Forum for Science, Industry and Business
Sponsored by:     Siemens     3M    n-tv
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Life Sciences Content

How Bees Smell

next article
12.02.2013

Odors play a major role in the life of honeybees. Accordingly, their nervous system needs to be highly capable of processing olfactory information. Indeed, the animals have the ability to process the relevant data in parallel as researchers of the Biocenter have been able to demonstrate for the first time.

 


The olfactory system of the honey bee: The two olfactory pathways leading from the antennal lobe to higher-order structures are highlighted in green and purple. The bee uses them for parallel processing of olfactory information.

Graphics Martin Brill and Wolfgang Rößler

When foraging for nectar- and pollen-rich flowers, honeybees (Apis mellifera) have to respond quickly to sensory input. When their olfactory receptors on the antennae catch traces of a scent in flight, the animals need to determine very quickly which type of scent it is and where it originates from.

This is the only way to make the right decision about the flower in question. In other respects too, the bee is highly dependent on the capacity to identify and classify odors in its everyday life: The animals communicate with each other via odors, differentiate between friend and foe on the basis of the typical "hive odor" and rely on odor trails for orientation.

In order to implement fast and reliable processing of such olfactory information, the honeybees have developed special structures and extremely efficient processing methods. The structural design of this olfactory system has long been known in minute detail; previously, however, there was a need for clarification on the flow of information within these structures. This has changed now: Together with colleagues from the Free University of Berlin (FU Berlin), University of Würzburg scientists have found answers to previously unanswered questions.

Parallel data processing

"We were able to establish that honeybees process olfactory information in parallel in the brain. Different parameters of the same information are transmitted via separate pathways in the animals, which increases the processing speed significantly," says Professor Wolfgang Rößler, the head of the Department for Zoology II at the University of Würzburg. Together with his doctoral student, Martin Brill, he conducted the decisive experiments during the past two years.

Parallel processing: This type of processing is already known by scientists to be used in other sensory systems, such as vision. The information arriving at the retina of the eye is first divided into different components – color, contrast, movement, location – and then transmitted to the brain for further processing via separate channels. Two such channels are known to exist in bees as well, but they are located in the olfactory system in their case. Previously, it was uncertain whether these are actually used for parallel processing. "It would have been just as conceivable that these structures only differ in that they are responsible for different odors," Rößler notes.

The olfactory system of the bee

The honeybee possesses about 60,000 olfactory receptors, located on its two antennae. From there, the information is transferred to the so-called antennal lobe, where primary processing takes place in about 160 spheroidal structures, the olfactory glomeruli. Via two neural tracts, consisting of numerous individual nerve cells, the data are then sent to higher-order structures – the mushroom body and the lateral horn – to be further processed. The Würzburg scientists focused their research on these two neural tracts.

"In earlier studies, the activity could only be measured in one of these neural tracts at a time," Martin Brill explains. Thus, it was impossible to decide whether the information is processed in parallel. Therefore, the scientists first needed to develop an apparatus for taking synchronous measurements in both tracts, the so-called multi-unit recording technology. Special amplifiers were required to read the signals and some special software to control the processes.

The experiment

It was therefore "quite an effort" to get started on the studies, as Brill remembers. The preliminary work alone stretched over about two years. As soon as the technology was ready, however, the experiments proceeded to the satisfaction of the scientists. They collected a treasure trove of data within a very short period of time. They were assisted in the evaluation of the data by the computational neuroscientist Martin Nawrot (FU Berlin / Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Berlin).

In their experiments, Rößler and Brill presented a diverse range of odors to the bees: from typical floral scents, to pheromones – i.e. messenger substances that the animals use for communication – to social odors from the everyday environment of a honeybee: Beeswax, honey, abandoned combs. During odor exposure, they measured the activity of numerous nerve cells in both neural tracts, using extremely fine probes, namely wire electrodes made by the scientists themselves, corresponding in diameter (15µm) to just one fifth of one strand of human hair.

The results of the studies

"Our studies have shown that both neural tracts exhibit broadly overlapping activity patterns. This indicates that the information is processed in parallel," Wolfgang Rößler summarizes the results. The assumption that the tracts might be responsible for different odor types has thus been refuted.

However, the scientists also found some differences between the tracts: One transmits information in a very general way – each single nerve cell that it is composed of responds to a diverse range of odors. The other one works in a rather more specific way: In this tract, individual nerve cells are responsible for only one odor or just a few odors. On this pathway, the transmission takes a bit longer – albeit only in the millisecond range.

The "what" channel and the "when" channel: This is how the scientists named the two neural pathways. One pathway tells the bee which odor it currently perceives while the other pathway provides the respective temporal information. From this information, the animal can derive with precision where the odor originates.

