“…Several studies have investigated the neural basis of such behavioral versatility by studying structural changes in the honeybee brain with age and social role, mainly focusing on the mushroom body (Groh, et al, 2006, 2012; Groh and Meinertzhagen, 2010). Although most developmental changes in the honeybee brain occur during pupal and larval stages (Devaud and Masson, 1999; Ganeshina et al, 2000), considerable age-dependent and experience-dependent anatomic changes have been described at the level of subregions in the adult honeybee antennal lobe (Winnington et al, 1996; Sigg et al, 1997; Morgan et al, 1998; Brown et al, 2004; Andrione et al, 2017; Arenas et al, 2013) and the mushroom body (Withers et al, 1993, 1995; Durst et al, 1994; Fahrbach et al, 1998; Wolschin et al, 2009), as well as at the level of single mushroom body neurons (Farris et al, 2001). In addition, electrophysiological properties of honeybee neurons also mature with age and experience in the antennal lobe (Wang et al, 2005) and in the mushroom body (Kiya et al, 2007).…”