Our mission

Research

To carry out basic and applied research on honey bees and social insects. To be a world-leading research group and a key component in UK science infrastructure and expertise.

Teaching

To train the next generation of honey-bee and social-insect scientists.

Community

To extend practical knowledge about honey bees and social insects to beekeepers, industry, land managers, teachers and others. To play an active role in the public communication of science.

Applied research is focused on the Sussex Plan for Honey Bee Health and Well-Being, which started in October 2008. The Sussex Plan comprises four projects aimed at helping honey bees and beekeepers by breeding disease-resistant 'hygienic' honey bees, helping the honey bee and insect pollinators in urban areas, learning where honey bees gather pollen and nectar by decoding their communication dances, and helping bees and agricultural pollination in farm land.

There is currently a great deal of concern about honey bee health, with a large number of colonies reported dying in North America, Japan and Europe. In addition, the number of bee hives in Britain has diminished greatly in the last one hundered years. Our research by studying diseases and foraging aims to help the decline in Britain and maintain healthy bee hives. LASI basic research investigates how societies of bees, wasps and ants are organised and coordinated, how they resolve their internal conflicts over who works and who lays eggs, and how the workers that guard the nest entrance recognise nestmates from non-nestmates, and also how the workers use different sources of information in foraging. Research is carried out by undergraduate project students in their final year, graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, volunteers and visitors under the supervision of Professor Francis Ratnieks, who is the UK's only Professor of Apiculture.

Research uses a wide range of techniques ranging from studying behaviour to mathematical modelling. Most research is carried out at the main LASI facility on the University of Sussex campus on the edge of the South Downs National Park. LASI field work is also carried out in Brazil and other locations, and involves collaboration with researchers worldwide.