ChatterBank1 min ago
Red Flowers ?
5 Answers
Listening to factoids on radio two, it was stated that bees can't see the colour red, they see it as black.
This got me thinking, why are so many flowers red, if the bees can't see them ?
This got me thinking, why are so many flowers red, if the bees can't see them ?
Answers
I've listened to 'factoids' hundreds of times and I've yet to encounter a day when they're all true. At least 15% of them seem to be urban myths (that have frequently been debunked by programmes such as QI months, or even years, before that egotistical tw.t and his cohorts give voice to them on Radio 2). A study published by Menzel and Blakers in 1975 in the...
23:11 Fri 24th Apr 2015
I've listened to 'factoids' hundreds of times and I've yet to encounter a day when they're all true. At least 15% of them seem to be urban myths (that have frequently been debunked by programmes such as QI months, or even years, before that egotistical tw.t and his cohorts give voice to them on Radio 2).
A study published by Menzel and Blakers in 1975 in the Journal of Comparative Physiology ("Colour receptors in the bee eye — Morphology and spectral sensitivity") showed that bees can see a wider range of colours than humans but, in particular, can see well into the ultra-violet region. It's likely that it's the ultra-violet light reflected by (what we see as) red flowers which draws them although, given that they can smell nectar from up to two mles away, colour might not be that important to them anyway.
A study published by Menzel and Blakers in 1975 in the Journal of Comparative Physiology ("Colour receptors in the bee eye — Morphology and spectral sensitivity") showed that bees can see a wider range of colours than humans but, in particular, can see well into the ultra-violet region. It's likely that it's the ultra-violet light reflected by (what we see as) red flowers which draws them although, given that they can smell nectar from up to two mles away, colour might not be that important to them anyway.
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