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Tag Archives: science

Bees Can Sense the Electric Fields of Flowers by Ed Yong

02 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Flowers, Garden Creatures, Honey Bee

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Bee, Electric field, electric fields, Flowers, honeybee, link, nature, pollination, science


Bumblebee

A bumblebee visits a flower, drawn in by the bright colours, the patterns on the petals, and the aromatic promise of sweet nectar. But there’s more to pollination than sight and smell. There is also electricity in the air.

Dominic Clarke and Heather Whitney from the University of Bristol have shown that bumblebees can sense the electric field that surrounds a flower. They can even learn to distinguish between fields produced by different floral shapes, or use them to work out whether a flower has been recently visited by other bees. Flowers aren’t just visual spectacles and smelly beacons. They’re also electric billboards.

“This is a big finding,” says Daniel Robert, who led the study. “Nobody had postulated the idea that bees could be sensitive to the electric field of a flower.”

Scientists have, however, known about the electric side of pollination since the 1960s, although it is rarely discussed. As bees fly through the air, they bump into charged particles from dust to small molecules. The friction of these microscopic collisions strips electrons from the bee’s surface, and they typically end up with a positive charge.

Flowers, on the other hand, tend to have a negative charge, at least on clear days. The flowers themselves are electrically earthed, but the air around them carries a voltage of around 100 volts for every metre above the ground. The positive charge that accumulates around the flower induces a negative charge in its petals.

When the positively charged bee arrives at the negatively charged flower, sparks don’t fly but pollen does. “We found some videos showing that pollen literally jumps from the flower to the bee, as the bee approaches… even before it has landed,” says Robert. The bee may fly over to the flower but at close quarters, the flower also flies over to the bee.

This is old news. As far back as the 1970s, botanists suggested that electric forces enhance the attraction between pollen and pollinators. Some even showed that if you sprinkle pollen over an immobilized bee, some of the falling grains will veer off course and stick to the insect.

But Robert is no botanist. He’s a sensory biologist. He studies how animals perceive the world around them. When he came across the electric world of bees and flowers, the first question that sprang to mind was: “Does the bee know anything about this process?” Amazingly, no one had asked the question, much less answered it. “We read all of the papers,” says Robert. “We even had one translated from Russian, but no one had made that intellectual leap.”

To answer the question, Robert teamed up with Clarke (a physicist) and Whitney (a botanist), and created e-flowers—artificial purple-topped blooms with designer electric fields. When bumblebees could choose between charged flowers that carried a sugary liquid, or charge-less flowers that yielded a bitter one, they soon learned to visit the charged ones with 81 percent accuracy. If none of the flowers were charged, the bees lost the ability to pinpoint the sugary rewards.

But the bees can do more than just tell if an electric field is there or not. They can also discriminate between fields of different shapes, which in turn depend on the shape of a flower’s petals and how easily they conduct electricity. Clarke and Whitney visualised these patterns by spraying flowers with positively charged and brightly coloured particles. You can see the results below. Each flower has been sprayed on its right half, and the rectangular boxes show the colours of the particles.

Flower-electric

The bees can sense these patterns. They can learn to tell the difference between an e-flower with an evenly spread voltage and one with a field like a bullseye with 70 percent accuracy.

Bees can also use this electric information to bolster what their other senses are telling them. The team trained bees to discriminate between two e-flowers that came in very slightly different shades of green. They managed it, but it took them 35 visits to reach an accuracy of 80 percent. If the team added differing electric fields to the flowers, the bees hit the same benchmark within just 24 visits.

How does the bee actually register electric fields? No one knows, but Robert suspects that the fields produce small forces that move some of the bee’s body parts, perhaps the hairs on its body. In the same way that a rubbed balloon makes you hair stand on end, perhaps a charged flower provides a bee with detectable tugs and shoves.

