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<h2> CHAPTER 3. EXCHANGING THE NESTS. </h2>
<p>Let us continue our series of tests with the Mason-bee of the Walls.
Thanks to its position on a pebble which we can move at will, the nest of
this Bee lends itself to most interesting experiments. Here is the first:
I shift a nest from its place, that is to say, I carry the pebble which
serves as its support to a spot two yards away. As the edifice and its
base form but one, the removal is performed without the smallest
disturbance of the cells. I lay the boulder in an exposed place where it
is well in view, as it was on its original site. The Bee returning from
her harvest cannot fail to see it.</p>
<p>In a few minutes, the owner arrives and goes straight to where the nest
stood. She hovers gracefully over the vacant site, examines and alights
upon the exact spot where the stone used to lie. Here she walks about for
a long time, making persistent searches; then the Bee takes wing and flies
away to some distance. Her absence is of short duration. Here she is back
again. The search is resumed, walking and flying, and always on the site
which the nest occupied at first. A fresh fit of exasperation, that is to
say, an abrupt flight across the osier-bed, is followed by a fresh return
and a renewal of the vain search, always upon the mark left by the shifted
pebble. These sudden departures, these prompt returns, these persevering
inspections of the deserted spot continue for a long time, a very long
time, before the Mason is convinced that her nest is gone. She has
certainly seen it, has seen it over and over again in its new position,
for sometimes she has flown only a few inches above it; but she takes no
notice of it. To her, it is not her nest, but the property of another Bee.</p>
<p>Often the experiment ends without so much as a single visit to the boulder
which I have moved two or three yards away: the Bee goes off and does not
return. If the distance be less, a yard for instance, the Mason sooner or
later alights on the stone which supports her abode. She inspects the cell
which she was building or provisioning a little while before, repeatedly
dips her head into it, examines the surface of the pebble step by step
and, after long hesitations, goes and resumes her search on the site where
the home ought to be. The nest that is no longer in its natural place is
definitely abandoned, even though it be but a yard away from the original
spot. Vainly does the Bee settle on it time after time: she cannot
recognize it as hers. I was convinced of this on finding it, several days
after the experiment, in just the same condition as when I moved it. The
open cell half-filled with honey was still open and was surrendering its
contents to the pillaging Ants; the cell that was building had remained
unfinished, with not a single layer added to it. The Bee, obviously, may
have returned to it; but she had not resumed work upon it. The
transplanted dwelling was abandoned for good and all.</p>
<p>I will not deduce the strange paradox that the Mason-bee, though capable
of finding her nest from the verge of the horizon, is incapable of finding
it at a yard's distance: I interpret the occurrence as meaning something
quite different. The proper inference appears to me to be this: the Bee
retains a rooted impression of the site occupied by the nest and returns
to it with unwearying persistence even when the nest is gone. But she has
only a very vague notion of the nest itself. She does not recognize the
masonry which she herself has erected and kneaded with her saliva; she
does not know the pollen-paste which she herself has stored. In vain she
inspects her cell, her own handiwork; she abandons it, refusing to
acknowledge it as hers, once the spot whereon the pebble rests is changed.</p>
<p>Insect memory, it must be confessed, is a strange one, displaying such
lucidity in its general acquaintance with locality and such limitations in
its knowledge of the dwelling. I feel inclined to call it topographical
instinct: it grasps the map of the country and not the beloved nest, the
home itself. The Bembex-wasps (Cf. "Insect Life": chapters 16 to 19.—Translator's
Note.) have already led us to a like conclusion. When the nest is laid
open, these Wasps become wholly indifferent to the family, to the grub
writhing in agony in the sun. They do not recognize it. What they do
recognize, what they seek and find with marvellous precision, is the site
of the entrance-door of which nothing at all is left, not even the
threshold.</p>
<p>If any doubts remained as to the incapacity of the Mason-bee of the Walls
to know her nest other than by the place which the pebble occupies on the
ground, here is something to remove them: for the nest of one Mason-bee, I
substitute that of another, resembling it as closely as possible in
respect to both masonry and storage. This exchange and those of which I
shall speak presently are of course made in the owner's absence. The Bee
settles without hesitation in this nest which is not hers, but which
