Birds and honey badgers could be cooperating to steal from bees in parts of Africa

Honeybees nesting in a tree cavity in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

Honeybees nesting in a tree cavity in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

Honeybees nesting in a tree cavity in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

The honeyguide bird loves beeswax, but needs help breaking open bees’ nests to get it.

So it shows a honey badger the way to the nest, who rips it open and together they share the rewards.

Or so the story goes...

Honey badger feeding on honeycomb. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Honey badger feeding on honeycomb. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Honey badger feeding on honeycomb. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Greater honeyguide feeding on beeswax. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Greater honeyguide feeding on beeswax. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Greater honeyguide feeding on beeswax. Photo: Dominic Cram.

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Honey badger feeding on honeycomb. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Honey badger feeding on honeycomb. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Honey badger feeding on honeycomb. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Greater honeyguide feeding on beeswax. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Greater honeyguide feeding on beeswax. Photo: Dominic Cram.

Greater honeyguide feeding on beeswax. Photo: Dominic Cram.

This Disneyesque tale of two species cooperating for mutual benefit has captivated naturalists for centuries – but is it true?

In the first large-scale search for evidence of the interaction, a team of young researchers from nine African countries, led by researchers at the University of Cambridge and the University of Cape Town, conducted nearly 400 interviews with honey-hunters across Africa.

“While researching honeyguides, we've been guided to bees’ nests by honeyguide birds thousands of times, but none of us have ever seen a bird and a badger interact to find honey,” said Dr Jessica van der Wal at the University of Cape Town, lead author of the study.

“It’s well-established that honeyguides lead humans to bees’ nests, but evidence for bird and badger cooperation in the literature is patchy."

Dr Jessica van der Wal, University of Cape Town, lead author of the study.

She added: "It tends to be old, second-hand accounts of someone saying what their friend saw. So we decided to ask the experts directly.”

Yao honey-hunters harvesting a honeybee nest in Mozambique. Photo: Jessica van der Wal

Yao honey-hunters harvesting a honeybee nest in Mozambique. Photo: Jessica van der Wal

Yao honey-hunters harvesting a honeybee nest in Mozambique. Photo: Jessica van der Wal

A honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

A honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

A honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

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Yao honey-hunters harvesting a honeybee nest in Mozambique. Photo: Jessica van der Wal

Yao honey-hunters harvesting a honeybee nest in Mozambique. Photo: Jessica van der Wal

Yao honey-hunters harvesting a honeybee nest in Mozambique. Photo: Jessica van der Wal

A honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

A honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

A honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

People in the 11 communities surveyed have searched for wild honey for generations - including with the help of honeyguide birds.

Most communities surveyed were doubtful that honeyguide birds and honey badgers help each other access honey, and the majority (80%) had never seen the two species interact.

But the responses of three communities in Tanzania stood out, where many people said they’d seen honeyguide birds and honey badgers cooperating to get honey and beeswax from bees’ nests.

Sightings were most common amongst the Hadzabe honey-hunters, of which 61% said they had seen the interaction.

“Hadzabe hunter-gatherers quietly move through the landscape while hunting animals with bows and arrows, so are poised to observe badgers and honeyguides interacting without disturbing them. Over half of the hunters reported witnessing these interactions, on a few rare occasions,” said Dr Brian Wood from the University of California, Los Angeles, who co-authored the study.

The report is published today in the Journal of Zoology.

Examining the evidence

Honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

Honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

Honey-hunter harvests a bees’ nest Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

The researchers reconstructed, step-by-step, what must happen for honeyguide birds and honey badgers to cooperate in this way.

Some steps, such as the bird seeing and approaching the badger, are highly plausible. Others, such as the honeyguide chattering to the badger, and the badger following it to a bees’ nest, remain unclear.

Badgers have poor hearing and bad eyesight, which isn’t ideal for following a chattering honeyguide bird.

The researchers say perhaps only some Tanzanian populations of honey badgers have developed the skills and knowledge needed to cooperate with honeyguide birds, and they pass these skills down from one generation to the next.

It’s also possible, they say, that badgers and birds do cooperate in more places in Africa but simply haven’t been seen.

“The interaction is difficult to observe because of the confounding effect of human presence: observers can’t know for sure who the honeyguide bird is talking to – them or the badger," said Dr Dominic Cram, University of Cambridge Department of Zoology and senior author of the study.

“We have to take these interviews at face value. Three communities report to have seen honeyguide birds and honey badgers interacting, and it’s probably no coincidence that they’re all in Tanzania.”

Dr Dominic Cram, University of Cambridge Department of Zoology and senior author of the study.

The authors highlight the need for more scientists to engage with relevant communities and learn from their views and observations, and integrate scientific and cultural knowledge to enrich and accelerate research.

Partner switch?

A mother honey badger and her cub feed on honeycomb in  Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

A mother honey badger and her cub feed on honeycomb in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

A mother honey badger and her cub feed on honeycomb in Mozambique. Photo: Dominic Cram

The greater honeyguide bird, Indicator indicator, is well-known to communities across many African countries, where it has been used for generations to find bees’ nests.

Male greater honeyguide. Photo: Dominic Cram

Male greater honeyguide. Photo: Dominic Cram

Male greater honeyguide. Photo: Dominic Cram

Wild honey is a high-energy food that can provide up to 20% of calorie intake – and the wax that hunters share or discard is a valuable food for the honeyguide.

Humans have learned how to read the calls and behaviour of the honeyguides to find wild bees’ nests.

“The honeyguides call to the humans, and the humans call back – it’s a kind of conversation as they move through the landscape towards the bees’ nests.”

Dr Claire Spottiswoode, University of Cambridge Department of Zoology and joint senior author of the study.

With our control of fire and tools, humans are useful partners to honeyguides. We can cut down trees, and smoke the bees to subdue them before opening their nests. Honey badgers, Mellivora capensis, are more likely to make the bees angry – and aggressive bees sometimes sting the birds to death.

But honeyguide birds have been around far longer than modern humans, with our mastery of fire and tools.

“Some have speculated that the guiding behaviour of honeyguides might have evolved through interactions with honey badgers, but then the birds switched to working with humans when we came on the scene because of our superior skills in subduing bees and accessing bees’ nests. It’s an intriguing idea, but hard to test,” said Spottiswoode.

The research was primarily funded by the European Research Council.

Reference: Van der Wal, J.E.M. et al.: ‘Do honey badgers and greater honeyguide birds cooperate to access bees’ nests? Ecological evidence and honey-hunter accounts.’ The Journal of Zoology, June 2023. DOI: 10.1111/jzo.13093

Photographs by Dr Dominic Cram and Dr Jessica van der Wal

The text in this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License 

Media contact: Jacqueline Garget, Office of External Affairs and Communications

Research contact: Dr Dominic Cram, Department of Zoology