Christina - questioning a statement doesn't necessarily mean we question
the credentials of the author.
I have the Buzz of the Bee book, its a beautiful book, great photos; one
of my favorites.
However, it sometimes takes a small amount of information and freely
hypothesizes. That's not necessarily bad. It MAY be a translation problem,
but the line is sometimes blurred about what is known and what is conjecture.
I found that the most interesting ideas have no references. Wen I first
read the book I found a few things that I'd not encountered before, and like
you, it got my attention. I found some of the statements in the book were
well backed up, some were not - or at least, not in any literature I could
find. He at times seems to present a knowledge of some ongoing, yet
mostly unpublished work. He also seems to like to take a behavioral observation
and then on not much more than that simple observation build a complete
explanation of why it occurs, the purpose it serves.
So, there were a few times when I'd find an issue I'm well familiar with
in the book and felt that it came off as being factual; rather than a
presumption or the author's conclusion. That doesn't take away from the book -
just don't take everything stated in the book as proven by hard
experimentation.
His book reminded me of Van Frisch - great on observation; great for
stimulating discussion, great for challenging ideas. But, like the dance
language, some of his ideas seemed to reflect his own musings. Only time will
tell.
So, yes, I think he's right that we've lots to learn. But, note the
title of the Chapter - Tuning the Telephone Line. That's a bit of a leap of
faith.
Measuring oscillations in comb and the effects of structure - appear to be
observations that can be verified. Does that mean bees use comb as a long
distance telephone line - not necessarily.
I stated, the charge also changes when bees step on and off - the comb is
much like a capacitor. So, do they use it as a telegraph?
We can hypothesize but still don't know whether or how bees might use
either of these for communications.
Jerry
***********************************************
The BEE-L mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned
LISTSERV(R) list management software. For more information, go to:
http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html
|