| Bee
aware
Tip for farmers: caterpillars fear
the sound of bee wings
Jurgen tautz
has a passion for delving into the daily lives of bees. He
has figured out much of the complex mechanism behind the waggle
dance which honeybees use to beckon other bees to a food source.
Now this scientist, from the University of Wurzburg in Germany
has come up with a novel way of pest control involving bees.
Tautz and his team observed that the flapping sound of bees
wings scares away caterpillars feeding on leaves. They put
bell pepper plants in a tent with bees and caterpillars. The
plants suffered 70 per cent less damage in tents with bees,
compared to plants in tents with caterpillars alone.
When a caterpillar senses the presence
of an insect, it drops down from the leafs surface.
They have sensory hairs which help them detect air vibrations,
including those made by an approaching insect. These
sensory hairs are not fine-tuned. Therefore, caterpillars
cannot distinguish between hunting wasps and harmless bees,
Tautz said. If the caterpillars are constantly stressed by
buzzing bees, as on trees heavily laden with blossoms, they
will feed a lot less. The study was published in the December
23 issue of Current Biology.
These results show that honeybees
can be much more than pollinators. The group plans to plant
flowering plants along with crops so that honeybees are constantly
in the area. If this works, farmers with beehives in their
fields will have better yields without the use of pesticides.
Pesticides cause the colony collapse disorder in honeybees.
According to the research this only means stripping the plants
off one level of pest control.
Source: Down To Earth
Date: January, 2009

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