The wisdom of the hive :: the social physiology of honey bee colonies /
This book describes and illustrates the results of more than fifteen years of elegant experimental studies conducted by the author to investigate how a colony of bees is organized to gather its resources. The results of his research - including studies of the shaking signal, tremble dance, and waggl...
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge, Mass. :
Harvard University Press,
1995.
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | This book describes and illustrates the results of more than fifteen years of elegant experimental studies conducted by the author to investigate how a colony of bees is organized to gather its resources. The results of his research - including studies of the shaking signal, tremble dance, and waggle dance - offer the clearest, most detailed picture available of how a highly integrated animal society works. |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (xiv, 295 pages) : illustrations (some color) |
Format: | Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 277-289) and index. |
ISBN: | 9780674043404 0674043405 |
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245 | 1 | 4 | |a The wisdom of the hive : |b the social physiology of honey bee colonies / |c Thomas D. Seeley. |
260 | |a Cambridge, Mass. : |b Harvard University Press, |c 1995. | ||
300 | |a 1 online resource (xiv, 295 pages) : |b illustrations (some color) | ||
336 | |a text |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |a computer |b c |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |a online resource |b cr |2 rdacarrier | ||
347 | |a data file | ||
504 | |a Includes bibliographical references (pages 277-289) and index. | ||
505 | 0 | |a Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Part I. Introduction -- 1. The issues. 1.1. The evolution of biological organization ; 1.2. The honey bee colony as a unit of function ; 1.3. Analytic scheme -- 2. The honey bee colony. 2.1. Worker anatomy and physiology ; 2.2. Worker life history ; 2.3. Nest architecture ; 2.4. The annual cycle of a colony ; 2.5. Communication about food sources ; 2.6. Food collection and honey production -- 3. The foraging abilities of a colony. 3.1. Exploiting food sources over a vast region around the hive ; 3.2. Surveying the countryside for rich food sources ; 3.3. Responding quickly to valuable discoveries ; 3.4. Choosing among food sources ; 3.5. Adjusting selectivity in relation to forage abundance ; 3.6. Regulating comb construction ; 3.7. Regulating pollen collection ; 3.8. Regulating water collection ; Summary -- Part II. Experimental Analysis -- 4. Methods and equipment. 4.1. The observation hive ; 4.2. The hut for the observation hive ; 4.3. The bees ; 4.4. Sugar water feeders ; 4.5. Labeling bees ; 4.6. Measuring the total number of bees visiting a feeder ; 4.7. Observing bees of known age ; 4.8. Recording the behavior of bees in the hive ; 4.9. The scale hive ; 4.10. Censusing a colony -- 5. Allocation of labor among forage sites. How a colony acquires information about food sources. 5.1. Which bees gather the information? ; 5.2. Which information is shared? ; 5.3. Where information is shared inside the hive ; 5.4. The coding of information about profitability ; 5.5. The bees' criterion of profitability ; 5.6. The relationship between nectar-source profitability and waggle dance duration ; 5.7. The adaptive tuning of dance thresholds ; 5.8. How a forager determines the profitability of a nectar source ; Summary ; How a colony acts on information about food sources. 5.9. Employed foragers versus unemployed foragers ; 5.10. How unemployed foragers read the information on the dance floor ; 5.11. How employed foragers respond to information about food-source profitability ; 5.12. The correct distribution of foragers among nectar sources ; 5.13. Cross inhibition between forager groups ; 5.14. The pattern and effectiveness of forager allocation among nectar sources ; Summary -- 6. Coordination of nectar collecting and nectar processing. How a colony adjusts its collecting rate with respect to the external nectar supply. 6.1. Rapid increase in the number of nectar foragers via the waggle dance ; 6.2. Increase in the number of bees committed to foraging via the shaking signal ; How a colony adjusts its processing rate with respect to its collecting rate. 6.3. Rapid increase in the number of nectar processors via the tremble dance ; 6.4. Which bees become additional food storers? ; Summary -- 7. Regulation of comb construction. 7.1. Which bees build comb? ; 7.2. How comb builders know when to build comb ; 7.3. How the quantity of empty comb affects nectar foraging ; Summary -- 8. Regulation of pollen collection. 