Following Dani’s request for a short review of the dances in the small booklet I mentioned above, the following are covered:
The Round dance - used to communicate forage is nearby (within 50m of hive but not a specific location; the reason why it’s best to add syrup in the evening to prevent robbing)
The waggle dance - v well covered already in this post. Communicates location of Forage between 65m and 11km. Also used to communicate a new nest site by scout bees during the swarming process
The sickle dance - a transition dance between the round dance and waggle dance but shorter ie 50-65m distances
Marathon dances - last for several hours and keep pace with the movement of the sun, again a forage communication dance
D-VAV dance (dorso- ventral abdominal dance) - regulates queen activities in swarming and in a different context to forage patterns linked to forage availability
Jostling dance - bees jostle others, to let them know a dance is about to begin
Spasmodic dance - similar to the jostling dance involves food distribution interspersed with short tail wagging motions, thought to signify forthcoming information about forage
Buzz run - signals the exit of a swarm. Workers run around the hive in an energetic and random pattern to increase activity of nestmates that lead to flight
Shaking dance - a worker rapidly shakes her body side to side to induce a worker to groom her
Trembling dance - observed when a colony is disturbed, workers twitch and tremble and run about on 4 legs, function is unknown
Wonderful aren’t they!?
Elaine