stands where the other did. If she was building, I offer her a cell in
process of building. She continues the masonry with the same care and the
same zeal as if the work already done were her own work. If she was
fetching honey and pollen, I offer her a partly-provisioned cell. She
continues her journeys, with honey in her crop and pollen under her belly,
to finish filling another's warehouse. The Bee, therefore, does not
suspect the exchange; she does not distinguish between what is her
property and what is not; she imagines that she is still working at the
cell which is really hers.</p>
<p>After leaving her for a time in possession of the strange nest, I give her
back her own. This fresh change passes unperceived by the Bee: the work is
continued in the cell restored to her at the point which it had reached in
the substituted cell. I once more replace it by the strange nest; and
again the insect persists in continuing its labour. By thus constantly
interchanging the strange nest and the proper nest, without altering the
actual site, I thoroughly convinced myself of the Bee's inability to
discriminate between what is her work and what is not. Whether the cell
belong to her or to another, she labours at it with equal zest, so long as
the basis of the edifice, the pebble, continues to occupy its original
position.</p>
<p>The experiment receives an added interest if we employ two neighbouring
nests the work on which is about equally advanced. I move each to where
the other stood. They are not much more than thirty inches a part. In
spite of their being so near to each other that it is quite possible for
the insects to see both homes at once and choose between them, each Bee,
on arriving, settles immediately on the substituted nest and continues her
work there. Change the two nests as often as you please and you shall see
the two Mason-bees keep to the site which they selected and labour in turn
now at their own cell and now at the other's.</p>
<p>One might think that the cause of this confusion lies in a close
resemblance between the two nests, for at the start, little expecting the
results which I was to obtain, I used to choose the nests which I
interchanged as much alike as possible, for fear of disheartening the
Bees. I need not have taken this precaution: I was giving the insect
credit for a perspicacity which it does not possess. Indeed, I now take
two nests which are extremely unlike each other, the only point of
resemblance being that, in each case, the toiler finds a cell in which she
can continue the work which she is actually doing. The first is an old
nest whose dome is perforated with eight holes, the apertures of the cells
of the previous generation. One of these cells has been repaired; and the
Bee is busy storing it. The second is a nest of recent construction, which
has not received its mortar dome and consists of a single cell with its
stucco covering. Here too the insect is busy hoarding pollen-paste. No two
nests could present greater differences: one with its eight empty chambers
and its spreading clay dome; the other with its single bare cell, at most
the size of an acorn.</p>
<p>Well, the two Mason-bees do not hesitate long in front of these exchanged
nests, not three feet away from each other. Each makes for the site of her
late home. One, the original owner of the old nest, finds nothing but a
solitary cell. She rapidly inspects the pebble and, without further
formalities, first plunges her head into the strange cell, to disgorge
honey, and then her abdomen, to deposit pollen. And this is not an action
due to the imperative need of ridding herself as quickly as possible, no
matter where, of an irksome load, for the Bee flies off and soon comes
back again with a fresh supply of provender, which she stores away
carefully. This carrying of provisions to another's larder is repeated as
often as I permit it. The other Bee, finding instead of her one cell a
roomy structure consisting of eight apartments, is at first not a little
embarrassed. Which of the eight cells is the right one? In which is the
heap of paste on which she had begun? The Bee therefore visits the
chambers one by one, dives right down to the bottom and ends by finding
what she seeks, that is to say, what was in her nest when she started on
her last journey, the nucleus of a store of food. Thenceforward she
behaves like her neighbour and goes on carrying honey and pollen to the
warehouse which is not of her constructing.</p>
<p>Restore the nests to their original places, exchange them yet once again
and both Bees, after a short hesitation which the great difference between
the two nests is enough to explain, will pursue the work in the cell of
her own making and in the strange cell alternately. At last the egg is
laid and the sanctuary closed, no matter what nest happens to be occupied
at the moment when the provisioning reaches completion. These incidents
are sufficient to show why I hesitate to give the name of memory to the
singular faculty that brings the insect back to her nest with such
