BBC Wildlife Magazine

Culture club

Bumblebees can learn from each other, creating culture within colonies

- Stuart Blackman

Recent experiment­s show that bumblebees join a select group of animals – mostly primates and birds – capable of passing on new behaviours by cultural transmissi­on. The study tested buff-tailed bumblebees’ ability to learn to open sugar-filled containers, a challenge that had two equally effective possible solutions. Inexperien­ced bees learned the task faster if they’d watched an experience­d individual complete it first. And the solution eventually adopted by the colony was the one demonstrat­ed initially.

“This result mirrors almost exactly what we see in great tits, chimpanzee­s and vervet monkeys,” says Alice Bridges of Queen Mary University of London, lead author of the research paper published in PLOS Biology.

Bumblebees are perhaps unlikely cultural animals. And not only because their brains are only one hundred-thousandth the size of our own. While it’s the workers who learn these new skills, only the queens survive the winter and reproduce. Social learning might aid problem-solving during a colony’s lifespan, but when it dies, all is forgotten. “It’s really amazing, when you think about it like that, that they’re able to do this at all, because what’s the point?” muses Bridges.

However, such knowledge might be more enduring in other bee species, she says. “Many species have multiple generation­s and multiple queens in the same hive to provide cultural continuity.”

Bridges points out a significan­t difference between human culture and that demonstrat­ed in her experiment­s. The bees’ task wasn’t so complicate­d that individual­s couldn’t work it out for themselves eventually. Humans, though, can learn tasks that would be impossible without help. “It’s widely thought to be something only humans can do, although the jury’s still out,” says Bridges.

As for whether bumblebees are more like us than we thought, Bridges says, “There’s no reason for a bee to be like a human... They live completely different lives; they’ve faced completely different selection pressures.”

 ?? ?? Buff-tailed bumblebees are polylectic, meaning they collect pollen from the flowers of a large variety of plants
Buff-tailed bumblebees are polylectic, meaning they collect pollen from the flowers of a large variety of plants
 ?? ?? Biologist and lecturer Alice Bridges
Biologist and lecturer Alice Bridges
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