apps. Even outside of a consumer setting, these behaviors are so common that they influence how politicians design public policy and attempt to influence voting behavior.

Like minds

Research shows bumblebees and humans share many of these behaviors. A 2005 study found bees evaluate the quality of nectar relative to their most recent feeding experience: Bees trained to visit a feeder with medium-quality nectar accepted it readily, whereas bees trained to visit a feeder with high-quality nectar often rejected medium-quality nectar.

My team and I wanted to explore whether floral traits such as scents, colors and patterns might serve as product labels for bees. In the lab, we trained groups of bees to associate certain artificial flower colors with high-quality “nectar” – actually a sugar solution we could manipulate.

Laboratory set up showing a rectangular screened box with blue plastic disks on one end. On the other end, there is a small hole in the screen accommodating a tube which leads to a smaller black box.

The bumblebee colony, right, is attached by tunnel to the foraging arena, left, where colored discs serve as artificial flowers. Claire Hemingway, CC BY-SA

For example, we trained one group to associate blue flowers with high-quality nectar. We then offered that group medium-quality nectar in either blue or yellow flowers.

We found the bees were more willing to accept the medium-quality nectar from yellow flowers than they were from blue. Their expectations mattered.

In another recent experiment, we gave bumblebees a choice between two equally attractive flowers – one high in sugar concentration but slower to refill and one quick to refill but containing less sugar. We measured their preference between the two, which was similar.

Pink, blue and yellow plastic discs are attached to a black background.

At the center of each artificial flower is a tube the bee enters to access the sugar solution. Claire Hemingway, CC BY-SA

We then expanded the choice by including a third flower that was even lower in sugar concentration or even slower to refill. We found that the presence of the new low-reward flower made the intermediate one appear relatively better.

These results are intriguing and suggest, for both bees and other animals, available choices may guide foraging decisions.

Potential uses

Understanding these behaviors in bumblebees and other pollinators may have important consequences for people. Honeybees and bumblebees are used commercially to support billions of dollars of crop production annually.

If bees visit certain flowers more in the presence of other flowers, farmers could use this tendency strategically. Just as stores stock shelves to present unattractive options alongside attractive ones, farmers could plant certain flower species in or near crop plants to increase visitation to the target crops.The Conversation

Claire Therese Hemingway, Assistant Professor of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

For customer support contact support@rawstory.com. Report typos and corrections to corrections@rawstory.com.

The white glove treatment being extended to convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell at a minimum security prison in Texas should prompt an investigation into the facility’s warden, suggested MSNBC’s Ken Dilanian on Monday morning.

Reacting to an NBC report and a letter from Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) that revealed that the former associate of both pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump is being given privileges that sound more like an extended resort stay and less like criminal detention, the justice and intelligence correspondent admitted he had never seen anything like it.

With Politico reporting on Monday that Maxwell is hoping to get Trump to commute her sentence, Dilanian was prompted by “Morning Joe” co-host Jonathan Lemire with, “It's just sort of shocking to again, read these details. We know so much of how the Trump administration has handled the Epstein matter and handled Ghislaine Maxwell has raised eyebrows, to put it mildly. But to get such special treatment, no wonder so many, frankly, on both sides of the aisle, particularly Congressman Raskin here, really sounding the alarm.”

“This letter says that she is being waited on hand and foot in the minimum security prison camp where she is right now in Bryan, Texas,” Dilanian began.“And let's remember she was moved to this prison camp after she sat down for a bizarre and unusual interview with the Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanche, Donald Trump's former defense lawyer, where he debriefed her about the Epstein case, even though he had no background in that case.”

“Now we're learning from House Democrats, we're talking to whistleblowers and looking at documents that she is getting all sorts of special privileges in this facility, courtesy of the warden — the warden is making this happen, according to these revelations,” he continued."

