1. Bees have 5 eyes
If you’ve ever been brave enough to get up close to a bee, you may have noticed three black dots on the top of its head. These are eyes! Who knew?
As well as two large eyes either side of its head, a bee has three ‘simple’ or ‘ocelli’ eyes on the top of its head. These detect light (but not shapes), meaning that a bee can sense if it is being approached from above by a predator.
The two large eyes either side of its head are made up of lots tiny lenses that each piece together a wider image of what the bee can see - this is known as a compound eye. They specialise in seeing patterns, which can help identify plant types and other bees.
2. Bee eyes are hairy
Strangely, bees’ two larger eyes have tiny hairs growing on them. It is believed that the hairs detect wind direction, so they can navigate in windy conditions.
3. Bees use the sun to navigate
As well as their hairy eyes, it is thought that bees also use the sun to navigate. They can see polarised light (light that has travelled through a filter, such as clouds), which means they can see the sun, even if it’s very cloudy.
4. Bees can detect motion in as little as 1/300th of a second
A field of flowers might seem still to us humans, but bees are likely to be able to see them swaying in the smallest breeze. That’s because bees are very sensitive to movement, even if that movement occurs in 1/300th of a second. Humans can only detect movement happening for longer than 1/50th of a second.
5. Bees can see ultraviolet light
Bees can see some colours, though they have very different colour vision than humans. Their eyes are more sensitive to blue and purple. Bees can see ultraviolet light, which is advantageous as flowers reflect large amounts of ultraviolet light. This makes flowers look very bright against their surroundings and very appealing to a bee!
It is thought that bees’ favourite colours are purple, violet, and blue. This might explain why ‘bee-friendly’ flowers, such as lavender and forget-me-nots, tend to be these colours.
Credit: lensstore.co.uk