Honey Bees on Cocaine 'Dance' When Food Is Found

phr

Bluelighter
Joined
May 25, 2004
Messages
36,649
Location
St. Charles, IL
Honey Bees on Cocaine 'Dance' When Food Is Found
Washington Post
12.25.08



THURSDAY, Dec. 25 (HealthDay News) -- Give a foraging honey bee cocaine, and it will dance to reap and share the rewards of success, a new study says.

The finding, published in this month's issue of the The Journal of Experimental Biology, supports the theory of a reward system in an insect's brain and altruism in the bee world.

Cocaine affects the transit of octopamine, a neurochemical that's abundant in the brains of foraging honey bees. A previous study showed octopamine causes the bees to increase their dancing even when it is not warranted. Octopamine affects the reward systems in mammals, including humans, by influencing the chemically related dopamine system. Dopamine plays a role in the human ability to predict and respond to pleasure or reward.

Foraging honey bees perform a "round" or "waggle" dance in the hive when they have found high quality nectar or pollen when the hive is in need of it. The dance directs the other bees to find the food. Such an altruistic act, in people, excites the pleasure centers of the brain.
ad_icon

When treated with cocaine, the foraging honey bees are more likely to dance regardless of the quality of or need for food, the study authors reported.

"It's not like they're gyrating wildly on the dance floor out of control," study leader Gene Robinson, an entomology and neuroscience professor at University of Illinois, said in a news release issued by the school. "This is a patterned response. It gives distance information, location information. That information is intact."

It's just that bees are communicating about a food source they normally would ignore because of poor quality or lack of need. The cocaine causes the bees to dance more -- an altruistic behavior, which supports the researchers belief of a reward system in the insect brain.

The bees on cocaine do not dance every time they go foraging, and when they do dance, their movements are not distorted.

"This study provides strong support for the idea that bees have a reward system, that it's been co-opted, and it's now involved in a social behavior, which motivates them to tell their hive mates about the food that they've found," Robinson said.

In a separate experiment, the researchers found that withholding cocaine from honey bees on the drug caused them to experience withdrawal symptoms. This, along with the other findings, may mean honey bees would be good subjects for substance-abuse research, he said.

Link!
 
It's just that bees are communicating about a food source they normally would ignore because of poor quality or lack of need. The cocaine causes the bees to dance more -- an altruistic behavior, which supports the researchers belief of a reward system in the insect brain.
Ha. Guess they have something in common with annoying human coke users; they won't shut the fuck up. =D
 
"It's not like they're gyrating wildly on the dance floor out of control," study leader Gene Robinson, an entomology and neuroscience professor at University of Illinois, said in a news release issued by the school. "This is a patterned response. It gives distance information, location information. That information is intact."

Damn, these bees have mad skills. It's funny how they defend the bee's dancing behavior and they go on to say how normal they behave under the influence of coke. I want to know how the hell they gave the bees coke? Maybe they were sprayed with a cocaine solution which forced them to inhale some of it. I'd like to read the full report on this one. It's interesting to know that even bees have a pleasure/reward system that has to be somewhat like humans. Bees are sophisticated for sure.
 
Damn, these bees have mad skills. It's funny how they defend the bee's dancing behavior and they go on to say how normal they behave under the influence of coke. I want to know how the hell they gave the bees coke? Maybe they were sprayed with a cocaine solution which forced them to inhale some of it. I'd like to read the full report on this one. It's interesting to know that even bees have a pleasure/reward system that has to be somewhat like humans. Bees are sophisticated for sure.

I'm pretty interested in how they administered it as well. I have a feeling I will be snuggling up to google later. :)
 
I'm pretty interested in how they administered it as well. I have a feeling I will be snuggling up to google later. :)

Saw this reported on local TV news station. From what I could see, they had the coke in solution, and were placing droplets on the bees back. The drug was absorbed through the skin.

Seeing all that pharmy grade coke in syringes, made me drool though :/
 
I've heard reports that many honey bee colonies in the USA have abandoned their nests during the past few years and the bee keepers are at a loss to explain it. I wonder if they all went south of border in search of newly discovered cocaine.
 
I can't believe we actually spend money on these kinds of experiments. Administering cocaine to bees is crazy.
 
I've heard reports that many honey bee colonies in the USA have abandoned their nests during the past few years and the bee keepers are at a loss to explain it. I wonder if they all went south of border in search of newly discovered cocaine.

i litterally lol-ed.

maybe the gov't stole them to do more drug tests on them.
then when they went to set them free, the bee's wouldn't go because they're addicted.8o
 
Dancing eh? I watched a huge documentary on honey bee's and they did some experiments and they are said that they think now that the dancing actually has nothing to do with the location of nectar. But maybe they were wrong ...i dunno. This documentary was fairly new. I saw it on the discovery channel like last year some time.


In the end of the article it said that taking the cocaine away from them would cause W/D symptoms... I wonder what the bee's were doing diff to get them to come up with that idea?
 
Top