"She's getting, according to this letter, access to special meals delivered to her cell, as you said, access to a service dog, a puppy that other inmates don't don't have access to,” he detailed. “She gets access to a special exercise area, private exercise area, according to this letter, and visitors, relatives and family members are given special treatment whisked into the facility outside of the normal parameters.”

“According to this letter, they are allowed to bring in computers, which Raskin said risks her having access, unmonitored access, to the outside world, which is something that federal inmates don't get,” he reported. “So this is just stunning, and we haven't had a chance to try to reach out to the federal prison system during the shutdown.

"They're hard to reach right now, but I'll be interested to see what they say, what the warden says, if anything, in response to this, because these are very serious allegations of what looks like, frankly, corruption uncovered here by House Democrats.”

- YouTube youtu.be

THANKS FOR SUBSCRIBING! ALL ADS REMOVED!

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced a new series of military strikes Monday that killed at least six people as part of the Trump administration’s purported efforts to combat drug trafficking, sparking outrage over what critics have dubbed the administration’s “extrajudicial executions.”

At the direction of President Donlad Trump, the U.S. military conducted strikes on two sea vessels in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, vessels that Hegseth alleged were “operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations.”

“Both strikes were conducted in international waters and 3 male narco-terrorists were aboard each vessel. All 6 were killed. No U.S. forces were harmed,” Hegseth wrote Monday in a social media post on X. “Under President Trump, we are protecting the homeland and killing these cartel terrorists who wish to harm our country and its people.”

The strikes were just the latest in a series of strikes in the Caribbean and Pacific Ocean targeting suspected drug traffickers, which to date have killed at least 75 people. The operations have drawn scrutiny from across the political spectrum, including from a majority of Democratic lawmakers, as well as a growing number of Republicans, with Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) labeling the strikes as illegal “extrajudicial killings.”

With Hegseth’s latest announcement, the scrutiny only intensified.

“Yay!!! More extra-judicial international executions by the United States,” wrote X user “Artie Vandelay,” an advocate for gun law reform who’s amassed nearly 11,000 followers. “This totally can’t come back to bite us.”

Hegseth has been accused of perpetuating illegal assassinations for approving the targeted strikes, which have denied those targeted any form of due process, strikes that have been accompanied by the Trump administration’s military escalations with Venezuela, which has seen the deployment of an aircraft carrier strikes group Trinidad, which lies just off of Venezuela’s coast.

Those accusations intensified Monday as the death toll from the Trump administration’s strikes grows closer to eclipsing 100.

“Thanks for 2 more pieces of evidence in your inevitable tribunal,” wrote X user “Bill DeMayo,” a political commentator who describes themselves as a “member of the resistance” who has amassed more than 12,000 followers. “Murderer.”


President Donald Trump seems to be realizing that "there is no future for him" within the Republican Party, and that could make his next "desperate play" to stay relevant his most dangerous one yet, according to one analyst.

For more than a decade, Trump has faced little dissent from within the Republican ranks in Congress, David Rothkopf, a columnist for The Daily Beast, argued during an episode of "The Daily Beast Podcast" that aired on Sunday. Now, he's facing a cadre of critics from within his party, such as Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Thomas Massie (R-KY), over his handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files and his signature tariffs.

That resistance, Rothkopf argued, is like "staring death in the face" for Trump.

"His political mortality is right around the corner," Rothkopf said. "And there is going to come a moment, and I don't know when that moment is, but there is going to come a moment where the majority of people in the Republican Party say, 'He's a lame duck, who's next?'"

This is going to be devastating because what Trump cares about more than anything else, even more than money, is being relevant, and he's going to make this desperate play to say, 'No, I'm still relevant,'" he continued. "'You remember Joe Biden, right? Nobody remembers Joe Biden. Joe Biden was president earlier this year."

Rothkopf said Trump dangling running for a third term is an example of how desperately Trump is chasing relevancy.

"It's just a desperate attempt to cling to relevance," Rothkopf said. "It's the policy equivalent of a trophy wife. It makes him feel younger."

{{ post.roar_specific_data.api_data.analytics }}