Two Things About Bees

BeeBees are great. They’re amazing animals. I’ve been interested in them for a few years now. I first started paying attention to them more back when I was writing a lot of fiction, I used bees as a metaphor in a few things. Then I decided to start doing some research on them, and it turned out I chose a great animal. Bees are some of the most complex, highly evolved creatures on Earth.

In any case, they’ve come up twice in some cool stuff I’ve been looking at lately. Firstly, I caught this PBS special on colony collapse disorder one night by chance. Colony collapse disorder has apiologists (bee researchers) scared, as it (whatever it is) is killing whole colonies of bees in the US and increasingly throughout the world.

Scientists don’t know yet exactly what’s happening to the bees yet either. They just don’t come back to the hive and die.

Silence of the Bees, though, shown in full on PBS.org, explains a lot about what’s happening and where research is now on it. It’s not as dry as some PBS specials, I recommend giving it a look.

Secondly, Newsweek has a pretty interesting, short article on Parisian bees and all the cool pollen they come up with.

Testers have been surprised to find equatorial pollens from palm trees in [Paris beekeper] DarnĂ©’s honey pots. There’s evidence of a pollen that looks to be from the family of the baobab tree, the whimsical African colossus. “There aren’t any baobabs in the Greater Paris area, that’s for sure,” DarnĂ© says. Some pollens linger unidentified while researchers trade pollen photos over the Internet with colleagues in New Zealand and Madagascar. Olive tree, eucalyptus, the South African gazania flower, even cannabis is traceable in Seine-St-Denis hives, according to Yves Loublier, a pollen specialist with the French National Center for Scientific Research.


2 Comments to “Two Things About Bees”  

  1. 1 Sameer

    Bees are very cool but also very misunderstood and maligned. Though you mention the PBS specials that teach us all the wonders of the bee world, most people end up seeing africanized killer bees in shows such as “When animals attack” and come to dislike one of the most important creatures on the planet. I am glad you picked such an awesome animal to love. Though I don’t love them because i got stung by one, I still have a lot of respect for these guys. Bees forever!

  2. 2 Sameer

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