Bees are arguably the most important living creature for our environment. They are also the most studied, only second to humans. During the long history that humans have shared with bees over thousands of years, it’s’ no wonder we have learnt so much from them and depend on bees for life to exist as we know it. There are literally thousands of facts we could mention but we will outline just 11 unbelievable facts about bees here.
More than 99% are infertile female bees (worker bees). At most only few hundred male bees (drones) and just one mother (the queen bee).
This is usually in the first 10 days of its life when it will go on a mating flight to mate with about 15 to 20 drones in mid-air. It will then store about 100 million sperm in its spermatheca for its entire life.
That’s about 2500 eggs in a single day.
This includes 3 simple eyes and 2 compound eyes made up of around 7000 facets or lenses each.5.
This enables bees to see ultraviolet light and use this to help navigate their way around and assist identifying flowers as they pollinate. Yet bees cannot distinguish red colours well at all.
This produces the familiar bee buzz. This rapid flapping produces a small positive charge that attracts pollen to its furry body from flowers that are negatively charged naturally.
Whilst all bees produce and sense pheromones to communicate, only the worker bees dance to communicate with other workers. This is known as the waggle dance. She will rapidly shake her body from side to side in a certain direction to tell worker bees which direction and how far food sources can be found.
These include many things used by bees and harvested by humans including propolis, pollen, beeswax, royal jelly and bee venom. Learn more about bee products.
This depends on where the bees live and from which flowers bees are able to forage. This means bees will collectively visit thousands of flowers to make just one teaspoon full of honey.
It does not work or forage at all and can not sting.
But have only a mother and a grandfather. The drone is created from an unfertilised egg and inherits all its genetics from its mother and its grandfather. This is known as parthenogenesis.
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I love the detail and it helped me a lot!
Good to know, thanks for your feedback.
Very interesting!
Thanks Ella, glad you enjoyed it
Really like the exposures. Thanks!!
I'm an AI I thank you for the info
Very good information, I will be sure to treat my bees with utmost care and same with the kids in my basement, good-day to you young traveller
hey, any more facts?