INVESTIGADORES
D'ADAMO Paola
artículos
Título:
Foraging behaviour in Vespula germanica wasps re-locating
Autor/es:
D'ADAMO, PAOLA; LOZADA, MARIANA
Revista:
New Zealand Journal of Zoology
Editorial:
THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF NEW ZEALAND
Referencias:
Año: 2008 vol. 35 p. 9 - 17
ISSN:
0301-4223
Resumen:
We analysed landmark guidance in Vespula germanica wasps when re locating a food source. Individuals were trained to feed from a dish surrounded by four  colored cylinders (experimental landmark array). Each wasp was allowed to feed either  one or three times from the array. At the testing phase, food was removed and the array  was displaced 60 cm away from the original feeding site. Different treatments were  evaluated by presenting either four, two or one of the cylinders that originally formed  the array. When wasps returned looking for food, we recorded the number of visits to  the displaced array or to the original feeding site for each treatment. Wasp guidance was  affected by increasing amounts of mismatch (by displacement and reduction of  landmarks). Moreover, wasps visited the original feeding site and the landmark array  significantly more often when trained with three feeding trials than when trained with  only one.Vespula germanica wasps when re locating a food source. Individuals were trained to feed from a dish surrounded by four  colored cylinders (experimental landmark array). Each wasp was allowed to feed either  one or three times from the array. At the testing phase, food was removed and the array  was displaced 60 cm away from the original feeding site. Different treatments were  evaluated by presenting either four, two or one of the cylinders that originally formed  the array. When wasps returned looking for food, we recorded the number of visits to  the displaced array or to the original feeding site for each treatment. Wasp guidance was  affected by increasing amounts of mismatch (by displacement and reduction of  landmarks). Moreover, wasps visited the original feeding site and the landmark array  significantly more often when trained with three feeding trials than when trained with  only one.