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Bees can learn complex, multi-step tasks through social interaction, even if they cannot figure them out on their own. Photo Credit: Michael Hodgins |
In a groundbreaking discovery, bumblebees have been shown to possess a previously unseen level of cognitive sophistication.
A new study, published in Nature, reveals that these bees can learn complex, multi-step tasks through social interaction, even if they cannot figure them out on their own. This challenges the long-held belief that such advanced social learning is unique to humans, and hints at the presence of key elements of cumulative culture in these insects.
Led by Dr Alice Bridges, postdoctoral researcher at the University of Sheffield, the research team designed a two-step puzzle box requiring bumblebees to perform two distinct actions in sequence to access a sweet reward at the end. The temporary reward was eventually taken away, and bees subsequently had to open the whole box before getting the treat.
While individual bees struggled to solve the puzzle when starting from scratch, those allowed to observe a trained "demonstrator" bee readily learned the entire sequence – even the first step – while only getting a reward at the end.