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Old 06-25-2018, 09:25 PM   #1
xoxoxoBruce
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Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 71,105
June 26th, 2018: Sugarbag Bees

In Australia one of natures few creations that won’t kill you is the Sugarbag Bees, Tetragonula carbonaria.
They are tiny, much smaller than the European honeybees we’re familiar with, and over time they have lost their stingers.
The other difference is the Sugarbag Bees build spiral combs.



Quote:
According to Tim Heard, an Australian entomologist and the author of The Australian Native Bee Book, the visible spiral is just the topmost layer of the complex, multistoried structure the bees build. A fully developed nest can contain a 10 to 20 continuously spiraling layers. Each circle can contain hundreds of brood cells containing eggs. The eggs develop into larvae, then pupae, and finally adult bees. Once the adult bee leaves the cell, new brood cells are built off of it, which helps form the spiral structure.


Quote:
This nest-building process, according to Heard, can go on indefinitely, as long as a queen can lay new eggs. For now we don’t know exactly why the nests take the spiraling form. “A possible adaptive advantage of this form is that it is efficient use of space and also facilitates the circulation of air between the layers,” Heard told Live Science. “But then one has to ask, why it is not more common?”
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