# Learning modifies attention during bumblebee visual search

**Authors:** Théo Robert, Karolina Tarapata, Vivek Nityananda

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00265-024-03432-z · Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology · 2024-02-06

## TL;DR

Bumblebees adjust their visual attention to flowers based on the quality of rewards they learn, focusing more on rewarding flowers and less on non-flower areas.

## Contribution

This study shows how learning modifies bumblebee visual search behavior during foraging, linking reward quality to attention allocation.

## Key findings

- Learning increases attention to rewarding flowers and decreases it to non-flower regions for high-quality rewards.
- Prior experience with lower rewards increases attention to higher-reward flowers compared to non-flower areas.
- Reward quality influences how focused bees are on flowers, with higher rewards leading to more focused foraging.

## Abstract

The role of visual search during bee foraging is relatively understudied compared to the choices made by bees. As bees learn about rewards, we predicted that visual search would be modified to prioritise rewarding flowers. To test this, we ran an experiment testing how bee search differs in the initial and later part of training as they learn about flowers with either higher- or lower-quality rewards. We then ran an experiment to see how this prior training with reward influences their search on a subsequent task with different flowers. We used the time spent inspecting flowers as a measure of attention and found that learning increased attention to rewards and away from unrewarding flowers. Higher quality rewards led to decreased attention to non-flower regions, but lower quality rewards did not. Prior experience of lower rewards also led to more attention to higher rewards compared to unrewarding flowers and non-flower regions. Our results suggest that flowers would elicit differences in bee search behaviour depending on the sugar content of their nectar. They also demonstrate the utility of studying visual search and have important implications for understanding the pollination ecology of flowers with different qualities of reward.

Studies investigating how foraging bees learn about reward typically focus on the choices made by the bees. How bees deploy attention and visual search during foraging is less well studied. We analysed flight videos to characterise visual search as bees learn which flowers are rewarding. We found that learning increases the focus of bees on flower regions. We also found that the quality of the reward a flower offers influences how much bees search in non-flower areas. This means that a flower with lower reward attracts less focussed foraging compared to one with a higher reward. Since flowers do differ in floral reward, this has important implications for how focussed pollinators will be on different flowers. Our approach of looking at search behaviour and attention thus advances our understanding of the cognitive ecology of pollination.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00265-024-03432-z.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Apis mellifera (bee, species) [taxon 7460]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

2 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10847365/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10847365