Interesting facts about the Honey Bee |
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The honey bee has been around for 30 million years. |
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It is the only insect that produces food eaten by man. |
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Honey bees are environmentally friendly and are vital as pollinators. |
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They are insects with a scientific name - Apis mellifera. |
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They have six legs, two eyes, and two wings, a nectar pouch, and a stomach. |
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The honeybee's wings stroke 11,400 times per minute, thus, making their distinctive buzz. A honeybee should not in actual fact be able to fly at all as it's wings are too small for it's body, it fly's only because it's wings beat so fast. |
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A honey bee can fly for up to six miles and as fast as 15 miles per hour, hence, it would have to fly around 90,000 miles - three times around the globe - to make one pound of honey. |
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Honey bees are almost the only bees with hairy compound eyes. |
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A honey bee visits 50 to 100 flowers during a collection trip. |
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Honeybees can perceive movements that are separated by 1/300th of a second. Humans can only sense movements separated by 1/50th of a second. Were a bee to enter a cinema, it would be able to differentiate each individual movie frame being projected. |
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Honeybees' stingers have a barb which anchors the stinger in the victim's body. The bee leaves its stinger and venom pouch behind and soon dies from abdominal rupture. |
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Honeybees communicate with one another by "dancing" so as to give the direction and distance of flowers. |
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The average honey bee will actually make only one twelfth of a teaspoon of honey in its lifetime. |
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Honey bees produce beeswax from eight paired glands on the underside of their abdomen. |
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Honey bees must consume about 17-20 pounds of honey to be able to biochemically produce each pound of beeswax. |
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Honey bees are entirely herbivorous when they forage for nectar and pollen but can cannibalize their own brood when stressed. |
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The honeybee is not born knowing how to make honey; the younger bees are taught by the more experienced ones. |
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Queen Bee |
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The queen is the only sexually developed female in the hive. |
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The queen bee lives for about two to three years and is the only bee that lays eggs. She is the busiest in the summer months, when the hive needs to be at its maximum strength, and lays up to 2500 eggs per day. |
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A queen can lay her weight in eggs in one day and 200,000 eggs in a year. |
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Fertilized eggs will become female offspring, while unfertilized eggs will become males. |
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The queen may mate with up to 17 drones over a 1-2 day period of mating flights. |
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The queen stores the sperm from these matings in her spermatheca, thus, she has a lifetime supply and never mates again. |
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A queen bee can control the flow of sperm to fertilize an egg when she is about to lay an egg. Honey bees have an unusual genetic sex determination system known as haplodiploidy. Worker bees are produced from fertilized eggs and have a full (double) set of chromosomes. The males, or drones, develop from unfertilized eggs and are thus haploid with only a single set of chromosomes. |
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Drone Bees |
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The male honey bees are called drones, and they do no work at all, have no stinger, all they do is mating. |
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Worker Bees |
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The workers are sexually undeveloped females. |
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Worker honey bees live for about four weeks in the spring or summer but up to six weeks during the winter. |
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The brain of a worker honey bee is about a cubic millimeter but has the densest neuropile tissue of any animal. |
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In the course of her lifetime, a worker bee will produce 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey. |
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Only worker bees sting, and only if they feel threatened and they die once they sting. Queens have a stinger, but don’t leave the hive to help defend it. |
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It is estimated that 1100 honey bee stings are required to be fatal. |
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Bee Colony |
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A colony of bees consists of 20,000-60,000 honeybees and one queen. |
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Each honey bee colony has a unique odor for members’ identification. |
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The honeycomb is composed of hexagonal cells with walls that are only 2/1000 inch thick, but support 25 times their own weight. |
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During winter, honey bees feed on the honey they collected during the warmer months. They form a tight cluster in their hive to keep the queen and themselves warm. |