What is the language of bees?

Do you know how bees collect nectar and pollen and transmit the information of nectar plants to their companions? Very wonderful. They tell honey plants the direction and the distance from the hive by flying "dance language". This is a special "language" of bees in insects. There are basically two forms of dance: one is a circular dance, which means that there are nectar plants within 50 meters from the hive, but it does not mean the direction. The other is "8", dancing with its tail wagging, giving off bad smell, and transmitting information with frequency smell, indicating that honey plants are more than 50~ 100 meters away from the hive. In a certain period of time, the number of times of flying "8" laps and wagging the tail can also indicate the distance between the bee plant and the hive. The bee's head up means that the honey plant is facing the sun, and the head down means that the honey plant is facing away from the sun. The angle formed by the vertical line between the bee body and the nest is consistent with the "sun angle", so this route can be used to find nectar plants and collect nectar and pollen. A bee can collect 20~40 mg of pollen at a time. To brew 1 kg honey, bees need to go back and forth tens of thousands of times and interview millions to more than 10 million flowers.

full circle

Bees and wasps have gone through a complete metamorphosis process-from egg hatching to larva, from larva to pupa, and then from pupa to adult bee. In social organisms, such as bees, unfertilized eggs develop into drones, and fertilized eggs develop into queen bees or worker bees. When a new queen bee appears, a group of worker bees are needed to find a new habitat.