arXiv Open Access 2026

Broad presence of ferromagnetism in bees and relationship to phylogeny, natural history, and sociality

Laura Russo Caleb Allen Cameron S. Jorgensen Lizabeth Quigley C. Charlotte Buchanan +5 lainnya
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Abstrak

Scientists have long been fascinated by magnetoreception, the innate capacity of many animals to sense and use the Earth's magnetic field for navigation. In eusocial insects like honey bees, magnetoreception has been linked to communication and foraging. However, little is known about magnetoreception's phylogenetic patterns and relationship to species traits and natural history. Here, we demonstrate that putative magnetoreception based on ferromagnetic particles is widespread across a diversity of bee species (72 out of 96 species tested), with no phylogenetic signal. We also detected such putative magnetoreception in non-bee outgroups, suggesting this magnetic capacity predates the evolution of the Anthophila. While magnetic signals were found across a diversity of life history traits, the strength of the magnetic signal varied within and between species, and increased with body size and social behavior.

Penulis (10)

L

Laura Russo

C

Caleb Allen

C

Cameron S. Jorgensen

L

Lizabeth Quigley

C

C. Charlotte Buchanan

M

Michael Winklhofer

S

Seán G. Brady

L

Laurence Packer

A

Anne Murray

D

Dustin A. Gilbert

Format Sitasi

Russo, L., Allen, C., Jorgensen, C.S., Quigley, L., Buchanan, C.C., Winklhofer, M. et al. (2026). Broad presence of ferromagnetism in bees and relationship to phylogeny, natural history, and sociality. https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.20312

Akses Cepat

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2026
Bahasa
en
Sumber Database
arXiv
Akses
Open Access ✓