The bees, in turn, change the charge of whatever flower they land upon. Robert’s team showed that the electrical potential in the stem of a petunia goes up by around 25 millivolts when a bee lands upon it. This change starts just before the bee lands, which shows that it’s nothing to do with the insect physically disturbing the flower. And it lasts for just under two minutes, which is longer than the bee typically spends on its visit.

This changing field can tell a bee whether a flower has been recently visited, and might be short of nectar. It’s like a sign that says “Closed for business. Be right back.” It’s also a much more dynamic signal than more familiar ones like colour, patterns or smells. All of these are fairly static. Flowers can change them, but it takes minutes or hours to do so. Electric fields, however, change instantaneously whenever a bees lands. They not only provide useful information, but they do it immediately.

Robert thinks that these signals could either be honest or dishonest, depending on the flower. Those that carpet a field and require multiple visits from pollinators will evolve to be truthful, because they cannot afford to deceive their pollinators.  Bees are good learners and if they repeatedly visit an empty flower, they will quickly avoid an entire patch. Worse still, they’ll communicate with their hive-mates, and the entire colony will seek fresh pastures. “If the flower can signal that it is momentarily empty, then the bee will benefit and the flower will communicate honestly its mitigated attraction,” says Robert.

But some flowers, like tulips or poppies, only need one or two visits to pollinate themselves.  “These could afford to lie,” says Gilbert. He expects that they will do everything possible to keep their electric charge constant, even if a bee lands upon them. They should always have their signs flipped to “Open”. Gilbert’s students will be testing this idea in the summer.

Many animals can sense electric fields, including sharks and rays, electric fish, at least one species of dolphin, and the platypus. But this is the first time that anyone has discovered this sense in an insect. And in the humble bumblebee, no less! Bees and flowers have been studied intensely for decades, maybe centuries, and it turns out that they’ve been exchanging secret messages all this time.

Now, Robert’s team is going to take their experiments from the lab into the field, to see just how electrically sensitive wild bees can be, and how their senses change according to the weather. “We are probably only seeing the tip of the electrical iceberg here,” he says.

National Geographic

Bees Can Sense the Electric Fields of Flowers by Ed Yong

24 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Flowers, Garden Creatures, Honey Bee

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Bee, Flowers, honeybee, link, nature, pollination, science


Bumblebee

A bumblebee visits a flower, drawn in by the bright colours, the patterns on the petals, and the aromatic promise of sweet nectar. But there’s more to pollination than sight and smell. There is also electricity in the air.

Dominic Clarke and Heather Whitney from the University of Bristol have shown that bumblebees can sense the electric field that surrounds a flower. They can even learn to distinguish between fields produced by different floral shapes, or use them to work out whether a flower has been recently visited by other bees. Flowers aren’t just visual spectacles and smelly beacons. They’re also electric billboards.

“This is a big finding,” says Daniel Robert, who led the study. “Nobody had postulated the idea that bees could be sensitive to the electric field of a flower.”

Scientists have, however, known about the electric side of pollination since the 1960s, although it is rarely discussed. As bees fly through the air, they bump into charged particles from dust to small molecules. The friction of these microscopic collisions strips electrons from the bee’s surface, and they typically end up with a positive charge.

Flowers, on the other hand, tend to have a negative charge, at least on clear days. The flowers themselves are electrically earthed, but the air around them carries a voltage of around 100 volts for every metre above the ground. The positive charge that accumulates around the flower induces a negative charge in its petals.

When the positively charged bee arrives at the negatively charged flower, sparks don’t fly but pollen does. “We found some videos showing that pollen literally jumps from the flower to the bee, as the bee approaches… even before it has landed,” says Robert. The bee may fly over to the flower but at close quarters, the flower also flies over to the bee.

This is old news. As far back as the 1970s, botanists suggested that electric forces enhance the attraction between pollen and pollinators. Some even showed that if you sprinkle pollen over an immobilised bee, some of the falling grains will veer off course and stick to the insect.

