Piping hot bees and boisterous buzz-runners 20 mysteries of honey bee behavior solved

Thomas D. Seeley

Book - 2024

"Thomas Seeley has spent his career unraveling the mysteries of honey bee behavior. His goal has been to understand how the 30,000 or so bees in a colony work together as a unit to accomplish such things as finding and occupying a snug nest cavity, furnishing it with beeswax combs, filling these combs with brood and food, and keeping themselves well nourished, comfortably warm, and safe from intruders. In this book, Seeley's goal is to illuminate these and other mysteries about the workings of honey bee colonies and explore how those mysteries were solved. Seeley's aim, as he says, is to review how and what he and his colleagues have learned about honey bees and to share some things that are not in the scientific papers: the ...personal experiences that drew him to these studies, the little observations that led to important insights, and the feelings of delight that came with solving each mystery. The book's thirty chapters are roughly chronological, offering a meta-history of the field alongside explication of various studies. Each chapter is structured approximately the same way: first, Seeley describes how he and his colleagues discovered a specific mystery about how a colony works, then how they solved it, and finally each closes with an explanation of the implications of the mystery and the way it fits into the wider field of honey bee research. Intimate and informative, PIPING HOT BEES AND BOISTEROUS BUZZ-RUNNERS will weave together personal narrative with the results of over 50 years of research into honey bees and honey bee colonies. It will offer context for more current research and introduce readers to the deep workings of honey bee behavior"--

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595.799/Seeley
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 595.799/Seeley (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 11, 2024
Subjects
Published
Princeton, New Jersey ; Oxford : Princeton University Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Thomas D. Seeley (author)
Other Authors
Margaret C. Nelson (illustrator)
Physical Description
xiii, 296 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color map ; 25 cm
Also available online
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780691237695
  • Preface
  • 1. Avoiding Asphyxia
  • 2. Forest Homes
  • 3. Homesite Inspectors
  • 4. Choosing a Homesite
  • 5. Consensus or Quorum?
  • 6. Piping Hot Bees
  • 7. Boisterous Buzz-Runners
  • 8. Flight Control in Swarms
  • 9. Astonishing Behavioral Versatility
  • 10. Messenger Bees
  • 11. A Tale of Four Species
  • 12. Colonies Are Information Centers
  • 13. Foragers as Sensors
  • 14. Nectar Flow On?
  • 15. Mystery of the Tremble Dance
  • 16. Two Recruitment Dances, or Just One?
  • 17. Movers and Shakers
  • 18. Groom Me, Please
  • 19. Colony Thirst
  • 20. Resin Work
  • Closing Thoughts
  • Appendix: List of Signals
  • Notes
  • References
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

This nicely written and illustrated book by Seely (Cornell Univ.) seems to have been developed for bee lovers, especially beekeepers. It contains a set of 20 stories that can be read independently. Throughout each chapter, Seeley tells readers about his early interest and continuous focus on learning and unveiling mysteries associated with the always fascinating honey bees. In the process, he thanks and remembers his mentors, students, and colleagues, who led him to a life dedicated to research. Readers will learn how fanning honeybees can get rid of higher levels of carbon dioxide within the colony, how honeybees find a place to establish their colony, how their waggle dance helps them do that but also helps them find the best food sources, how escaped swarms can easily adapt to the wild since their innate traits have not been completely altered by beekeepers, and a plethora of fascinating answers to questions one might have about these creatures. Many of the experiments depicted here are detailed in such a way that they could be easily replicated to discover the same answers after careful observations. An insightful vision of the researcher in action. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. --Jorge M. Gonzalez, Austin Achieve Public Schools

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A scholar of honeybee behavior reveals 20 of his discoveries. Seeley, author of The Lives of Bees and The Wisdom of the Hive, opens his latest exploration with a childhood memory of watching a swarm of honeybees make a home in a tree near his family's home: "Cool!" This memory sets the tone for the pages that follow, the author's delight in his work helping to propel readers through the carefully described experiments that yielded his discoveries. Laced with precise measurements and Latin names, these discoveries range broadly, including how bees know when to ventilate their close quarters, decide on a new nesting site, initiate swarms, and optimize food collection. The throughline that binds these elements together is Seeley's fascination with honeybee communication and cognition and his determination to understand both. One experiment studies how a swarm decides which nesting site to choose; another, how a forager bee learns when a food source is particularly robust. The means by which the author and his colleagues--and he takes care to name them, over decades of collaboration--test their hypotheses involve meticulous work, such as individually labeling 12,000 bees (it took nine days in all), traveling to areas that allow them to control natural variables (a treeless island, a flowerless forest), and tinkering with hives to control egress and ingress. If many of these details are less than compelling as narrative, the overall sense that readers who stick with Seeley will get is that the fun of science is in both practice and results. The author periodically addresses readers with infectious enthusiasm: "I hope that you, too, are able to enjoy this cheery sight," he exclaims of a nectar-laden bee. Frequent photos, diagrams, and drawings help to lift the informational load. Fascinating both for its insights about nature and as a portrait of the scientist at work. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.