Publication | Open Access
Self-organized defensive behavior in honeybees
61
Citations
14
References
1999
Year
Insect Social BehaviorPattern FormationBehavioral SciencesEngineeringPitchfork BifurcationSocial BehaviorEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyInterspecific Behavioral InteractionSpatial DistributionSocial InsectArtificial BeeSymbiosisDefensive BehaviorPublic HealthBiotic InteractionAnimal BehaviorSelf-organized Defensive Behavior
We investigated the defensive behavior of honeybees under controlled experimental conditions. During an attack on two identical targets, the spatial distribution of stings varied as a function of the total number of stings, evincing the classic "pitchfork bifurcation" phenomenon of nonlinear dynamics. The experimental results support a model of defensive behavior based on a self-organizing mechanism. The model helps to explain several of the characteristic features of the honeybee defensive response: (i) the ability of the colony to localize and focus its attack, (ii) the strong variability between different hives in the intensity of attack, as well as (iii) the variability observed within the same hive, and (iv) the ability of the colony to amplify small differences between the targets.
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