8.1. The inverse relationship between pollen collection and the pollen reserve ; 8.2. How pollen foragers adjust their colony's rate of pollen collection ; 8.3. How pollen foragers receive feedback from the pollen reserves ; 8.4. The mechanism of indirect feedback ; 8.5. Why the feedback flows indirectly ; 8.6. How a colony's foragers are allocated between pollen and nectar collection ; Summary -- 9. Regulation of water collection. 9.1. The importance of variable demand ; 9.2. Patterns of water and nectar collection during hive overheating ; 9.3. Which bees collect water? ; 9.4. What stimulates bees to begin collecting water? ; 9.5. What tells water collectors to continue or stop their activity? ; 9.6. Why does a water collector's unloading experience change when her colony's need for water changes? ; Summary -- Part III. Overview -- 10. The main features of colony organization. 10.1. Division of labor based on temporary specializations ; 10.2. Absence of physical connections between workers ; 10.3. Diverse pathways of information flow ; 10.4. High economy of communication ; 10.5. Numerous mechanisms of negative feedback ; 10.6. Coordination without central planning -- 11. Enduring lessons from the hive -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index. | |
520 | |a This book describes and illustrates the results of more than fifteen years of elegant experimental studies conducted by the author to investigate how a colony of bees is organized to gather its resources. The results of his research - including studies of the shaking signal, tremble dance, and waggle dance - offer the clearest, most detailed picture available of how a highly integrated animal society works. | ||
588 | 0 | |a Print version record. | |
506 | |3 Use copy |f Restrictions unspecified |2 star |5 MiAaHDL | ||
533 | |a Electronic reproduction. |b [Place of publication not identified] : |c HathiTrust Digital Library, |d 2011. |5 MiAaHDL | ||
538 | |a Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. |u http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 |5 MiAaHDL | ||
583 | 1 | |a digitized |c 2011 |h HathiTrust Digital Library |l committed to preserve |2 pda |5 MiAaHDL | |
546 | |a English. | ||
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758 | |i has work: |a The wisdom of the hive (Text) |1 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCH6Q8dc4C8KDMPpdyRcxCP |4 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork | ||
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contents | Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Part I. Introduction -- 1. The issues. 1.1. The evolution of biological organization ; 1.2. The honey bee colony as a unit of function ; 1.3. Analytic scheme -- 2. The honey bee colony. 2.1. Worker anatomy and physiology ; 2.2. Worker life history ; 2.3. Nest architecture ; 2.4. The annual cycle of a colony ; 2.5. Communication about food sources ; 2.6. Food collection and honey production -- 3. The foraging abilities of a colony. 3.1. Exploiting food sources over a vast region around the hive ; 3.2. Surveying the countryside for rich food sources ; 3.3. Responding quickly to valuable discoveries ; 3.4. Choosing among food sources ; 3.5. Adjusting selectivity in relation to forage abundance ; 3.6. Regulating comb construction ; 3.7. Regulating pollen collection ; 3.8. Regulating water collection ; Summary -- Part II. Experimental Analysis -- 4. Methods and equipment. 4.1. The observation hive ; 4.2. The hut for the observation hive ; 4.3. The bees ; 4.4. Sugar water feeders ; 4.5. Labeling bees ; 4.6. Measuring the total number of bees visiting a feeder ; 4.7. Observing bees of known age ; 4.8. Recording the behavior of bees in the hive ; 4.9. The scale hive ; 4.10. Censusing a colony -- 5. Allocation of labor among forage sites. How a colony acquires information about food sources. 5.1. Which bees gather the information? ; 5.2. Which information is shared? ; 5.3. Where information is shared inside the hive ; 5.4. The coding of information about profitability ; 5.5. The bees' criterion of profitability ; 5.6. The relationship between nectar-source profitability and waggle dance duration ; 5.7. The adaptive tuning of dance thresholds ; 5.8. How a forager determines the profitability of a nectar source ; Summary ; How a colony acts on information about food sources. 5.9. Employed foragers versus unemployed foragers ; 5.10. How unemployed foragers read the information on the dance floor ; 5.11. How employed foragers respond to information about food-source profitability ; 5.12. The correct distribution of foragers among nectar sources ; 5.13. Cross inhibition between forager groups ; 5.14. The pattern and effectiveness of forager allocation among nectar sources ; Summary -- 6. Coordination of nectar collecting and nectar processing. How a colony adjusts its collecting rate with respect to the external nectar supply. 