PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Heat and heavy metals are changing the way that bees buzz

2025-07-08
(Press-News.org) Ongoing research into the effect of environmental change on the buzzing of bees reveals that high temperatures and exposure to heavy metals reduces the frequency (and audible pitch) of non-flight wing vibrations, which could have consequences on the effectiveness of bee communication and their role as pollinators.

“People have been long interested in how insect flight muscles work, as these muscles power the most efficient flight systems in nature,” says Dr Charlie Woodrow, a post-doctoral researcher at Uppsala University. “However, many do not know that bees use these muscles for functions other than flight.”

These important non-flight muscle vibrations are used in communication, defence and buzz-pollination. “Buzz pollination is an incredible behaviour whereby a bee will curl its body around the pollen-concealing anthers of some flowers, and contract the flight muscles up to 400 times per second to produce vibrations which shake the pollen loose,” says Dr Woodrow.

“We want to understand how variation in these vibrations affects pollen release, to understand plant reproduction and pollinator behaviour,” says Dr Woodrow. “This inspired us to research how non-flight buzzes differ within and between species, and the drivers affecting these buzzes.”

Dr Woodrow’s experiments were carried out using colonies of buff-tailed bumblebees (Bombus terrestris), a common European species that are well studied. Using accelerometers, Dr Woodrow and his team were able to measure the frequency of the buzz, which corresponds to the audible pitch. “They are super easy to use in the field,” he says. “We press these against the thorax of the bee, or against the flower the bee is visiting, and we can record the vibrations the bee produces.”

Dr Woodrow and his team also coupled the accelerometry with thermal imaging, which shows them how bees deal with the extra heat that they generate when buzzing. “We have also been using high-speed filming to uncover never before seen behaviours,” says Dr Woodrow. “For example, we recently discovered that bees don’t just vibrate on flowers, but they periodically transmit these vibrations to flowers by biting.”

“We have recently found that temperature plays a vital role, much more than was previously appreciated, and this work is currently in review for publication,” says Dr Woodrow. “This has many implications for how we study buzz-pollination, as temperature is not really something that has been considered up to this point.”

As well as increased temperatures, exposure to heavy metals was also shown to reduce the contraction frequencies of the flight muscles during non-flight buzzing, which Dr Woodrow is working on in collaboration with Dr Sarah Scott at Newcastle University, UK. However, the researchers were surprised to find no differences in the effect of temperature on buzzing when the experiments were reproduced in the Arctic compared to those further south, suggesting underlying muscle physiology, rather than local adaptation, may be responsible for determining the properties of a bee’s buzz.

The benefits of understanding the impact of environmental change on a bee’s buzz include unique insights into bee ecology and behaviour, helping to identify the species or regions most at risk, and the improvement of AI-based species detection based on sound recordings. “Perhaps buzzes could even be used as a marker of stress or environmental change,” says Dr Woodrow. “For example, we now know that certain environmental pollutants can affect the buzzes bees produce, so they could even serve as an indicator of ecosystem health.”

“It is important we understand how these changes will affect non-flight buzzes because they are responsible for so many aspects of a bee’s ecology,” says Dr Woodrow. “If these vibrations are disrupted, this could lead to poor communication in the colony, inefficient thermoregulation, or poor resource acquisition for their offspring.”

Perhaps most concerningly for humans and wildlife alike, a reduction in buzz-pollination could have potentially serious consequences for plant reproduction and biodiversity. “For example, buzz-pollination is energetically expensive and causes the bee to generate metabolic heat – therefore if the environment gets too warm, it may simply choose to avoid buzz-pollinated flowers,” says Dr Woodrow.

As well as furthering our understanding of how environmental change may be affecting bee buzzes, there are also applications for robotics and the future safeguarding of pollination services. “We are working towards understanding bee vibrations through micro-robotics, so our results are also going towards developing micro-robots to understand pollen release,” says Dr Woodrow.

This research is being presented at the Society for Experimental Biology Annual Conference in Antwerp, Belgium on the 8th July 2025.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

What’s behind the enormous increase in early-onset gastrointestinal cancers?

2025-07-08
A new paper in BJS, published by Oxford University Press, indicates that early-onset gastrointestinal cancer rates are rising dramatically across the globe. In the United States, the age-standardized rate of colorectal cancer decreased from 66.2 cases per 100,000 people in 1985 to 35.7 cases per 100,000 people in 2018. In contrast, early-onset colorectal cancer has shown a marked increase in both men and women in the United States since the mid-1990s, with the age-adjusted incidence rising from 5.9 cases per 100,000 in 2000 to 8.4 cases per 100,000 in 2017. Compared with adults born in 1950, those born in 1990 have twice the risk of ...

Pharmacogenomics expert advances precision medicine for bipolar disorder

2025-07-08
CAGLIARI, Sardinia, Italy, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Interview published today in Genomic Psychiatry, Dr. Mirko Manchia opens up about his transformative journey from a small Sardinian city to becoming a leading voice in psychiatric pharmacogenomics, revealing how personal family experiences with mental illness sparked a lifelong quest to understand why psychiatric medications work brilliantly for some patients while failing others. The Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Cagliari has spent decades unraveling one of psychiatry's most perplexing puzzles: why does lithium, psychiatry's oldest mood stabilizer, ...

