We’ve long known how important bees are as little pollinators. But did you know how smart they are, too? In this fascinating piece, Hannah Nordhaus explores what experiments are being conducted to test how bees solve problems. Her words are complemented by beautiful photos and videos taken by Karine Aigner—and you’ll be amazed watching a bee roll a ball over, stand on it, and extract a “sweet treat.” Yet another reminder that we need to look after these remarkable creatures.
Over the past few decades, scientists have been learning more and more about the ways that bees figure things out. They’ve studied how honeybee foragers fan out across miles of unfamiliar terrain in their six-week adult lifespan, navigating by sunlight and memory as they visit thousands of flowers to retrieve nectar for their colonies. They’ve followed bees back to their nests and seen how they dance to tell others where the best flowers are, and how they make collective decisions to swarm and relocate their homes.
More picks on bees
The Noblest of Things
“The next day, I opened the hive and there were no bees.’
The Powerful Potential Of Tiny Conservation Plots
“Making space for environmental conservation in our densest concrete jungles.”
Here a Bee, There a Bee, Everywhere a Wild Bee
“Biologists are finding new bee species all over the Pacific Northwest—highlighting how little we know about native pollinators.”
Studying the Swarm
“During sex, the drone’s phallus explodes, killing him immediately. His purpose singular and disposable, his role complete.”
America’s Bee Problem Is an Us Problem
“Beekeepers went away for vacation and returned to depleted hives. Entire apiaries collapsed in the span of weeks.”
Hive Mind
“A beekeeper reconnects with the natural world in an apiary.”
