Yorkshire Post

Bees can identify flowers by pattern

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BUMBLEBEES CAN identify different flowers by the invisible patterns of scent across their surface, research has found.

The work, led by scientists from the University of Bristol and Queen Mary University of London, revealed how bees learn the patterns and distinguis­h between flowers.

Flowers have different patterns of scent across their surface, with visiting bees finding that the edge of the petals may smell different to the centre. This is in addition to patterns on flowers – such as lines pointing to the centre – that help guide bees and other pollinator­s towards the nectar.

Research journal published in the

shows how bumblebees can tell flowers apart by how scent is arranged on their surface. The study found that once bees learnt a pattern of how scent was arranged on a flower, they preferred to visit unscented flowers with a similar arrangemen­t of visual spots on their surface.

Dr Dave Lawson, of the University of Bristol’s School of Biological Sciences, described this as being the equivalent of a human putting their hand into a bag to feel the shape of an object and then picking out a picture of it.

“Being able to mentally switch between different senses is something we take for granted, but it’s exciting that a small animal like a bee is also able to do something this abstract,” he said.

The study is part of research at the University of Bristol into ways that flowers communicat­e with their pollinator­s.

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