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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Comparative Physiology Année : 2008

Behavioral studies on tarsal gustation in honeybees: sucrose responsiveness and sucrose-mediated olfactory conditioning.

Résumé

Although the forelegs of honeybees are one of their main gustatory appendages, tarsal gustation in bees has never been systematically studied. To provide a more extensive account on honeybee tarsal gustation, we performed a series of behavioral experiments aimed at characterizing (1) tarsal sucrose sensitivity under different experimental conditions and (2) the capacity of tarsal sucrose stimulation to support olfactory conditioning. We quantified the proboscis extension reflex to tarsal sucrose stimulation and to odors paired with tarsal sucrose stimulation, respectively. Our experiments show that tarsal sucrose sensitivity is lower than antennal sucrose sensitivity and can be increased by starvation time. In contrast, antennae amputation decreases tarsal sucrose sensitivity. Furthermore, we show that tarsal sucrose stimulation can support olfactory learning and memory even if the acquisition level reached is relatively low (40%).

Dates et versions

hal-00318748 , version 1 (04-09-2008)

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Citer

Maria de Brito Sanchez, Chun Chen, Jianjun Li, Fanglin Liu, Monique Gauthier, et al.. Behavioral studies on tarsal gustation in honeybees: sucrose responsiveness and sucrose-mediated olfactory conditioning.. Journal of Comparative Physiology, 2008, epub ahead of print. ⟨10.1007/s00359-008-0357-8⟩. ⟨hal-00318748⟩
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