Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6259786 Behavioural Brain Research 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Left-right antennal asymmetry has been reported in honeybees. We studied primitive social bees to investigate the evolutionary origins of the asymmetry. Three species of Australian native, stingless bees (Trigona carbonaria, Trigona hockingsi and Austroplebeia australis) were trained to discriminate two odours, lemon (+)/vanilla (−), using the Proboscis Extension Reflex (PER). Recall of the olfactory memory at 1 h after training was better when the odour was presented on the right than on the left side of the bee. In contrast, recall at 5 h after training was better when the odour was presented on the left than on the right side of the bee. An additional experiment with T. hockingsi bees, fed with sugar 1 h before recall and tested at 5 h, produced similar results, showing that the shift in lateralized recall was due to the lapse of time per se and not to changes in motivation to feed. Stingless bees show the same laterality as honeybees, suggesting that asymmetry evolved prior to the evolutionary divergence of these species.

► We investigated the evolutionary origins of the lateralization in bees. ► We tested primitive social bees: three species of Australian native, stingless bees. ► Bees were tested for memory recall under unilateral stimulus presentation. ► We found that primitive stingless bees show the same laterality as honeybees. ► Asymmetry is likely to have evolved before evolutionary divergence of these species.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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