Dance of the Bees
Like most insects, bees don't have ears, in fact they can't
hear at all. But this doesn't mean you can sneak up on a bee,
they know you are there because of vibrations. So how does a
bee communicate ? Bees love to dance and dancing is a way
for them to talk to one another. It was Austrian zoologist,
Karl von Frisch, who first discovered the dance "language" of
bees. Up close and personal with the bees, Frisch had observed
a forager bee, on discovering a flower, return to the
nest and perform a dance for its fellow workers. Closer
observation led to the discovery of a series of dance moves
performed by bees to communicate to the nest the location of
food sources. Here are a few dance moves. A vigorous figure
eight dance means a flower is nearby. A less than enthusiastic
tail-wag dance means food is far away. If the bee points it's
body vertically up, the flowers are in the direction of the
sun, if it points its body down, the flowers are away from the
sun. If a bee dances with it's body at a specific angle,
that is the degree (from the sun) to which the other worker
bees must leave the nest to find the food source. The bee
dance can also be used to inform the colony of predators,
location of a new home, or imminent threats. So remember
,if you harass or disturb a bee, it may fly back
to its nest and have a big dance about you.
You can't afford to be a bad dancer in a bee colony!
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