The honey bee brain has an oval shape and is about the size of one sesame seed. The bee brain is a very sophisticated sensory system which gives them excellent sight and smell abilities. Their small brains are able to make very complicated calculations on distances for different locations.
Bees can remember various colors and different landmarks quite easily. In Australia, researchers were able to successfully teach honey bees to identify several different colors. The bees were shown a color that was used to indicate a specific path in a maze. The bees were then able to find their way through the maze because they recognized that color. They were also able to recall that specific color later on, and they use it to guide their way through the maze even when they weren't shown it at the start of the maze.
A bee has 960,000 neurons in its brain. Their brain's measure just one tiny cubic millimeter, which they use very intelligently. Worker bees have to handle various roles in their lives. Foragers have to find flowers, figure out if they are a good source food, find their way back to the hive, and then share all of that detailed information with other foragers.
Honey bees can quickly remember various locations by smell. Studies showed that bees can go back to a place that had a particular smell when that identical odor was released in their hive. These bees communicate with each other using their special language code that is called the "waggle" dance. Their dance pattern looks very much like a figure eight.
Research studies have revealed that bees did their best learning in the morning. This turns out to be very beneficial to honey bees because flower nectar levels are very high in the morning. When bees get their difficult learning done in the morning, they are able to save some energy for their easier tasks for later on in the day.
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