Elsevier

Animal Behaviour

Volume 194, December 2022, Pages 239-251
Animal Behaviour

Do bumble bees play?

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2022.08.013Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Ball rolling by bumble bees fulfils animal play criteria.

  • Ball rolling can act as an unconditioned rewarding stimulus.

  • Younger bees rolled more balls, with age patterns resembling mammalian juvenile play.

  • Males rolled balls for longer durations than females.

A variety of animals have been found to interact with and manipulate inanimate objects ‘just for fun’, that is, to play. Most clear examples of object play come from mammals and birds. However, whether insects interact with inanimate objects as a form of play has never been systematically examined. Here, we show that rolling of wooden balls by bumble bees, Bombus terrestris, fulfils behavioural criteria for animal play and is akin to play in other animals. We found that ball rolling (1) did not contribute to immediate survival strategies, (2) was intrinsically rewarding, (3) differed from functional behaviour in form, (4) was repeated but not stereotyped, and (5) was initiated under stress-free conditions. Through the design of the experiment and with the support of behavioural observations, we excluded the possibilities that ball rolling was driven by exploration for food, clutter clearing or mating. Similar to vertebrate play, we also found age and sex differences for ball rolling by bumble bees: younger bees rolled more balls than older bees and male bees rolled individual balls for longer durations than females. We explicitly show that ball rolling is itself a rewarding activity. After being trained to find freely movable balls in one of two differently coloured chambers, bees showed a preference for the colour of the chamber where they had rolled balls. Our results contribute to the question of sentience in insects and lend further support for the existence of positive affective states in these animals.

Keywords

age difference
Bombus terrestris
cognition
conditioned place preference
invertebrate
object manipulation
play behaviour
sex difference

Data Availability

Data will be made available on request.

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