Decipher: to decode or the meaning of something.
Ultraviolet: (1) light waves at wavelengths less than those visible to humans. Also called UV light. (2) invisible light rays just below the violet end of the spectrum... more
Honey bees use all of their senses to find the best flowers including: smell, color, shape, location, petal textures, and time of day. But what does a bee do when she wants to tell her sisters what she has discovered?
Honey bees and most insects can see most colors you and I see— green, blue, and violet. Honey bees cannot discriminate reds very well, but in exchange they can see ultraviolet light—the same light we use sunscreen to protect our skin from. Most flowers have taken advantage of this and have ultraviolet patches called nectar guides. These guides help attract bees to land and show the bees where to get nectar.
How does a honey bee tell her sisters when she finds the locations of rewarding flowers, a drinking hole, or even a great new home? She will fly home and dance. That’s right, dance. Experienced bees use the angle of their body relative to the hive ceiling to tell their sisters the direction and approximate distance of whatever they are dancing for. Then the well-informed sisters go off and check out this location for themselves. You can play the bee game and try to interpret the dances of bees yourself.
Karl von Frisch won the Nobel Prize in 1973 in part for deciphering the language of the bees. In some of his first experiments he put a honey bee hive in a field with a single nectar feeder for the bees to collect from. Dr. Frisch then sat and watched the bees inside their hive.
After long hours of observation he noticed the bees doing a waggling behavior inside the hive. He traced and measured animals as they did this behavior throughout the day. By doing this Dr. Frisch noticed that the bees changed the angle that they danced at the same rate as the sun moving through the sky. He discovered the bees were using dance to point their sisters to the sugar feeder relative to the sun. Later Dr. Frisch and others deciphered other parts of the bee dance language that encoded distance, but there is still so much we can learn about these marvelous little insects.
Christopher M. Jernigan. (2017, June 13). Bee Communication. ASU - Ask A Biologist. Retrieved January 18, 2025 from https://askabiologist.asu.edu/honey-bee-communication
Christopher M. Jernigan. "Bee Communication". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 13 June, 2017. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/honey-bee-communication
Christopher M. Jernigan. "Bee Communication". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 13 Jun 2017. ASU - Ask A Biologist, Web. 18 Jan 2025. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/honey-bee-communication
Worker bees communicating with their antennae.
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