02815naa a2200325 a 450000100080000000500110000800800410001902200140006002400530007410000180012724501070014526000090025252018760026165000170213765000190215465000220217365000100219565300220220565300300222765300220225765300140227970000160229370000260230970000190233570000190235470000200237370000190239370000200241277300570243221655092024-07-05 2024 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d a0960-98227 ahttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2024.02.0732DOI1 aPIETRO, V. D. aThe inheritance of alternative nest architectural traditions in stingless bees.h[electronic resource] c2024 aAbstract:The transmission of complex behavior and culture in humans has long been attributed to advanced forms of social learning, which play a crucial role in our technological advancement.3 While similar phenomena of behavioral traditions and cultural inheritance have been observed in animals, including in primates, whales, birds, and even insects, the underlying mechanisms enabling the persistence of such animal traditions, particularly in insects, are less well understood. This study introduces pioneering evidence of enduring architectural traditions in the stingless bee Scaptotrigona depilis, which are maintained without any evidence for social learning. We demonstrate that S. depilis exhibits two distinct nest architectures, comprising either helicoidal or flat, stacked horizontal combs, which are transmitted across generations through stigmergy - an environmental feedback mechanism whereby the presence of the existing comb structures guides subsequent construction behaviors—thereby leading to a form of environmental inheritance. Cross-fostering experiments further show that genetic factors or prior experience does not drive the observed variation in nest architecture. Moreover, the experimental introduction of corkscrew dislocations within the combs prompted helicoidal building, confirming the use of stigmergic building rules. At a theoretical level, we establish that the long-term equilibrium of building in the helicoidal pattern fits with the expectations of a two-state Markov chain model. Overall, our findings provide compelling evidence for the persistence of behavioral traditions in an insect, based on a simple mechanism of environmental inheritance and stigmergic interactions, without requiring any sophisticated learning mechanism, thereby expanding our understanding of how traditions can be maintained in non-human species. aInsect nests aStingless bees aAbelha Brasileira aNinho aAnimal traditions aEnvironmental inheritance aNest architecture aStigmergy1 aMENEZES, C.1 aFREDIANI, M. G. de B.1 aPEREIRA, D. J.1 aFAJGENBLAT, M.1 aFERREIRA, H. M.1 aWENSELEERS, T.1 aOLIVEIRA, R. C. tCurrent Biologygv. 34, n. 9, p. 1996-2001.e3, 2024.