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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. Waggle dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waggle_dance

    For cavity-nesting honey bees, like the western honey bee (Apis mellifera) or Apis nigrocincta, flowers that are located directly in line with the sun are represented by waggle runs in an upward direction on the vertical combs, and any angle to the right or left of the sun is coded by a corresponding angle to the right or left of the upward ...

  4. SongMeanings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SongMeanings

    SongMeanings is a music website that encourages users to discuss and comment on the underlying meanings and messages of individual songs. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] As of May 2015, the website contains over 110,000 artists, 1,000,000 lyrics, 14,000 albums, and 530,000 members.

  5. Round dance (honey bee) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Round_dance_(honey_bee)

    Honey bees use both the position of the sun and the polarization patterns of a blue sky to communicate the direction to the food source. Support for this theory rests in the observation that honey bees can still recognize the sun's position when it is obscured by a cloud or a mountain, for example. [ 1 ]

  6. Beehive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beehive

    Painted wooden beehives with active honey bees A honeycomb created inside a wooden beehive. A beehive is an enclosed structure where some honey bee species of the subgenus Apis live and raise their young. Though the word beehive is used to describe the nest of any bee colony, scientific and professional literature distinguishes nest from hive.

  7. Joyful Noise: Poems for Two Voices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joyful_Noise:_Poems_for...

    The book is a collection of fourteen children's poems about insects such as mayflies, lice, and honeybees. The concept is unusual in that the poems are intended to be read aloud by two people. Some lines are spoken by the readers simultaneously, while others are read alternately by the speakers.

  8. Honeycomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeycomb

    Honey bees consume about 8.4 lb (3.8 kg) of honey to secrete 1 lb (450 g) of wax, [1] and so beekeepers may return the wax to the hive after harvesting the honey to improve honey outputs. The structure of the comb may be left basically intact when honey is extracted from it by uncapping and spinning in a centrifugal honey extractor .

  9. Bee learning and communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_learning_and_communication

    Honey bees are adept at associative learning, and many of the phenomena of operant and classical conditioning take the same form in honey bees as they do in the vertebrates. Efficient foraging requires such learning. For example, honey bees make few repeat visits to a plant if it provides little in the way of reward.