
PLANTS are not the silent types they lead us to believe. As well as sending out chemical signals to warn others of an approaching predator, it seems they may even communicate with would-be pollinators via electrical signals.
As bees fly through the air, they 鈥 like all insects 鈥 acquire a positive electric charge. Flowers, on the other hand, are grounded and so have a negative charge.
To see whether bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) are able to make use of these signals, Daniel Robert at the University of Bristol, UK, and colleagues made artificial flowers. These looked and smelled identical but some were filled with sucrose and others with quinine, a substance bees don鈥檛 feed on.
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At first, the bees visited these flowers at random. But when a 30-volt static electric field 鈥 typical for a 30-centimetre-tall flower 鈥 was applied to the blooms filled with sucrose, the team found that the bees could detect the field from a few centimetres away and visited the charged flowers 81 per cent of the time. The bees reverted to random behaviour when the electricity was switched off (Science, ).
The result suggests the bees used the electric field as an indicator of the presence of food, much like they use colour and scent. In the absence of a charge, they foraged at random, showing that they hadn鈥檛 just learned the location of the sucrose flowers. 鈥淭hat was the first hint that had us jumping up and down,鈥 says Robert.
Next, the team looked at whether the bees were influenced by the shape of an electric field, which is determined by a flower鈥檚 shape. By varying the shape of the field around artificial flowers that had the same charge, they showed that bees preferred visiting flowers with fields in concentric rings like a bullseye: these were visited 70 per cent of the time compared to only 30 per cent for flowers with a solid circular field.
The researchers speculate that flowers evolved different shaped fields in the competition to attract pollinators. 鈥淔lowers are a ruthless expression of evolution,鈥 says Robert. 鈥淭hey exploit bees.鈥
They showed that when a bee visits a flower it transfers some of its positive charge, incrementally changing the flower鈥檚 field. With repeated visits, the charge may alter significantly, which could tell other bees that the nectar supply has been diminished. 鈥淓lectricity is a way to change cues very quickly: 鈥業 look perfect, I smell nice, but my electrics aren鈥檛 quite right 鈥 come back later!鈥,鈥 he says.
Robert Raguso at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, agrees that the changing electric field may signal that nectar is running low. 鈥淔lower colours and scents change slowly, but nectar or pollen can be removed quickly by a pollinator, creating a situation in which the just-visited flower still advertises, dishonestly,鈥 he says. The rapid change in electric charge would reduce those out-of-date cues.
This article appeared in print under the headline 鈥淓lectric plant auras guide foraging bees鈥