The role of colour patterns for the recognition of flowers by bees (dataset)
Hempel De Ibarra, N; Holtze, S; Bäucker, C; et al.Sprau, P; Vorobyev, M
Date: 22 July 2022
Dataset
Publisher
University of Exeter
Publisher DOI
Related links
Abstract
Bees discriminate between many different colours of flower petals, but it is not well understood
how they perceive and learn patterns frequently found in flowers with colourful structures. We used
multispectral imaging to explore chromatic cues in concentric flower patterns as they are seen
through the low-resolution eyes of a ...
Bees discriminate between many different colours of flower petals, but it is not well understood
how they perceive and learn patterns frequently found in flowers with colourful structures. We used
multispectral imaging to explore chromatic cues in concentric flower patterns as they are seen
through the low-resolution eyes of a honeybee. We find a diversity of colour combinations, which
suggests that plants could exploit the sensory capabilities of pollinators, like bees, that learn colours
easily. A consistent feature is that the surround of the pattern has a stronger chromatic contrast to
the foliage background than the centre. This could potentially serve as a feature filter for the fast
identification of colours in a scene as flower objects during a forager’s approach. We also trained
and tested bees with three types of concentric patterns. Bees recognised and discriminated them
accurately in most tests relying flexibly on both chromatic and spatial cues. Only in few situations,
depending on the training stimulus, chromatic cues dominated and pattern cues were ignored. The
variability of floral designs and the bees’ flexibility in recalling colour and spatial information
suggest a role for colour vision in pattern processing. Implications for the signalling strategies of
flowers are discussed.
Psychology - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0