大黄蜂
田蚕
觅食
昆虫飞行
膜翅目
翼
航程(航空)
生物
蜜蜂科
生态学
持续时间(音乐)
动物
传粉者
航空航天工程
物理
花粉
工程类
授粉
声学
作者
Milena Gilgenreiner,Christoph Kurze
标识
DOI:10.1098/rspb.2024.1001
摘要
Flight plays a crucial role in the fitness of insect pollinators, such as bumblebees. Despite their relatively large body size compared with their wings, bumblebees can fly under difficult ambient conditions, such as cooler temperatures. While their body size is often positively linked to their foraging range and flight ability, the influence of age remains less explored. Here, we studied the flight performance (distance, duration and speed) of ageing bumblebee workers using tethered flight mills. Additionally, we measured their intertegular distance and dry mass as proxies for their body size. We found that the flight distance and duration were predominantly influenced by age, challenging assumptions that age does not play a key role in foraging and task allocation. From the age of 7 to 14 days, flight distance and duration increased sixfold and fivefold, respectively. Conversely, the body size primarily impacted the maximum and average flight speed of workers. Our findings indicate that age substantially influences the flight distance and duration in bumblebee workers, affecting foraging performance and potentially altering task allocation strategies. This underscores the importance of considering individual age and physiological changes alongside body size/mass in experiments involving bumblebee workers.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI