I think we should get ourselves some honey bee facts, after all so
many healing and health-promoting opportunities for the humans begin
with this little busy creature.
As you read the following 20 honey bee facts, you will be so intrigued just like me by this teensy-weensy fellow's extraordinary abilities.
As you read the following 20 honey bee facts, you will be so intrigued just like me by this teensy-weensy fellow's extraordinary abilities.
1. The honey bee has been around for millions of years.
2. Honey bees, scientifically also known as Apis mellifera, are environmentally friendly and are vital as pollinators.
3. It is the only insect that produces food eaten by man.
4.
Honey is the only food that includes all the substances necessary to
sustain life, including enzymes, vitamins, minerals, and water; and it's
the only food that contains "pinocembrin", an antioxidant associated
with improved brain functioning.
5. Honey
bees have 6 legs, 2 compound eyes made up of thousands of tiny lenses
(one on each side of the head), 3 simple eyes on the top of the head, 2
pairs of wings, a nectar pouch, and a stomach.
6. Honey
bees have 170 odorant receptors, compared with only 62 in fruit flies
and 79 in mosquitoes. Their exceptional olfactory abilities include kin
recognition signals, social communication within the hive, and odor
recognition for finding food. Their sense of smell was so precise that
it could differentiate hundreds of different floral varieties and tell
whether a flower carried pollen or nectar from metres away.
7. The
honey bee's wings stroke incredibly fast, about 200 beats per second,
thus making their famous, distinctive buzz. A honey bee can fly for up
to six miles, and as fast as 15 miles per hour.
8. The average worker bee produces about 1/12th teaspoon of honey in her lifetime.
9. A hive of bees will fly 90,000 miles, the equivalent of three orbits around the earth to collect 1 kg of honey.
10. It takes one ounce of honey to fuel a bee's flight around the world.
11. A honey bee visits 50 to 100 flowers during a collection trip.
12.
The bee's brain is oval in shape and only about the size of a sesame
seed, yet it has remarkable capacity to learn and remember things and is
able to make complex calculations on distance travelled and foraging
efficiency.
13. A
colony of bees consists of 20,000-60,000 honeybees and one queen.
Worker honey bees are female, live for about 6 weeks and do all the
work.
14. The
queen bee can live up to 5 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. Click here to
learn more about the Honey Bee Life Cycle,
15. Larger
than the worker bees, the male honey bees (also called drones), have no
stinger and do no work at all. All they do is mating.
16. Each honey bee colony has a unique odour for members' identification.
17. Only
worker bees sting, and only if they feel threatened and they die once
they sting. Queens have a stinger, but they don't leave the hive to help
defend it.
18. It is estimated that 1100 honey bee stings are required to be fatal.
19. Honey bees communicate with one another by "dancing".
20. 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.
The more I learnt about honey
bee facts; honey's great creator -the honey bee itself, its highly
organized society, how it acts with such intricate cooperation, and the
various bee products, the more I admire and respect this amazing
creature.
It is no wonder why sometimes the colony is called a superorganism.
It is no wonder why sometimes the colony is called a superorganism.
"Unique among all God's
creatures, only the honeybee improves the environment and preys not on
any other species." ~ Royden Brown
"If the bee disappears from the surface of the earth, man would have no more than four years to live?" ~ Albert Einstein
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