A photographer captures a pollinator's powerful wings mid-flight
HOW DOES A BUMBLEBEE lift its big body into the air with comparatively small wings? “Instead of the aerodynamic finesse found in most other insects, bumblebees have adopted a brute-force approach,” report University of Oxford scientists, whose recent research uncovered some of the secrets of bumblebee flight. Beating 130 times or more per second, the insect’s left and right wings flap independently, the scientists found, and are powered by large flight muscles that take up most of the bee’s thorax, or midsection. The system is fueled by regular doses of energy-rich nectar that the bee acquires while pollinating plants.A new storymap connects the dots between extreme weather and climate change and illustrates the harm these disasters inflict on communities and wildlife.
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