Flower Petal Size Affects Spreading Of Bumblebee Parasite
UMass Amherst research assistant Fiona MacNeill trimming one of the 105,000 flowers in undated photo. Certain physical traits of flowers affect the health of bumblebees by enabling the transmission of a harmful pathogen, research at the University of Massachusetts Amherst has shown. (Ben Barnhart, NewsX/Bee)

Flower Petal Size Affects Spreading Of Bumblebee Parasite

Continue ReadingFlower Petal Size Affects Spreading Of Bumblebee Parasite
Researchers ‘Worried’ As Roundup ‘Affects Bumblebees’ Memory’
Individual forager bumblebees marked with a small number tag were exposed either to very low acute dose of glyphosate-based herbicide Roundup, or to sucrose (control). Thereafter, bees underwent five learning bouts in which they choose between artificial rewarding flowers (sucrose) or aversive flowers (quinine). Experimental bees were individually allowed to enter the arena with 10 different color flowers (two of each color) with a drop of sucrose or quinine. During the five learning bouts control bees learned to differentiate between the rewarding and aversive flowers, and two days later they were able to remember all they had learned. However, learning of the Roundup exposed bees was declined within few hours from the exposure, and two days later in a memory test they had lost everything they had learned. (University of Turku, NewsX/Bee)

Researchers ‘Worried’ As Roundup ‘Affects Bumblebees’ Memory’

Continue ReadingResearchers ‘Worried’ As Roundup ‘Affects Bumblebees’ Memory’

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