Just by small actions, bees make scientists surprised by high IQ
Scientists are surprised by the intelligence of the bee when it proactively makes the flowers bloom early to provide abundant food for them.
Like many other species in nature, bees need nutrients to survive and grow. To meet that demand, bees eat pollen, nectar from plants.
Therefore, the food source of the bee largely depends on the flowering season. When plants bloom many flowers, usually in the spring, bees will grow faster, while in the winter, the number of bees will decrease due to reduced food sources.
Bee food sources largely depend on the flowering season.
However, few people know that some species of bees are extremely smart when trying to push flowers to bloom early so they do not starve . The new discovery by scientists from Switzerland about the intelligent behavior of the bee technology is astounding.
In particular, the bees have bitten nibbled on the leaves of non-flowering plants in order to stimulate early flowering. The results showed that this small action caused the plants to flower 30 days earlier than normal.
According to Unilad, the flowers bloom early, helping bees get the nutrients they need in the summer. Of course, if the tree is already flowering, pollen is available, it will not perform this bite.
Turmeric biting on leaves leaves promotes flowering early in favor of bees.
Turmeric bees are socially organized insects, characterized by black and yellow hairs that often form a band. However, some species of bodies are orange or red, or completely black. Turmeric hives are usually smaller than honeybees, with nests of about 50.
Foteini G. Pashalidou, the lead author of the study, said he and his colleagues planted many tomato plants, black mustard plants in large net cages, and fed the starving turmeric bees to observe.
Then, they took out a few trees with about 5-10 bites of turmeric. After observation, the actual bites caused black mustard plants to flower 2 weeks earlier and tomato plants to flower about 1 month earlier than expected.
The study also showed that when the bees are full of food, they will no longer bite the leaves.
To ensure that the results don't just show up under experimental conditions, the team has put turmeric bees live on the rooftop of a building in Zurich, Switzerland since March 2018, along with many yet to bloom plants.
The bees may fly away to feed, but before that they left many bites on the rooftop plants.
Dr Mark Mescher, co-author of the study, said: "The findings found are consistent with the idea that turmeric bites down trees to promote early flowering, benefiting itself. species".
What's more interesting is that when scientists copy bites like turmeric to plants that don't bloom, they don't get as good results as they do.
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