But Robert is no botanist. He’s a sensory biologist. He studies how animals perceive the world around them. When he came across the electric world of bees and flowers, the first question that sprang to mind was: “Does the bee know anything about this process?” Amazingly, no one had asked the question, much less answered it. “We read all of the papers,” says Robert. “We even had one translated from Russian, but no one had made that intellectual leap.”

To answer the question, Robert teamed up with Clarke (a physicist) and Whitney (a botanist), and created e-flowers—artificial purple-topped blooms with designer electric fields. When bumblebees could choose between charged flowers that carried a sugary liquid, or charge-less flowers that yielded a bitter one, they soon learned to visit the charged ones with 81 percent accuracy. If none of the flowers were charged, the bees lost the ability to pinpoint the sugary rewards.

But the bees can do more than just tell if an electric field is there or not. They can also discriminate between fields of different shapes, which in turn depend on the shape of a flower’s petals and how easily they conduct electricity. Clarke and Whitney visualised these patterns by spraying flowers with positively charged and brightly coloured particles. You can see the results below. Each flower has been sprayed on its right half, and the rectangular boxes show the colours of the particles.

Flower-electric

The bees can sense these patterns. They can learn to tell the difference between an e-flower with an evenly spread voltage and one with a field like a bullseye with 70 percent accuracy.

Bees can also use this electric information to bolster what their other senses are telling them. The team trained bees to discriminate between two e-flowers that came in very slightly different shades of green. They managed it, but it took them 35 visits to reach an accuracy of 80 percent. If the team added differing electric fields to the flowers, the bees hit the same benchmark within just 24 visits.

How does the bee actually register electric fields? No one knows, but Robert suspects that the fields produce small forces that move some of the bee’s body parts, perhaps the hairs on its body. In the same way that a rubbed balloon makes you hair stand on end, perhaps a charged flower provides a bee with detectable tugs and shoves.

The bees, in turn, change the charge of whatever flower they land upon. Robert’s team showed that the electrical potential in the stem of a petunia goes up by around 25 millivolts when a bee lands upon it. This change starts just before the bee lands, which shows that it’s nothing to do with the insect physically disturbing the flower. And it lasts for just under two minutes, which is longer than the bee typically spends on its visit.

This changing field can tell a bee whether a flower has been recently visited, and might be short of nectar. It’s like a sign that says “Closed for business. Be right back.” It’s also a much more dynamic signal than more familiar ones like colour, patterns or smells. All of these are fairly static. Flowers can change them, but it takes minutes or hours to do so. Electric fields, however, change instantaneously whenever a bees lands. They not only provide useful information, but they do it immediately.

Robert thinks that these signals could either be honest or dishonest, depending on the flower. Those that carpet a field and require multiple visits from pollinators will evolve to be truthful, because they cannot afford to deceive their pollinators.  Bees are good learners and if they repeatedly visit an empty flower, they will quickly avoid an entire patch. Worse still, they’ll communicate with their hive-mates, and the entire colony will seek fresh pastures. “If the flower can signal that it is momentarily empty, then the bee will benefit and the flower will communicate honestly its mitigated attraction,” says Robert.

But some flowers, like tulips or poppies, only need one or two visits to pollinate themselves.  “These could afford to lie,” says Gilbert. He expects that they will do everything possible to keep their electric charge constant, even if a bee lands upon them. They should always have their signs flipped to “Open”. Gilbert’s students will be testing this idea in the summer.

Many animals can sense electric fields, including sharks and rays, electric fish, at least one species of dolphin, and the platypus. But this is the first time that anyone has discovered this sense in an insect. And in the humble bumblebee, no less! Bees and flowers have been studied intensely for decades, maybe centuries, and it turns out that they’ve been exchanging secret messages all this time.

Now, Robert’s team is going to take their experiments from the lab into the field, to see just how electrically sensitive wild bees can be, and how their senses change according to the weather. “We are probably only seeing the tip of the electrical iceberg here,” he says.

National Geographic

-33.982832 18.469360

Link

#Honeybees “entomb” hives

10 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in GMO, Honey Bee, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

CCD, environment, honeybee, nature, science


Honeybees entomb hive

Honeybees are taking emergency measures to protect their hives from pesticides, in an extraordinary example of the natural world adapting swiftly to our depredations, according to a prominent bee expert.

Scientists have found numerous examples of a new phenomenon – bees “entombing” or sealing up hive cells full of pollen to put them out of use, and protect the rest of the hive from their contents. The pollen stored in the sealed-up cells has been found to contain dramatically higher levels of pesticides and other potentially harmful chemicals than the pollen stored in neighbouring cells, which is used to feed growing young bees.

Honeybee CCD update

07 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in ecology, Garden Creatures, Gardens, GMO, Honey Bee, insects

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Bee, dead bees, environment, european honeybee, food, garden, honey, honey research, honeybee, nature, science


bee hive 1

During a trip though the United States a few years ago I overheard this chilling quotation:

“If the bees disappear from the surface of the Earth, man would have no more than four years to live.”

Once home, I began a flurry of research. This quote has been attributed to Einstein, the problem is that the famed physicist never said it. It was first written down about 40 years after his death in 1955. Nonetheless Colony Collapse Disorder has serious implications for plants, wildlife and yes – humans.

HISTORY

Honey has been part of the human diet and used medicinally for thousands of years. There is evidence that the Egyptians and the Ancient Greeks farmed honey.

Research has indicated that Honeybees originated in Africa and are almost as old as flowering plants. They then spread into Europe in two ancient migrations. In the New World the introduction of the European Honeybee began in North America as early as 1622. In 1956 a subspecies from Africa was introduced into Brazil in an attempt to increase honey production. The descendants of these bees spread rapidly northward, hybridizing with and displaced the previous European honeybee resulting in the African Killer bee. The killer bee stopped its Northward migration in 1999 as the winters were too cold.

COLONY COLLAPSE DISORDER (CCD)

SYMPTOMS

CCD is characterized by complete absence of worker bees, with no build up of dead bees in or around the colonies. Some worker bees normally stay in the hive to look after the bee grubs in the brood. (Bees will not normally desert a hive until all the brood has hatched.) Food in the form of Honey and pollen is present in the hive, as well as the Queen and some drones. The remaining bees are reluctant to consume provided food. Other bees, who would normally rob the hive do not do so.

Little was understood and had the Scientists baffled. CCD was first reported in Northern America late 2006. European beekeepers observed a similar phenomenon in Belgium, France, the Netherlands, Greece, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Austria, England, Slovenia and Germany. Cases have been reported in Taiwan, and India since April 2007. Losses of up to 80% have been reported. The theorized causes were environmental changes, malnutrition, mites, virus’s, pesticides, EMFs – radiation from cellular phones and other man made devices and GMOs (genetically modified crops).

Many  theorized causes have indeed had an impact on the bees, however 6 years later we have more proof than ever that GMOs are largely to blame for the demise of the bees.

Death of Bees – Genetically modified crops

Geneticaly Modified crops implicated in CCD

Honey bees corn syrup

GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS (GMOs)

Genetically modified, insect resistant crops are now used in forty percent of corn crops in the America. Research was conducted at the University of Jenna from 2001 to 2004. Researchers investigated the effects of pollen in GM maize crop called BT corn on bees. The study concluded that there was no evidence of a toxic effect on healthy honeybees. Then by sheer chance the bees used in the experiment were infested with a parasite, resulting in a significant decline in the bees that were fed the BT crop. According to studies the bacterial toxin may have altered the surface of the bees intestines, weakening them allowing the parasites to gain entry.

Beekeepers that have been the most badly affected have been close to maize, cotton, Soya beans, canola, sunflowers, apples, vines and pumpkins.

PESTICIDES

It is particularly difficult to evaluate pesticide contributions to CCD. The variety of pesticides being reported in areas reported with CCD makes it impossible to test for all the pesticides at once. Bee farmers are migratory, often transporting hives over long distances and exposing the colony to a variety of pesticides. The bees themselves put the nectar and honey into long-term storage, meaning there is a delay in feeding the contaminated provisions to the colony. Pesticides are more likely to enter the colony via pollen stores rather than the nectar. The nectar would kill the bee if it were toxic. Broods are fed nectar, while the workers eat honey. CCD hives have brood intact, so the bees must leave because the honey is toxic.

One recently published view is that the bees are falling victim to nicotine-based pesticides. All the affected hives as well as the soil would need to be tested.

New studies – Colony collapse disorder

POLLINATION

Bees are important pollinators especially in the Agriculture industry. It is estimated that one third of the human food supply depends on bee pollination. This has led to a vast industry in the Americas of migratory beekeepers so that the bees can be concentrated where pollination is needed. Pollination improves the yield and quality of the crop and seeds.

Honeybees participate in the sexual reproduction of plants, ensuring cross-pollination and genetic diversity. Plants are the major food source for animals and humans alike.

HOW MAN MANIPULATES BEES

In 1923 Rudolph Steiner in his lectures on Bees predicted the dire state of the Honeybee today. He said that in fifty to eighty years we would see the consequences of mechanizing the forces that had previously operated organically in the beehive. This includes breeding the Queen Bee artificially.

The following are the ways humans manipulate bee colonies:

• The raising of larvae in separate quarters and the random feeding of Royal jelly to produce queens then shipping them by post to keepers.

• Selection of bees for docility

• Re-Queening the hives after 1 or 2 years instead of the normal 5 to 6 years

• The grafting of Queens.

• Moving larva to artificial cups for transportation.

• Using chemical control agents for diseases and pests

• Providing ready-made combs in place of bee constructed combs.

• Supplying wax.

• Use of ventilators

• Use of Queen excluders to prevent eggs being laid in inconvenient areas of the hive.

• Moving hives over long distances

• Clipping of the Queen’s wings

• Agriculture monoculture wreaks havoc on the honeybee’s diet.

* Artificially feeding the bees during the Winter with High Fructose Corn syrup

CONCLUSION

CCD may seriously affect our food production, economies and our sustainability here on earth.

Bees are the true alchemists of nature and no other creature can protect or project the knowledge they do. Man does not know yet how to prepare honey or pollinate crops.

honey in comb

Video

Honeybee waggle dance

03 Sunday Feb 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Honey Bee

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bee, dance, environment, garden, honeybee, nature, science, video


By means of the waggle dance a bee communicates to its hivemates in which direction they must fly to reach a food source.
The video was produced by Bienentanz Gesellschaft für Kommunikation mbH in Berlin, Germany (www.bienentanz.com). This is the English language version.

the top ten GMO

25 Friday Jan 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in GMO

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

canola, corn, cottonseed, dairy products, environment, food, GMO, papaya, peas, potato, rice, science, Soy, tomatoe


top 10 gmo

Another reason to grow your own food.

Do you know what GMOs are ?

24 Thursday Jan 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in GMO

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

environment, GMO, gmos, monsanto, science, transgenic organisms


GMO

There are a lot of new people learning about Monsanto and GMOs, so for the folks still seeking basic information here is an article explaining what GMOs are:

“A GMO (genetically modified organism) is the result of a laboratory process where genes from the DNA of one species are extracted and artificially forced into the genes of an unrelated plant or animal. The foreign genes may come from bacteria, viruses, insects, animals or even humans. Since this involves the transfer of genes, GMOs are also known as “transgenic” organisms.”

Read More:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/priya-advani/effects-of-genetically-modified-food_b_967667.html

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