Further studies necessary

According to Rößler, the processing principle might be particularly well suited for conducting a very fast analysis of odor mixtures. This is of special importance to the bees, since each bee hive has its own distinctive odor. The smell is caused by an assortment of about 25 substances on the surface area of the bees' body, differing from colony to colony in its special mixing ratio. Whether parallel processing actually enables bees to identify odor mixtures particularly well is still subject to further examination and the respective hypothesis needs to be tested in future, Rößler explains.

In any case, Rößler warns against excessive euphoria: The "olfactory code" has not yet been cracked in our study. However, we have achieved an important step towards this goal.

The project was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) under the nationwide priority program "Integrative Analysis of Olfaction" (SPP 1392).

Parallel Processing via a Dual Olfactory Pathway in the Honeybee. Martin F. Brill, Tobias Rosenbaum, Isabelle Reus, Christoph J. Kleineidam, Martin P. Nawrot and Wolfgang Rössler. Journal of Neuroscience. 6. February 2013. DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4268-12.2013

Contact person

Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Rößler, T: +49 (0) 931 31-84306, email: roessler@biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de

Robert Emmerich | Source: Uni Würzburg
Further information: www.uni-wuerzburg.de

next article

More articles from Life Sciences:

nachricht The secret of DNA methylation
19.06.2013 | Université de Genève

nachricht Study Shows How the Nanog Protein Promotes Growth of Head and Neck Cancer
19.06.2013 | Ohio State University Medical Center

All articles from Life Sciences >>>
The most recent press releases about innovation >>>

Overview of the latest five Focus news of the innovations-report:
In the focus: Siemens and LanzaTech partner to transform steel mill off-gases into bioethanol

- Biological fermentation process converts CO and CO2 into bioethanol and platform chemicals

- Process uses energy contained in steel plant off-gases

- Ten-year co-operation to develop and market integrated environmental solutions for the steel industry worldwide

Siemens Metals Technologies and LanzaTech have signed a ten-year co-operation agreement to develop and market integrated environmental solutions for the steel industry worldwide. The collaboration will utilize the ground-breaking fermentation technology developed by LanzaTech transforming carbon-rich off-gases generated by the steel industry into low carbon bioethanol and other platform chemicals. ...

In the focus: Printing Tiny Batteries

Novel application of 3D printing could enable the development of miniaturized medical implants, compact electronics, tiny robots, and more

3D printing can now be used to print lithium-ion microbatteries the size of a grain of sand. The printed microbatteries could supply electricity to tiny devices in fields from medicine to communications, including many that have lingered on lab benches for lack of a battery small enough to fit the ...

In the focus: EADCO and PC-Aero present at the Paris Airshow for the first time the full electric 6 seats ....

... two engines aircraft project “Elektro E6”.

The countdown has been started for opening the gates again for the worldwide leading aviation and space event in Le Bourget, Paris from June 17th - 23rd, 2013.

EADCO & PC-Aero will present at the Paris Air Show in Hall H4 booth F-7 their new future aircraft and innovative project: ...

In the focus: Ceramic Transformer Integrates Power Supply Unit

Siemens scientists have developed new kinds of ceramics in which they can embed transformers.

The new development allows power supply transformers to be reduced to one fifth of their current size so that the normally separate switched-mode power supply units of light-emitting diodes can be integrated into the module's heat sink.

The new technology was developed in cooperation with industrial and research partners who ...

In the focus: Nanoparticle Opens the Door to Clean-Energy Alternatives

Cheaper clean-energy technologies could be made possible thanks to a new discovery.

Led by Raymond Schaak, a professor of chemistry at Penn State University, research team members have found that an important chemical reaction that generates hydrogen from water is effectively triggered -- or catalyzed -- by a nanoparticle composed of nickel and phosphorus, two inexpensive elements that are abundant on Earth. ...

All Focus news of the innovations-report >>>

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

The secret of DNA methylation

19.06.2013 | Life Sciences

Rice blast research reveals details on how a fungus invades plants

19.06.2013 | Agricultural and Forestry Science

Gel or whitening? Consumer choice and product organization

19.06.2013 | Studies and Analyses

VideoLinks
B2B-VideoLinks
More VideoLinks >>>

Event News

International Symposium on Morphogenesis

14.06.2013 | Event News

ESMT Annual Forum: CEOs discuss “The Future of Jobs” with international academics and policymakers

13.06.2013 | Event News

Invitation: Mathematics for Industry and Society in the French Embassy Berlin, 04. - 05.07.2013

10.06.2013 | Event News