6.1. Rapid increase in the number of nectar foragers via the waggle dance ; 6.2. Increase in the number of bees committed to foraging via the shaking signal ; How a colony adjusts its processing rate with respect to its collecting rate. 6.3. Rapid increase in the number of nectar processors via the tremble dance ; 6.4. Which bees become additional food storers? ; Summary -- 7. Regulation of comb construction. 7.1. Which bees build comb? ; 7.2. How comb builders know when to build comb ; 7.3. How the quantity of empty comb affects nectar foraging ; Summary -- 8. Regulation of pollen collection. 8.1. The inverse relationship between pollen collection and the pollen reserve ; 8.2. How pollen foragers adjust their colony's rate of pollen collection ; 8.3. How pollen foragers receive feedback from the pollen reserves ; 8.4. The mechanism of indirect feedback ; 8.5. Why the feedback flows indirectly ; 8.6. How a colony's foragers are allocated between pollen and nectar collection ; Summary -- 9. Regulation of water collection. 9.1. The importance of variable demand ; 9.2. Patterns of water and nectar collection during hive overheating ; 9.3. Which bees collect water? ; 9.4. What stimulates bees to begin collecting water? ; 9.5. What tells water collectors to continue or stop their activity? ; 9.6. Why does a water collector's unloading experience change when her colony's need for water changes? ; Summary -- Part III. Overview -- 10. The main features of colony organization. 10.1. Division of labor based on temporary specializations ; 10.2. Absence of physical connections between workers ; 10.3. Diverse pathways of information flow ; 10.4. High economy of communication ; 10.5. Numerous mechanisms of negative feedback ; 10.6. Coordination without central planning -- 11. Enduring lessons from the hive -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index. |
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discipline | Biologie Sprachwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft |
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Introduction -- 1. The issues. 1.1. The evolution of biological organization ; 1.2. The honey bee colony as a unit of function ; 1.3. Analytic scheme -- 2. The honey bee colony. 2.1. Worker anatomy and physiology ; 2.2. Worker life history ; 2.3. Nest architecture ; 2.4. The annual cycle of a colony ; 2.5. Communication about food sources ; 2.6. Food collection and honey production -- 3. The foraging abilities of a colony. 3.1. Exploiting food sources over a vast region around the hive ; 3.2. Surveying the countryside for rich food sources ; 3.3. Responding quickly to valuable discoveries ; 3.4. Choosing among food sources ; 3.5. Adjusting selectivity in relation to forage abundance ; 3.6. Regulating comb construction ; 3.7. Regulating pollen collection ; 3.8. Regulating water collection ; Summary -- Part II. Experimental Analysis -- 4. Methods and equipment. 4.1. The observation hive ; 4.2. The hut for the observation hive ; 4.3. The bees ; 4.4. Sugar water feeders ; 4.5. Labeling bees ; 4.6. Measuring the total number of bees visiting a feeder ; 4.7. Observing bees of known age ; 4.8. Recording the behavior of bees in the hive ; 4.9. The scale hive ; 4.10. Censusing a colony -- 5. Allocation of labor among forage sites. How a colony acquires information about food sources. 5.1. Which bees gather the information? ; 5.2. Which information is shared? ; 5.3. Where information is shared inside the hive ; 5.4. The coding of information about profitability ; 5.5. The bees' criterion of profitability ; 5.6. The relationship between nectar-source profitability and waggle dance duration ; 5.7. The adaptive tuning of dance thresholds ; 5.8. How a forager determines the profitability of a nectar source ; Summary ; How a colony acts on information about food sources. 5.9. Employed foragers versus unemployed foragers ; 5.10. How unemployed foragers read the information on the dance floor ; 5.11. How employed foragers respond to information about food-source profitability ; 5.12. The correct distribution of foragers among nectar sources ; 5.13. Cross inhibition between forager groups ; 5.14. The pattern and effectiveness of forager allocation among nectar sources ; Summary -- 6. Coordination of nectar collecting and nectar processing. How a colony adjusts its collecting rate with respect to the external nectar supply. 