Robot spider vs. bee
Learning to survive a dangerous enemy has its costs
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Thursday, September 4th, 2008

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SPONGE ATTACKVIDEO | A new bee-testing device mimics a close call with a dangerous camouflaged spider. A bee that ignores the yellow-on-yellow spider shape and buzzes close to sip a sugar droplet gets a remotely triggered squeeze from electronic sponges (clockwise starting at top left).Ings It can be a robot-eat-bee world out there, but bumblebees can
learn to outwit electronics that mimic lurking spiders.
Getting wise to the dangers of camouflaged predators,
however, has a cost for the bees, says Lars Chittka of Queen Mary, University of London. Predator-savvy bees get jumpy, slowing
down on the nectar-collection job, he and a colleague report in an upcoming Current Biology.
And in the end, some of the bumblebees get a little paranoid,
increasingly shying away from safe flowers. “They’re behaving as if they’re starting
to see ghosts,” Chittka says.
Bees may not have particularly big brains, but they manage some
sophisticated behavior. They make good subjects for studying how an animal’s learning
capacity affects how it makes a living, he says.
To see what bees can learn about the tricks of their
predators, Ings and Chittka focused on crab spiders, which lurk in flowers to
hunt pollinators and can change color over the course of several days to match
petals. That is, as long as the petals are yellow, white or, for some crab
spider species, pink.
In the real world, the big, hard-bodied bumblebees with
plenty of flight power represent a considerable challenge for crab spiders.
Most of the time, the bee escapes from the attack and has a chance to learn,
Ings says.

REAL LIFEA crab spider attacks a bee, offering a real-world version of the predation recently mimicked by a robotic device. Full StoryIngs For simulating a near-death experience with a Misumena vatia crab spider, Ings and
engineer consultants took inspiration from the pincers that brake a bicycle
wheel. Ings worked out an electric switch with a little pair of arms that he
could trigger remotely to close on a visiting bee. He cushioned the jaws with
strips of household cleaning sponges, and for the full treatment, positioned a life-size
plastic crab spider in a plausible color just above the pincers.
“The robotic spider is fantastic,” says another crab-spider
researcher, Marie Herberstein of Macquarie
University in Sydney, Australia.
This invention offers much better experimental control than handheld squeezing
tools researchers’ used in earlier experiments, she says.
Ings and Chittka trained the bumblebees to buzz around an
array of 16 floral-yellow rectangles, each equipped with a pair of pincers and
a hole between the pincers’ jaws for sipping droplets of sugar water.
For the learning tests, the researchers positioned spider
models, either a high-contrast white or camouflaged yellow, on four randomly
selected yellow rectangles. Each bee saw only one kind of spider. Ings immobilized
any bee that landed between the sponge jaws of these infested rectangles.
Surprisingly, the camouflage didn’t make any difference in
the number of visits bees needed to learn to avoid spiders, Chittka says. He
sees an evolutionary arms race between the two adversaries, and “now the
advantage is to the bees,” he says.
Camouflage did have its effects though. The researchers
discovered that bees exposed only to camouflaged spiders slowed down, as if sacrificing
speed for accuracy in investigating a flower. These bees hovered in front of a rectangle
an extra few tenths of a second. But bees that had only seen the
white-on-yellow spiders made their decisions faster.
Camouflage also raised the risks of getting spooked and
fleeing a rectangle that actually had no spider. These false alarms showed up
most dramatically when the researchers tested bees 24 hours after training.
The rise in false-alarm rates after a night’s sleep
parallels a phenomenon known from studies of human memory. “Memories don’t just
fade, but change with time,” Chittka says. Traumatic memories can even
intensify. Researchers working with
nonhuman animals often haven’t taken into account the many ways memory can
morph after an experience, Chittka says.
Interesting as the robot is, it doesn’t mimic spider
movement or allow bees to check out its profile from both sides. “This opens
the door to a whole range of questions about what really goes on in the field,”
says Jérôme Casas of the University of
Tours in France.
Found in: Life
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