The Honey Bee


The Honey Bee. Perhaps the most important insect in the world....without the bees we would not have crops, fruit, vegetables. Things would be grim.


Finally there is the waggle dance. Bees communicate by dancing and this was discovered and understood by Karl Ritter von Frisch, an Austrian ethologist who received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1973. The "waggle dance" tells about more distant food sources. In order to do this, the dancing bee moves forward a certain distance on the vertically hanging honeycomb in the hive, then traces a half circle to return to her starting point, whereupon the dance begins again. On the straight stretch, the bee "waggles" with her posterior. The direction of the straight stretch contains the information about the direction of the food source, the angle between the straight stretch and the vertical being precisely the angle which the direction of flight has to the position of the sun. The distance to the food source is relayed by the time taken to traverse the straight stretch, one second indicating a distance of approximately one kilometer (so the speed of the dance is inversely related to the actual distance). The other bees take in the information by keeping in close contact with the dancing bee and reconstructing its movements. They also receive information via their sense of smell about what is to be found at the food source (type of food, pollen, propolis, water) as well as its specific characteristics. The orientation functions so well that the bees can find a food source with the help of the waggle dance even if there are hindrances they must detour around like an intervening mountain.

The Waggle Dance: direction relative to the sun is shown by angle to the vertical; distance by the time taken on the central stretch.

The "round dance" provides the information that there is a feeding place in the vicinity of the beehive at a distance between 50 and 100 meters, without the particular direction being given. By means of close contact among the bees it also supplies information about the type of food (blossom scent). 

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