From the NY Times
By Emma Goldberg
If their honey-making and pollination prowess weren’t enough, there’s a new reason to appreciate honeybees: They’re world-class surfers.
Beyond
 pollinating flowers, worker bees — which are all females — are given 
the job of searching for water to cool their hives. But if they fall 
into ponds, their wings get wet and can’t be used to fly. A team of 
researchers at the California Institute of Technology found that when 
bees drop into bodies of water, they can use their wings to generate 
ripples and glide toward land — like surfers who create and then ride 
their own waves.
Gnarly, right?
“When
 they fall in the water, they have to find a way to get to shore as a 
matter of survival,” said Chris Roh, a Caltech research engineer and 
lead author of the study, published Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. “It’s a ‘to bee or not to bee’ situation.”
As with many scientific advances — Isaac Newton’s apple or Benjamin Franklin’s lightning bolt — Dr.
 Roh’s experiment began with a walk. Passing Caltech’s Millikan Pond in 
2016, he observed a bee on the water’s surface generating waves. He 
wondered how an insect known for flight could propel through water.
Dr.
 Roh and his co-author Morteza Gharib, a Caltech professor of 
aeronautics and bio-inspired engineering, used butterfly nets to collect
 local Pasadena honeybees and observe their surf-like movements.
The researchers 
fashioned a wire harness to constrain each bee’s bodily motion, allowing
 close examination of their wings. They found that the bee bends its 
wing at a 30-degree angle, pulling up water and generating a forward 
thrust. Bees get trapped on the surface because water is roughly three orders of magnitude 
denser than air. But that weight helps to propel the bee forward when 
its wings flap. It’s a strenuous exercise for the bees, which the 
researchers estimate could handle about 10 minutes of the activity.
The researchers said the surf-like motion hasn’t been documented in other insects and most semiaquatic insects use their legs for propulsion, what’s known as water-walking. It may have evolved in bees, they speculate,
 so the workers could collect fluid without getting stuck in the water 
and dying. The closest motion is seen in stoneflies, but their movement 
is more like paddling than surfing. 
Dr.
 Roh and Dr. Gharib plan to use their observations to design robots 
capable of traversing sky and sea. They have already made a mechanical 
model that simulates the bee’s surfing motion. Next, they will make one 
light enough to fly.
Howard
 Stone, a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at 
Princeton, said nature is a helpful guide for technological innovation 
because “evolution has had lots of years to try out solutions” to common
 physical problems.
Dr. Gharib’s lab 
has previously studied underwater locomotion by looking at jellyfish, 
and energy harvesting by looking at leaves rustling in the wind. He 
envisions numerous practical applications for bee surfing.
“You
 could imagine an amphibious system that can move on the surface of 
water and fly without hassle,” Dr. Gharib said. “This could be useful 
for search and rescues, or for getting samples of the surface of the 
ocean, if you can’t send a boat or helicopter.”
Some more detail here...
Some more detail here...
 
1 comment:
PG has linked to TheInertia(dot)com article, "Cool Waves and a Tasty Buzz: Researchers Find Honey Bees Surf on Waves Created by Their Own Wings" posted Nov 19, 2019, by Alexander Haro, Senior Editor.
In the Conversation section below the above mentioned article I was ascribed the nickname, PurpleBoomerang, having posted...
"Pollen floats doesn't it? Not sure about water absorbency of pollen. What if a bee with pollen stuck to it were to find itself landed on water?"
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