Bumblebees Solve Ball Puzzle for Sugar in 73% of Trials, Study Finds
Updated
Updated · CBC Sports · Jun 8
Bumblebees Solve Ball Puzzle for Sugar in 73% of Trials, Study Finds
3 articles · Updated · CBC Sports · Jun 8
Summary
73% of bumblebees pushed a ball under an out-of-reach target and climbed it to reach sugar, solving the task without prior training on that solution.
Science-published researchers say the result shows spontaneous problem-solving in insects, a cognitive ability more often linked to large-brained vertebrates such as chimpanzees and elephants.
23 of 30 bees still moved the ball to the correct side after the target was made invisible with red light, indicating they remembered the reward location rather than acting randomly.
Researchers and outside experts said the lab result fits real-world bee behavior, where foraging and navigation demand learning and memory, and could strengthen arguments to protect bees from pesticide-related harm.