unerring precision and yet does not allow her to distinguish her work from
some one else's, however great the difference may be.</p>
<p>We will now experiment with Chalicodoma muraria from another psychological
point of view. Here is a Mason-bee building; she is at work on the first
course of her cell. I give her in exchange a cell not only finished as a
structure, but also filled nearly to the top with honey. I have just
stolen it from its owner, who would not have been long before laying her
egg in it. What will the Mason do in the presence of this munificent gift,
which saves her the trouble of building and harvesting? She will leave the
mortar no doubt, finish storing the Bee-bread, lay her egg and seal up. A
mistake, an utter mistake: our logic is not the logic of the insect, which
obeys an inevitable, unconscious prompting. It has no choice as to what it
shall do; it cannot discriminate between what is and what is not
advisable; it glides, as it were, down an irresistible slope prepared
beforehand to bring it to a definite end. This is what the facts that
still remain to be stated proclaim with no uncertain voice.</p>
<p>The Bee who was building and to whom I offer a cell ready-built and full
of honey does not lay aside her mortar for that. She was doing mason's
work; and, once on that tack, guided by the unconscious impulse, she has
to keep masoning, even though her labour be useless, superfluous and
opposed to her interests. The cell which I give her is certainly perfect,
looked upon as a building, in the opinion of the master-builder herself,
since the Bee from whom I took it was completing the provision of honey.
To touch it up, especially to add to it, is useless and, what is more,
absurd. No matter: the Bee who was masoning will mason. On the aperture of
the honey-store she lays a first course of mortar, followed by another and
yet another, until at last the cell is a third taller then the regulation
height. The masonry-task is now done, not as perfectly, it is true, as if
the Bee had gone on with the cell whose foundations she was laying at the
moment when I exchanged the nests, but still to an extent which is more
than enough to prove the overpowering impulse which the builder obeys.
Next comes the victualling, which is also cut short, lest the honey-store
swelled by the joint contributions of the two Bees should overflow. Thus
the Mason-bee who is beginning to build and to whom we give a complete
cell, a cell filled with honey, makes no change in the order of her work:
she builds first and then victuals. Only she shortens her work, her
instinct warning her that the height of the cell and the quantity of honey
are beginning to assume extravagant proportions.</p>
<p>The converse is equally conclusive. To a Mason-bee engaged in victualling
I give a nest with a cell only just begun and not at all fit to receive
the paste. This cell, with its last course still wet with its builder's
saliva, may or may not be accompanied by other cells recently closed up,
each with its honey and its egg. The Bee, finding this in the place of her
half-filled honey-store, is greatly perplexed what to do when she comes
with her harvest to this unfinished, shallow cup, in which there is no
place to put the honey. She inspects it, measures it with her eyes, tries
it with her antennae and recognizes its insufficient capacity. She
hesitates for a long time, goes away, comes back, flies away again and
soon returns, eager to deposit her treasure. The insect's embarrassment is
most evident; and I cannot help saying, inwardly:</p>
<p>'Get some mortar, get some mortar and finish making the warehouse. It will
only take you a few moments; and you will have a cupboard of the right
depth.'</p>
<p>The Bee thinks differently: she was storing her cell and she must go on
storing, come what may. Never will she bring herself to lay aside the
pollen-brush for the trowel; never will she suspend the foraging which is
occupying her at this moment to begin the work of construction which is
not yet due. She will rather go in search of a strange cell, in the
desired condition, and slip in there to deposit her honey, at the risk of
meeting with a warm reception from the irate owner. She goes off, in fact,
to try her luck. I wish her success, being myself the cause of this
desperate act. My curiosity has turned an honest worker into a robber.</p>
<p>Things may take a still more serious turn, so invincible, so imperious is
the desire to have the booty stored in a safe place without delay. The
uncompleted cell which the Bee refuses to accept instead of her own
finished warehouse, half-filled with honey, is often, as I said,
accompanied by other cells, not long closed, each containing its Bee-bread
and its egg. In this case, I have sometimes, though not always, witnessed
the following: when once the Bee realises the shortcomings of the
unfinished nest, she begins to gnaw the clay lid closing one of the
adjoining cells. She softens a part of the mortar cover with saliva and
patiently, atom by atom, digs through the hard wall. It is very slow work.
