Skip to content
Science

New study reveals how temperature and urbanisation can change bee behaviour

Monash University 2 mins read

Sweat bee, image credit Dr Scarlett Howard

Key points 

  • Higher temperatures caused European honeybees to slow down their attraction to light, while native Australian bees’ light attraction appeared unaffected.
  • Light simulating natural sunlight elicited a similar response in bees compared with simulated artificial city light.
  • Bees living in urban and natural environments demonstrated similar light attraction responses.

Research from Monash University explores how rising temperature and growing urban environments can affect behaviour in native Australian bees and the European honeybee.

Bees play a vital role in pollinating crops, gardens and native plants, yet global insect populations are under pressure from climate change and habitat loss. To understand how these pressures might influence bee behaviour, researchers compared the responses of native and introduced bees, which resided in urban and natural sites across and outside greater Melbourne.

The study, which was published in the Journal of Insect Physiology, measured phototactic responses (attraction to light) under varying temperatures (28 °C and 32 °C) towards UV light (simulating more ecologically relevant light) and artificial white light (simulating less ecologically relevant light).

The results revealed significant differences in behaviour between native bees and introduced honeybees, with honeybees exhibiting faster responses under all conditions.

Temperature significantly impacted the phototaxis for honeybees, with the higher temperature resulting in slower phototaxis (reduced attraction to light), but no significant effect was observed for native bees. It was found that neither urbanisation nor light type had a significant effect on the response time in either honeybee or native bees.

Dr Scarlett Howard from the School of Biological Sciences, said the findings of this study suggest that temperature changes associated with climate change could alter key behaviours in honeybees, potentially affecting how they forage and navigate.

“The finding that some bees changed their behaviour under the influence of certain stressors, but not others, highlights the complexity of how multiple interacting environmental threats impact pollinators,” said Dr Howard. 

“Understanding how bees respond to environmental change is critical because their behaviour underpins pollination, which supports healthy ecosystems and food production. Our results help fill a gap in knowledge about how temperature and urban pressures interact to influence pollinator behaviour.”

Key findings of the research found:

  • Native bees and honeybees differ in their phototactic responses, which can also vary with temperature, but not with the urbanisation level from which the bee originates.
  • Bees exhibited a generalised phototactic response to both artificial white and narrowband UV light sources. 
  • Bees may not necessarily respond differently to ecologically relevant or irrelevant lighting types. 

The study emphasises the need for continued research into how interacting global changes can affect pollinator species differently, and what this means for conservation and supporting different bee species in agricultural and urban systems.

Read the research paper: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinsphys.2025.104927

ASSETS AVAILABLE

Images available here

MEDIA ENQUIRIES 

Hande Cater
Media and Communications Manager
P: +61 456 428 906
E: [email protected]

GENERAL MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Monash Media
P: +61 3 9903 4840
E: [email protected]

For more experts, news, opinion and analysis, visit Monash News.

More from this category

  • Research Development, Science
  • 14/01/2026
  • 14:00
Climate Council

Bronze Medal Nobody Wants: 2025 Earth’s Third-Hottest Year

January 14 2026 New data from Europe’s leading climate agency shows 2025 was just 0.13°C away from being the hottest year on record, underscoring…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Science
  • 14/01/2026
  • 13:00
Climate Media Centre

TALENT ALERT: Copernicus Climate Report reveals 2025 one of the hottest years on record

14 Jan 2026 New global climate data released today by the Copernicus Climate Change Service confirms that 2025 was among the hottest years ever recorded, marked by extreme heat, oceanic warming and escalating climate impacts driven by the burning of fossil fuels. Climate scientists and frontline experts say the findings confirm climate change is not a future threat, but a present and accelerating crisis that is already reshaping lives, ecosystems and economies across the globe. The Copernicus Global Climate Highlights report shows 2025 continued a pattern of rising global temperatures, intensifying heatwaves, worsening bushfire conditions and compounding impacts on cities,…

  • Biotechnology, Science
  • 14/01/2026
  • 09:30
OmnigeniQ

Australian start-up unveils world-first physics model to visualise human proteins

Australian companyOmnigeniQ has revealed the first computer model of a human protein as it exists in the body, confirming that native protein topology can be calculated directly from physics. The breakthrough was achieved using the company’s physics-based Deterministic Intelligence model that shows proteins in their native, hydrated, dynamic form – something existing tools cannot do. This milestone supports OmnigeniQ’s mission to build the world’s first holographic twin of the human body, enabling more preventative, predictive and precise medicine. OmnigeniQ has unveiled a world-first scientific milestone at Biotech Showcase in San Francisco, demonstrating the first deterministic computation of Cyclin-dependent kinase 5…

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.