[log in to unmask] (mailto:[log in to unmask]) writes:
<Now that people can track bees with radar etc, I wonder whether anybody
has checked whether bees prefer a nectar source uphill rather than downhill,
meaning that they fly downhill when fully laden? I imagine you could, in
a suitably sloping location, place 2 identical feeders with measured
amounts of syrup, train equal numbers of bees from the same hive to each and see
which gets emptied first.>
Chris
We finally got two instruments late last fall. We then had to test them
for scenarios of interest to our funding sponsors. BY the time we finished,
we hit MT winter. Weather is now starting to clear, and we've lots of
scenarios we'd like to test.
Also, nit picking - but tracking bees with radar has been done, years ago -
Gerald Loper found drone congregation areas using radar, but the equipment
was big, expensive, and only show general patterns of bee locations.
We use LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) - similar to radar, but
distinctly different in other aspects.
I'm interested in lots of dispersion questions - upwind, downwind, beehives
in clusters, spread throughout field, etc.
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