A good half-hour elapses before the tiny cavity is large enough to admit a
pin's head. I wait longer still. Then I lose patience; and, fully
convinced that the Bee is trying to open the store-room, I decide to help
her to shorten the work. The upper part of the cell comes away with it,
leaving the edges badly broken. In my awkwardness, I have turned an
elegant vase into a wretched cracked pot.</p>
<p>I was right in my conjecture: the Bee's intention was to break open the
door. Straight away, without heeding the raggedness of the orifice, she
settles down in the cell which I have opened for her. Time after time, she
fetches honey and pollen, though the larder is already fully stocked.
Lastly, she lays her egg in this cell which already contains an egg that
is not hers, having done which she closes the broken aperture to the best
of her ability. So this purveyor had neither the knowledge nor the power
to bow to the inevitable. I had made it impossible for her to go on with
her purveying, unless she first completed the unfinished cell substituted
for her own. But she did not retreat before that impossible task. She
accomplished her work, but in the absurdest way: by injuriously
trespassing upon another's property, by continuing to store provisions in
a cupboard already full to overflowing, by laying her egg in a cell in
which the real owner had already laid and lastly by hurriedly closing an
orifice that called for serious repairs. What better proof could be wished
of the irresistible propensity which the insect obeys?</p>
<p>Lastly, there are certain swift and consecutive actions so closely
interlinked that the performance of the second demands a previous
repetition of the first, even when this action has become useless. I have
already described how the Yellow-winged Sphex (Cf. "Insect Life": chapters
6 to 9.—Translator's Note.) persists in descending into her burrow
alone, after depositing at its edge the Cricket whom I maliciously at once
remove. Her repeated discomfitures do not make her abandon the preliminary
inspection of the home, an inspection which becomes quite useless when
renewed for the tenth or twentieth time. The Mason-bee of the Walls shows
us, under another form, a similar repetition of an act which is useless in
itself, but which is the compulsory preface to the act that follows. When
arriving with her provisions, the Bee performs a twofold operation of
storing. First, she dives head foremost into the cell, to disgorge the
contents of her crop; next, she comes out and at once goes in again
backwards, to brush her abdomen and rub off the load of pollen. At the
moment when the insect is about to enter the cell tail first, I push her
aside gently with a straw. The second act is thus prevented. The Bee now
begins the whole performance over again, that is to say, she once more
dives head first to the bottom of the cell, though she has nothing left to
disgorge, as her crop has just been emptied. When this is done, it is the
belly's turn. I instantly push her aside again. The insect repeats its
proceedings, still entering head first; I also repeat my touch of the
straw. And this can go on as long as the observer pleases. Pushed aside at
the moment when she is about to insert her abdomen into the cell, the Bee
goes back to the opening and persists in going down head first to begin
with. Sometimes, she descends to the bottom, sometimes only half-way,
sometimes again she only pretends to descend, just bending her head into
the aperture; but, whether completed or not, this action, for which there
is no longer any motive, since the honey has already been disgorged,
invariably precedes the entrance backwards to deposit the pollen. It is
almost the movement of a machine whose works are only set going when the
driving-wheel begins to revolve.</p>
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