6.1. Rapid increase in the number of nectar foragers via the waggle dance ; 6.2. Increase in the number of bees committed to foraging via the shaking signal ; How a colony adjusts its processing rate with respect to its collecting rate. 6.3. Rapid increase in the number of nectar processors via the tremble dance ; 6.4. Which bees become additional food storers? ; Summary -- 7. Regulation of comb construction. 7.1. Which bees build comb? ; 7.2. How comb builders know when to build comb ; 7.3. How the quantity of empty comb affects nectar foraging ; Summary -- 8. Regulation of pollen collection. 8.1. The inverse relationship between pollen collection and the pollen reserve ; 8.2. How pollen foragers adjust their colony's rate of pollen collection ; 8.3. How pollen foragers receive feedback from the pollen reserves ; 8.4. The mechanism of indirect feedback ; 8.5. Why the feedback flows indirectly ; 8.6. How a colony's foragers are allocated between pollen and nectar collection ; Summary -- 9. Regulation of water collection. 9.1. The importance of variable demand ; 9.2. Patterns of water and nectar collection during hive overheating ; 9.3. Which bees collect water? ; 9.4. What stimulates bees to begin collecting water? ; 9.5. What tells water collectors to continue or stop their activity? ; 9.6. Why does a water collector's unloading experience change when her colony's need for water changes? ; Summary -- Part III. Overview -- 10. The main features of colony organization. 10.1. Division of labor based on temporary specializations ; 10.2. Absence of physical connections between workers ; 10.3. Diverse pathways of information flow ; 10.4. High economy of communication ; 10.5. Numerous mechanisms of negative feedback ; 10.6. Coordination without central planning -- 11. Enduring lessons from the hive -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">This book describes and illustrates the results of more than fifteen years of elegant experimental studies conducted by the author to investigate how a colony of bees is organized to gather its resources. 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genre_facet | Domestic fiction Domestic fiction. |
id | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn456408074 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-11-27T13:16:53Z |
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spelling | Seeley, Thomas D., author. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n88651926 The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / Thomas D. Seeley. Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1995. 1 online resource (xiv, 295 pages) : illustrations (some color) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier data file Includes bibliographical references (pages 277-289) and index. Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Part I. Introduction -- 1. The issues. 1.1. The evolution of biological organization ; 1.2. The honey bee colony as a unit of function ; 1.3. Analytic scheme -- 2. The honey bee colony. 2.1. Worker anatomy and physiology ; 2.2. Worker life history ; 2.3. Nest architecture ; 2.4. The annual cycle of a colony ; 2.5. Communication about food sources ; 2.6. Food collection and honey production -- 3. The foraging abilities of a colony. 3.1. Exploiting food sources over a vast region around the hive ; 3.2. Surveying the countryside for rich food sources ; 3.3. Responding quickly to valuable discoveries ; 3.4. Choosing among food sources ; 3.5. Adjusting selectivity in relation to forage abundance ; 3.6. Regulating comb construction ; 3.7. Regulating pollen collection ; 3.8. Regulating water collection ; Summary -- Part II. Experimental Analysis -- 4. Methods and equipment. 4.1. The observation hive ; 4.2. The hut for the observation hive ; 4.3. The bees ; 4.4. Sugar water feeders ; 4.5. Labeling bees ; 4.6. Measuring the total number of bees visiting a feeder ; 4.7. Observing bees of known age ; 4.8. Recording the behavior of bees in the hive ; 4.9. The scale hive ; 4.10. Censusing a colony -- 5. Allocation of labor among forage sites. How a colony acquires information about food sources. 5.1. Which bees gather the information? ; 5.2. Which information is shared? ; 5.3. Where information is shared inside the hive ; 5.4. The coding of information about profitability ; 5.5. The bees' criterion of profitability ; 5.6. The relationship between nectar-source profitability and waggle dance duration ; 5.7. The adaptive tuning of dance thresholds ; 5.8. How a forager determines the profitability of a nectar source ; Summary ; How a colony acts on information about food sources. 5.9. Employed foragers versus unemployed foragers ; 5.10. How unemployed foragers read the information on the dance floor ; 5.11. How employed foragers respond to information about food-source profitability ; 5.12. The correct distribution of foragers among nectar sources ; 5.13. Cross inhibition between forager groups ; 5.14. The pattern and effectiveness of forager allocation among nectar sources ; Summary -- 6. Coordination of nectar collecting and nectar processing. How a colony adjusts its collecting rate with respect to the external nectar supply. 