Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Bees create mental maps to reach home

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Jun, 2014 01:27 PM
    We have long wondered at the complex navigation abilities of the bees who use the sun as a compass. But bees do memorise a mental map too, like humans, despite their much smaller brain size, new research reveals adding a whole new dimension to complex bee-navigation abilities that have long fascinated scientists.
     
    "The surprise comes for many people that such a tiny little brain is able to form such a rich memory described as a cognitive map," said Randolf Menzel, a neurobiologist at Free University of Berlin.
     
    The research demonstrates that bees can find their way back to their hives without relying solely on the sun.
     
    Instead, they seem to use a "cognitive map" that is made up of memorised landscape snapshots that direct them home.
     
    The cognitive map used by mammals is thought to originate in the brain’s hippocampus.
     
    Humans employ such maps on a daily basis.
     
    Even in a windowless office, many people can point towards their home.
     
    "They can point to their home generally even though they cannot see it, even along a path through a wall that they have not travelled," said Fred Dyer, a behavioural biologist at Michigan State University in East Lansing.
     
    The study argues that bees can do something similar, albeit on a much more rudimentary level.
     
    The authors tested their theory by interfering with the bees' sun compass.
     
    They shifted the bees’ internal biological clock by inducing sleep using a general anaesthetic.
     
    Once the bees had woken up, Menzel and his colleagues tracked them along a path of several hundred metres from a release site to their hive using harmonic radar.
     
    When the bees were released from a site with which they were unfamiliar, they initially travelled in the wrong direction, flying away from their hive instead of towards it.
     
    With their internal clocks shifted, the bees still thought that it was morning -- so they went the wrong way based on their sense of where the sun should be.
     
    "But then they redirect, ignoring the information from the sun. They refer to something else which is a cognitive map," Menzel said.
     
    The research was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Revealed: How you chose your husband

    Revealed: How you chose your husband
    What sounds better: a pizza that is 90 percent fat free or a pizza with 10 percent fat? You would rush for the pizza with first message although the choice is the same. The same principle applies when you choose your mate!

    Revealed: How you chose your husband

    Guess what, your nose can be used to sniff out opposite sex

    Guess what, your nose can be used to sniff out opposite sex
    You are not aware of this at the conscious level but your nose is busy doing its job - sniffing out that feminine smell from secretions her body is oozing near you in marketplace, office or mall!

    Guess what, your nose can be used to sniff out opposite sex

    Know how Egyptians moved giant rocks to build pyramids

    Know how Egyptians moved giant rocks to build pyramids
    It is time to rewrite history books. The mystery of how Egyptians moved huge stones to build pyramids has been unlocked, finally.

    Know how Egyptians moved giant rocks to build pyramids

    Sick wives face high divorce risk: Study

    Sick wives face high divorce risk: Study
    The vows of togetherness often fall apart among couple when the wife - but not the husband - becomes seriously ill, a significant study has revealed.

    Sick wives face high divorce risk: Study

    This font would let your kid learn faster

    This font would let your kid learn faster
    This dyslexic-friendly font - derived from Comic Sans font - is shaped similarly to the way kids naturally write. 

    This font would let your kid learn faster

    Facebook's healthy 'move,' acquires fitness app

    Facebook's healthy 'move,' acquires fitness app
    Social networking site Facebook has acquired Helsinki-based fitness tracking app Moves in an undisclosed deal.

    Facebook's healthy 'move,' acquires fitness app