homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Bees completely stopped flying during the 2017 total solar eclipse

Who took the lights out?

Tibi Puiu
October 11, 2018 @ 3:11 pm

share Share

Honeybee

Credit: Pixabay.

Last year’s total solar eclipse was all the rage around the continental United States. For honeybees, however, the whole experience was rather confusing. A citizen science project that included both researchers and elementary-schoolers, monitored bees during the eerie moments when the moon blocked the sun. The study found that it wasn’t just Americans who took a break, but also the bees, who stopped foraging and just idled around.

Who took the lights out?

The study’s authors, which included more than 400 participants, set up 16 monitoring stations across Oregon, Idaho, and Missouri, on the path of totality during the 2017 eclipse. Each station was fitted with microphones shielded by windscreens in order to minimize noise. Suspended from lanyards, the microphones recorded the buzz of bees as they zig-zagged from lower to flower. The researchers also recorded data on light and temperature.

Before and after the eclipse, the bees were active in phases. However, during the totality itself, the bees completely stopped flying.

“We anticipated, based on the smattering of reports in the literature, that bee activity would drop as light dimmed during the eclipse and would reach a minimum at totality,” said Candace Galen, professor of biological sciences at the University of Missouri and lead researcher on the study. “But, we had not expected that the change would be so abrupt, that bees would continue flying up until totality and only then stop, completely. It was like ‘lights out’ at summer camp! That surprised us.”

Since the bees tended to fly for a longer duration immediately before and after the totality, the authors of the new study suspect that the sudden darkness may have coaxed the insects to return to their nests. Usually, at night, bees return to their nests and fly more slowly. Just one buzz was recorded during totality in all of the 16 monitoring locations.

Alternatively, the eclipse may have caused the bees to reduce flight speed — so that they might not bump into things or each other.

The researchers could not differentiate between bee species from the recordings alone but observations suggest that the monitored bees were bumblebees (genus Bombus) or honey bees (Apis mellifera).

Scientists have known for a while that animals behave differently, sometimes bizarrely, during eclipses. For instance, orb-weaving spiders destroy their webs during an eclipse.

“The eclipse gave us an opportunity to ask whether the novel environmental context–mid-day, open skies–would alter the bees’ behavioral response to dim light and darkness. As we found, complete darkness elicits the same behavior in bees, regardless of timing or context. And that’s new information about bee cognition,” Galen says.

The next solar eclipse will take place on April 8, 2024. This time, Galen and researchers plan on monitoring bees again to see whether the insects actually head home when the lights go off.

“The total solar eclipse was a complete crowd-pleaser, and it was great fun to hitch bee research to its tidal wave of enthusiasm,” Galen says.

The findings were published in the Annals of the Entomological Society of America.

share Share

What Happens When You Throw a Paper Plane From Space? These Physicists Found Out

A simulated A4 paper plane takes a death dive from the ISS for science.

A New Vaccine Could Stop One of the Deadliest Forms of Breast Cancer Before It Starts

A phase 1 trial hints at a new era in cancer prevention

After 700 Years Underwater Divers Recovered 80-Ton Blocks from the Long-Lost Lighthouse of Alexandria

Divered recover 22 colossal blocks from one of the ancient world's greatest marvels.

Scientists Discover 9,000 Miles of Ancient Riverbeds on Mars. The Red Planet May Have Been Wet for Millions of Years

A new look at Mars makes you wonder just how wet it really was.

This Is Why Human Faces Look So Different From Neanderthals

Your face stops growing in a way that neanderthals' never did.

Ozempic Is Changing More Than Waistlines as Scientists Wise Up to Concerning Side Effects

But GLP-1 drugs also offer many benefits beyond weight loss.

Researchers stop Parkinson's symptoms in mice using a copper supplement. Could humans be next?

Could we stop Parkinson's by feeding neurons copper?

There's a massive, ancient river system under Antarctica's ice sheet

This has big implications for our climate models.

I Don’t Know Who Needs to Hear This, But It's Okay to Drink Coffee in the Summer

Finally, some good news.

New Blood Test Reveals How Fast Your Organs Are Aging. Your Brain’s Biological Age May Hold the Key to How Long You Live

People with "older" brains had a much higher risk of dying compared to "younger" brains.