Brazilian researcher explores centenarian stem cells for aging insights

2025-07-08
SÃO PAULO, São Paulo, Brazil, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Interview, postdoctoral researcher Dr. Mateus Vidigal de Castro shares his contributions to longevity research at the University of São Paulo. Working under the supervision of Professor Mayana Zatz at one of Brazil's leading genetics research centers, Dr. de Castro studies induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from centenarians, particularly those who demonstrated recovery from COVID-19. Research ...

Dr. Xuyu Qian's breakthrough analysis of 18 million brain cells advances understanding of human brain development

2025-07-08
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, USA – July 8, 2025 – Genomic Press today published in Genomic Psychiatry an in-depth interview with Dr. Xuyu Qian, Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, whose pioneering research in brain organoid technology and spatial transcriptomics is transforming our understanding of human brain development and neurodevelopmental disorders. Dr. Qian's recent landmark study, published in Nature (2025), represents one of the ...

Gene networks decode human brain architecture from health to glioma

2025-07-08
SAN FRANCISCO, California, USA, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Interview published in Brain Medicine, Dr. Michael C. Oldham shares his unconventional journey from advertising executive to computational neuroscientist and his groundbreaking contributions to understanding the human brain's cellular and molecular architecture through gene coexpression analysis. From Madison Avenue to molecular neuroscience Dr. Oldham's path to neuroscience was anything but direct. After graduating from Duke University at age 20 ...

How artificial light at night damages brain health and metabolism

2025-07-08
MORGANTOWN, West Virginia, USA, 8 July 2025 – In a comprehensive Genomic Press Innovators & Ideas interview published today, distinguished neuroscientist Dr. Randy J. Nelson shares insights from his pioneering research on how disrupted circadian rhythms affect brain function and overall health. The interview, published in Brain Medicine, traces Dr. Nelson's unconventional path from farm work and autopsy assistant to becoming one of the world's leading authorities on biological rhythms. Dr. Nelson, who chairs the Department of Neuroscience at West Virginia University, has spent the ...

For ultrasound, ultra-strength not always a good thing

2025-07-08
Osaka Metropolitan University researchers have solved a long-standing mystery in the field of sonochemistry: why do chemical reactions slow down when ultrasonic power becomes too strong? Their findings allow for smarter use of ultrasound in science and industry, such as for environmental cleanup or the creation of useful nanoparticles. Although ultrasound is inaudible to the human ear, it plays a powerful role in sonochemistry. When ultrasonic waves are applied to a liquid, they generate microscopic bubbles that rapidly ...

Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercising more enjoyable and give you better results

2025-07-08
Finding motivation to exercise can be the greatest challenge in working out. This might be part of the reason why less than a quarter of people achieve the activity goals recommended by the World Health Organization. But what if working out could be more enjoyable? One way of achieving this could be opting for types of exercise that fit our personalities. To this end, researchers in the UK now have examined how personality affects what types of exercise we prefer, and our commitment and engagement to them. The results ...

Study shows people perceive biodiversity

2025-07-08
A new study published in People and Nature finds that both sight and sound influence perception of biodiversity, and participants were slightly more accurate when assessing forest biodiversity through sound alone than through sight alone. This interdisciplinary research, led by scientists from the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ, and Leipzig University, brings together methods from environmental psychology and forest and soundscape ecology.  In a lab-based sorting study, two groups of 48 participants examined either photographs ...

Personality type can predict which forms of exercise people enjoy

2025-07-08
The key to sticking to and reaping the rewards of exercise over the long term may be as simple as doing something you enjoy, say the authors of a new study from UCL. Previous research has shown that the personalities of people who engage in different types of organised sport tend to vary. But what is less clear is how personality affects the types of exercise people actually enjoy doing. The new study, published in Frontiers in Psychology, explored whether individual personality traits corresponded to the enjoyment of different types of exercise, whether participants completed a prescribed exercise programme, and the subsequent ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Does exercise really improve mental health?

Behind the ballistics of the “explosive” squirting cucumber

Researchers find compound that inhibits cutaneous HPVs

City of Hope Research Spotlight, April/May 2025

The gut microbiota in elderly patients with acute hepatitis E infection

The Three Gorges region of the Yangtze River hits record high temperatures in 2024

Experts urge evidence-based regulations of 7-OH, not restriction, as new science emerges showing safe use

Genes for surviving plague in prairie dogs

New research shows AI chatbots should not replace your therapist

Pusan National University researchers reveal middle-class families hit hardest by South Korea's cost-of-living crisis

Understanding how heat stress reshapes fat metabolism in chickens

Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Innovative Genomics Institute announce new Center for Pediatric CRISPR Cures

Innovative liquid biopsy test uses RNA to detect early-stage cancer

New quantum record: Transmon qubit coherence reaches millisecond threshold

How Germany’s 2021 floods could have been even worse

Study traces evolutionary origins of important enzyme complex

Tiny antibody has big impact on deadly viruses

Scientists find new way to control electricity at tiniest scale

Heat and heavy metals are changing the way that bees buzz

What’s behind the enormous increase in early-onset gastrointestinal cancers?

Pharmacogenomics expert advances precision medicine for bipolar disorder

Brazilian researcher explores centenarian stem cells for aging insights

Dr. Xuyu Qian's breakthrough analysis of 18 million brain cells advances understanding of human brain development

Gene networks decode human brain architecture from health to glioma

How artificial light at night damages brain health and metabolism

For ultrasound, ultra-strength not always a good thing

Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercising more enjoyable and give you better results

Study shows people perceive biodiversity

Personality type can predict which forms of exercise people enjoy

People can accurately judge biodiversity through sight and sound

[Press-News.org] Heat and heavy metals are changing the way that bees buzz