6.1. Rapid increase in the number of nectar foragers via the waggle dance ; 6.2. Increase in the number of bees committed to foraging via the shaking signal ; How a colony adjusts its processing rate with respect to its collecting rate. 6.3. Rapid increase in the number of nectar processors via the tremble dance ; 6.4. Which bees become additional food storers? ; Summary -- 7. Regulation of comb construction. 7.1. Which bees build comb? ; 7.2. How comb builders know when to build comb ; 7.3. How the quantity of empty comb affects nectar foraging ; Summary -- 8. Regulation of pollen collection. 8.1. The inverse relationship between pollen collection and the pollen reserve ; 8.2. How pollen foragers adjust their colony's rate of pollen collection ; 8.3. How pollen foragers receive feedback from the pollen reserves ; 8.4. The mechanism of indirect feedback ; 8.5. Why the feedback flows indirectly ; 8.6. How a colony's foragers are allocated between pollen and nectar collection ; Summary -- 9. Regulation of water collection. 9.1. The importance of variable demand ; 9.2. Patterns of water and nectar collection during hive overheating ; 9.3. Which bees collect water? ; 9.4. What stimulates bees to begin collecting water? ; 9.5. What tells water collectors to continue or stop their activity? ; 9.6. Why does a water collector's unloading experience change when her colony's need for water changes? ; Summary -- Part III. Overview -- 10. The main features of colony organization. 10.1. Division of labor based on temporary specializations ; 10.2. Absence of physical connections between workers ; 10.3. Diverse pathways of information flow ; 10.4. High economy of communication ; 10.5. Numerous mechanisms of negative feedback ; 10.6. Coordination without central planning -- 11. Enduring lessons from the hive -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index. This book describes and illustrates the results of more than fifteen years of elegant experimental studies conducted by the author to investigate how a colony of bees is organized to gather its resources. The results of his research - including studies of the shaking signal, tremble dance, and waggle dance - offer the clearest, most detailed picture available of how a highly integrated animal society works. Print version record. Use copy Restrictions unspecified star MiAaHDL Electronic reproduction. [Place of publication not identified] : HathiTrust Digital Library, 2011. MiAaHDL Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL digitized 2011 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL English. Honeybee Food. Honeybee Behavior. Abeille Alimentation. Abeille Murs et comportement. SCIENCE General. bisacsh Honeybee Behavior fast Honeybee Food fast Bees Behavior, Animal Domestic fiction fast Domestic fiction. lcgft http://id.loc.gov/authorities/genreForms/gf2014026295 has work: The wisdom of the hive (Text) https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCH6Q8dc4C8KDMPpdyRcxCP https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork Print version: Seeley, Thomas D. Wisdom of the hive. Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1995 0674953762 9780674953765 (DLC) 95003645 (OCoLC)32015827 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=282791 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Seeley, Thomas D. The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Part I. Introduction -- 1. The issues. 1.1. The evolution of biological organization ; 1.2. The honey bee colony as a unit of function ; 1.3. Analytic scheme -- 2. The honey bee colony. 2.1. Worker anatomy and physiology ; 2.2. Worker life history ; 2.3. Nest architecture ; 2.4. The annual cycle of a colony ; 2.5. Communication about food sources ; 2.6. Food collection and honey production -- 3. The foraging abilities of a colony. 3.1. Exploiting food sources over a vast region around the hive ; 3.2. Surveying the countryside for rich food sources ; 3.3. Responding quickly to valuable discoveries ; 3.4. Choosing among food sources ; 3.5. Adjusting selectivity in relation to forage abundance ; 3.6. Regulating comb construction ; 3.7. Regulating pollen collection ; 3.8. Regulating water collection ; Summary -- Part II. Experimental Analysis -- 4. Methods and equipment. 