Associative Mechanosensory Conditioning of the Proboscis Extension Reflex in Honeybees

  1. Martin Giurfa1,3 and
  2. Dagmar Malun2
  1. 1Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition Animale, CNRS-Université Paul-Sabatier, 31062 Toulouse cedex 4, France 2Neurobiology, Institute of Biology, Free University of Berlin, D-14195 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

The present work introduces a form of associative mechanosensory conditioning of the proboscis extension reflex (PER) in honeybees. In our paradigm, harnessed honeybees learn the elemental association between mechanosensory, antennal stimulation and a reward of sucrose solution delivered to the proboscis. Thereafter, bees extend their proboscis to the antennal mechanosensory stimulation alone. We show that bees can learn such an association in a side-specific manner, that is, they learn the association on the antennal side that was rewarded and not on the side that was not rewarded. Responding produced by the paired training does likely contain a substantial Pavlovian component. Responding is only elicited by mechanosensory stimulation and not by spurious cues such as olfactory, visual, and contextual ones. The interstimulus interval (ISI) affects one-trial mechanosensory learning: a bell-shaped curve with a maximum of responding ∼4 sec ISI was obtained. Mechanosensory memory is still operative 24 h after conditioning. Apart from absolute conditioning in which mechanosensory stimulation of one antenna is paired with sucrose, differential, side-specific, mechanosensory conditioning using two mechanosensory stimulations, one rewarded and the other not, is also possible. This paradigm constitutes, therefore, a new standard procedure for further learning studies in honeybees.

Footnotes

  • Article and publication are at http://www.learnmem.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/lm.63604.

    • Received May 30, 2003.
    • Revision received February 11, 2004.
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