Skip to content
Science

Brainy bees create a buzz with maths skills

Monash University 2 mins read

Honey bees have proven themselves even smarter than previously thought, with new research from Monash University finding they order numbers from left to right like humans.

The tiny mathematicians have impressed researchers with their numerical and spatial processing skills, adding to a growing appreciation of the bee’s intelligence.

To test how they preferred to order numbers, researchers showed the bees small cards with varying quantities of shapes in different patterns.

Through various combinations and placements, the bees showed evidence of preferring smaller numbers to be placed to their left and larger ones to their right.

The study is the result of a collaboration between Monash University and Melbourne University, led by Dr Scarlett Howard, Monash University Research Fellow and head of the University’s Integrative Cognition, Ecology and Bio-inspiration Research Group.

Dr Howard said bees’ strong information processing skills make them ideal research subjects to study animals with miniature brains.

“Learning how different species process information like numbers and space gives us a greater overall context for our understanding of both human and animal brains. We can learn what is different and what is the same for how our minds work,” Dr Howard said.

“Previous studies have shown several other species, including apes and some birds, have preferences for ordering numbers in various directions.

“It shows us how information in brains is ordered efficiently, the origins for those biases, and how widespread information processing is across species.”

Co-researcher Adrian Dyer, Adjunct Associate Professor in the Monash Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, said the finding was another piece in the complex puzzle of evolution.

“The last time we had a common ancestor with bees was more than 600 million years ago, but they have either retained or separately developed this ability that is so like our own,” Associate Professor Dyer said.

“We tend to overlook the intelligence of animals with smaller brains, but it’s not always the case.

“Humans have almost 100 billion neurons in our brains, whereas bees have less than a million, yet we have these measurable similarities in neural processing.”

Jung-Chun (Zaza) Kuo was a major collaborator on the research while completing a jointly-supervised Honours degree at Melbourne University with Melbourne’s Professor Devi Stuart-Fox, Monash’s Associate Professor Dyer and others at Monash.

“This finding has significant implications for the evolution of cognitive functions, information processing, and mathematic ability in humans,” she said.

The evidence that honey bees, humans, some primates, and birds show directional preferences for ordering numbers suggests that this way of processing information has advantages for very different animals.

Researchers are now aiming to solve the mysteries of why such different animal species prefer to link space and number in similar ways, how a miniature brain enables mathematical processing, and the possible lessons for efficient design of new technology inspired by animal minds.

The full research paper in the the peer-reviewed scientific journal Animal Behaviour is available online at doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2024.123054

Images available here. Pic opportunities available in the apiary at Monash University Clayton.

MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Toni Brient
Media and Communications Manager, Monash University
M: +61 456 428 906
E: [email protected] 

GENERAL MEDIA ENQUIRIES
Monash Media
T: +61 (0) 3 9903 4840
E: [email protected] 

For more Monash media stories, visit our news and events site

 

Media

More from this category

  • General News, Science
  • 06/05/2026
  • 09:29
Parliament of Australia

Public Works Committee visits the National Research Cyclotron Facility at Camperdown

Tomorrow, theParliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works(the Committee) will conduct a site inspection at National Research Cyclotron Facility (NRCF) at Camperdown, Sydney, and shortly after question officials from the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation about the proposed works at the site. The proposed works will deliver the decommissioning and demolition of the NRCF after 30 years of operation on land leased from the Sydney Local Health District near the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. Established in 1991, the NRCF housed a cyclotron which produced radioisotopes which were principally used for medical imaging research purposes. The facility was permanently closed down…

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 06/05/2026
  • 07:00
UNSW Sydney

How malaria research could reveal clues to male infertility

Billions of years of evolution separate humans and malaria parasites – but efforts to stop the disease spreading have revealed a surprising overlap in how they reproduce. A UNSW researcher exploring ways to stop the spread of malaria by disrupting how the parasite reproduces inside mosquitoes has stumbled on an unexpected potential link to male fertility. Dr Claire Sayers is a molecular biologist working in malaria research at UNSW's School of Biomedical Sciences. She says the disease – caused by a single-celled parasite called Plasmodium – spreads when mosquitoes drink blood from an infected person that contains male and female…

  • Science
  • 05/05/2026
  • 22:10
Forge Biologics

Epicrispr Biotechnologies and Forge Biologics Announce AAV Development and cGMP Manufacturing Partnership

Forge’s FUEL™ platform and manufacturing services support the production of AAV for EPI-321, Epicrispr’s investigational gene therapy for FSHD Material manufactured at Forge for…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.