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  2. Why Bees Do the Waggle Dance - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-bees-waggle-dance-064000416.html

    Honey bees are incredibly social insects. They live together in big groups with other bees in an organized society that scientists call eusocial, which means every bee has a job to do. This could ...

  3. Bee learning and communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_learning_and_communication

    Younger bees play a role inside the hive while older bees play a role outside the hive mostly as foragers. Huang's team found that forager bees gather and carry a chemical called ethyl oleate in the stomach. The forager bees feed this primer pheromone to the worker bees, and the chemical keeps them in a nurse bee state.

  4. Swarm behaviour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swarm_behaviour

    A swarm typically contains about half the workers together with the old queen, while the new queen stays back with the remaining workers in the original hive. When honey bees emerge from a hive to form a swarm, they may gather on a branch of a tree or on a bush only a few meters from the hive.

  5. Waggle dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waggle_dance

    Honeybees accumulate an electric charge during flying and when their body parts are moved or rubbed together. Bees emit constant and modulated electric fields during the waggle dance. Both low- and high-frequency components emitted by dancing bees induce passive antennal movements in stationary bees according to Coulomb's Law.

  6. Plants and pollinators have co-evolved together over time, which allows them to interact in a mutually beneficial way. How bees see our world and discern good flowers and bad blooms Skip to main ...

  7. Collective animal behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_animal_behavior

    Aggregations of animals are faced with decisions which they must make if they are to remain together. For a school of fish, an example of a typical decision might be which direction to swim when confronted by a predator. [47] Social insects such as ants and bees must collectively decide where to build a new nest. [48]

  8. Insect cognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_Cognition

    Young bees begin as nurses tending to the feeding and sanitation of the hive's larvae. As a bee ages it undergoes a shift in tasks from nurse to forager, leaving the hive to collect pollen. This shift in job leads to changes in gene expression within the brain which are associated with an increase in mushroom body size.

  9. Bumblebee communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bumblebee_communication

    Successful bees ran faster and longer compared to unsuccessful bees. A bee may spend several minutes running around the nest before flying out again. [ 5 ] As the bee runs, it has been hypothesized that the bee may also offer a form of communication based on the buzzing sounds made from her wings.