4.1. The observation hive ; 4.2. The hut for the observation hive ; 4.3. The bees ; 4.4. Sugar water feeders ; 4.5. Labeling bees ; 4.6. Measuring the total number of bees visiting a feeder ; 4.7. Observing bees of known age ; 4.8. Recording the behavior of bees in the hive ; 4.9. The scale hive ; 4.10. Censusing a colony -- 5. Allocation of labor among forage sites. How a colony acquires information about food sources. 5.1. Which bees gather the information? ; 5.2. Which information is shared? ; 5.3. Where information is shared inside the hive ; 5.4. The coding of information about profitability ; 5.5. The bees' criterion of profitability ; 5.6. The relationship between nectar-source profitability and waggle dance duration ; 5.7. The adaptive tuning of dance thresholds ; 5.8. How a forager determines the profitability of a nectar source ; Summary ; How a colony acts on information about food sources. 5.9. Employed foragers versus unemployed foragers ; 5.10. How unemployed foragers read the information on the dance floor ; 5.11. How employed foragers respond to information about food-source profitability ; 5.12. The correct distribution of foragers among nectar sources ; 5.13. Cross inhibition between forager groups ; 5.14. The pattern and effectiveness of forager allocation among nectar sources ; Summary -- 6. Coordination of nectar collecting and nectar processing. How a colony adjusts its collecting rate with respect to the external nectar supply. 6.1. Rapid increase in the number of nectar foragers via the waggle dance ; 6.2. Increase in the number of bees committed to foraging via the shaking signal ; How a colony adjusts its processing rate with respect to its collecting rate. 6.3. Rapid increase in the number of nectar processors via the tremble dance ; 6.4. Which bees become additional food storers? ; Summary -- 7. Regulation of comb construction. 7.1. Which bees build comb? ; 7.2. How comb builders know when to build comb ; 7.3. How the quantity of empty comb affects nectar foraging ; Summary -- 8. Regulation of pollen collection. 8.1. The inverse relationship between pollen collection and the pollen reserve ; 8.2. How pollen foragers adjust their colony's rate of pollen collection ; 8.3. How pollen foragers receive feedback from the pollen reserves ; 8.4. The mechanism of indirect feedback ; 8.5. Why the feedback flows indirectly ; 8.6. How a colony's foragers are allocated between pollen and nectar collection ; Summary -- 9. Regulation of water collection. 9.1. The importance of variable demand ; 9.2. Patterns of water and nectar collection during hive overheating ; 9.3. Which bees collect water? ; 9.4. What stimulates bees to begin collecting water? ; 9.5. What tells water collectors to continue or stop their activity? ; 9.6. Why does a water collector's unloading experience change when her colony's need for water changes? ; Summary -- Part III. Overview -- 10. The main features of colony organization. 10.1. Division of labor based on temporary specializations ; 10.2. Absence of physical connections between workers ; 10.3. Diverse pathways of information flow ; 10.4. High economy of communication ; 10.5. Numerous mechanisms of negative feedback ; 10.6. Coordination without central planning -- 11. Enduring lessons from the hive -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index. Honeybee Food. Honeybee Behavior. Abeille Alimentation. Abeille Murs et comportement. SCIENCE General. bisacsh Honeybee Behavior fast Honeybee Food fast Bees Behavior, Animal |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/genreForms/gf2014026295 |
title | The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / |
title_auth | The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / |
title_exact_search | The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / |
title_full | The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / Thomas D. Seeley. |
title_fullStr | The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / Thomas D. Seeley. |
title_full_unstemmed | The wisdom of the hive : the social physiology of honey bee colonies / Thomas D. Seeley. |
title_short | The wisdom of the hive : |
title_sort | wisdom of the hive the social physiology of honey bee colonies |
title_sub | the social physiology of honey bee colonies / |
topic | Honeybee Food. Honeybee Behavior. Abeille Alimentation. Abeille Murs et comportement. SCIENCE General. bisacsh Honeybee Behavior fast Honeybee Food fast Bees Behavior, Animal |
topic_facet | Honeybee Food. Honeybee Behavior. Abeille Alimentation. Abeille Murs et comportement. SCIENCE General. Honeybee Behavior Honeybee Food Bees Behavior, Animal Domestic fiction Domestic fiction. |
url | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=282791 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT seeleythomasd thewisdomofthehivethesocialphysiologyofhoneybeecolonies AT seeleythomasd wisdomofthehivethesocialphysiologyofhoneybeecolonies |