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Erschienen in: Neural Computing and Applications 2/2012

01.03.2012 | Swam Intelligence

Swarm-intelligent foraging in honeybees: benefits and costs of task-partitioning and environmental fluctuations

verfasst von: Thomas Schmickl, Ronald Thenius, Karl Crailsheim

Erschienen in: Neural Computing and Applications | Ausgabe 2/2012

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Abstract

For honeybee colonies, it is crucial to collect nectar in an efficient way. Empiric experiments showed that the process of decision making, which allows the colony to select the optimal nectar source, is based on individual decisions. These decisions are made by returning nectar foragers, which alter their dancing behaviours based on the nectar source’s quality and based on the experienced search time for a receiver bee. Nectar receivers, which represent a shared limited resource for foragers, can modulate the foraging decisions performed by the colony. We investigated the interplay between foragers and receivers by using a multi-agent simulation. Therefore, we implemented agents which are capable of a limited set of behaviours and which spend energy according to their behaviour. In simulation experiments, we tested colonies with various receiver-to-forager ratios and measured colony-level results like the emerging foraging patterns and the colony’s net honey gain. We show that the number of receivers prominently regulates the foraging workforce. All tested environmental fluctuations are predicted to cause energetic costs for the colony. Task-partitioning additionally influences the colony’s decision-making concerning the question whether or not the colony sticks to a nectar source after environmental fluctuations.

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Metadaten
Titel
Swarm-intelligent foraging in honeybees: benefits and costs of task-partitioning and environmental fluctuations
verfasst von
Thomas Schmickl
Ronald Thenius
Karl Crailsheim
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2012
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Neural Computing and Applications / Ausgabe 2/2012
Print ISSN: 0941-0643
Elektronische ISSN: 1433-3058
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00521-010-0357-9

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