Bees Content / Bees Content for ϲϿ Davis en What Makes Queen Bees So Smart? /news/what-makes-queen-bees-so-smart <p><span>A bumblebee’s brain is smaller than a sesame seed. But it can still accomplish quite a bit.</span></p><p><span>“You don’t need a big brain to learn well,” said Felicity Muth, an assistant professor in the Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior&nbsp;and a National Geographic Explorer who studies cognition in bees and other animals. “Bumblebees are capable of many of the same cognitive feats as many vertebrates.”</span></p> November 07, 2024 - 2:22pm Andy Fell /news/what-makes-queen-bees-so-smart Climate Change Is Ratcheting Up the Pressure on Bees /climate/blog/bees-face-many-challenges-and-climate-change-ratcheting-pressure Extreme weather like drought, heat and storms also affects wild and native bees, says Jennie L. Durant in this essay for The Conversation. October 14, 2022 - 2:43pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/blog/bees-face-many-challenges-and-climate-change-ratcheting-pressure Pesticides Can Affect Multiple Generations of Bees /climate/news/pesticides-can-affect-multiple-generations-bees A ϲϿ Davis study finds that pesticides not only directly affect bee health, but effects from past exposure can carry over to future generations. November 29, 2021 - 11:52am Amy M Quinton /climate/news/pesticides-can-affect-multiple-generations-bees Genome Sequencing Shows Climate Barrier to Spread of Africanized Bees /curiosity/news/genome-sequencing-shows-climate-barrier-spread-africanized-bees <p>Since the 1950s, “Africanized” honeybees have spread north and south across the Americas until apparently coming to a halt in California and northern Argentina. Now genome sequencing of hundreds of bees from the northern and southern limits shows a gradual decline in African ancestry across hundreds of miles, rather than an abrupt shift.</p> October 21, 2020 - 10:20am Andy Fell /curiosity/news/genome-sequencing-shows-climate-barrier-spread-africanized-bees Pesticides and Food Scarcity Dramatically Reduce Wild Bee Population /climate/news/pesticides-and-food-scarcity-dramatically-reduce-wild-bee-population <p>The loss of flowering plants and the widespread use of pesticides could be a double punch to wild bee populations. In a new study, researchers at the University of California, Davis, found that the combined threats reduced blue orchard bee reproduction by 57 percent and resulted in fewer female offspring. The study was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.</p> October 06, 2020 - 9:30am Amy M Quinton /climate/news/pesticides-and-food-scarcity-dramatically-reduce-wild-bee-population THE DOWNLOAD: Steam Appears, Art Surprises, Bees Disappear /news/download-steam-art <p>Most campus buildings are heated with steam pumped through a network of underground pipes. Overnight Thursday (Feb. 2), water flooded several of the underground vaults that house steam lines and other equipment needed to circulate it throughout campus. In this case, the flooding caused electrical shorts that temporarily disabled the pumps used to clear standing water from of the vaults. The mixture of cold rainwater and steaming hot pipes, led to steam escaping from a number of grates around campus.</p> February 07, 2017 - 9:00am Cody Kitaura /news/download-steam-art Entomologists, Engineers Work Together to Weigh a Bee /curiosity/news/entomologists-engineers-work-together-weigh-bee-0 <p>How to weigh an individual bee is&nbsp;the problem&nbsp;that brought together insect specialists at ϲϿ&nbsp;Davis and two teams of ϲϿ Davis engineering students this year. By understanding everything they can about a bumblebee colony, researchers hope to&nbsp;understand&nbsp;how California’s native bumblebees respond to changes in the environment and the availability of flowers, and how we can protect these insects that are so vital to both agriculture and wild plants.</p> July 06, 2016 - 4:48pm Andy Fell /curiosity/news/entomologists-engineers-work-together-weigh-bee-0 Wild bees decline where crop pollination most needed, study finds /news/wild-bees-decline-where-crop-pollination-most-needed-study-finds <p>Wild bee populations have declined significantly since 2008 in Central California and some other key areas of the United States, according to a newly published study co-authored by ϲϿ Davis researchers.</p> <p>The new study suggests that wild bee populations likely declined in areas comprising 23 percent of the nation between 2008 and 2013, a decline associated with conversion of natural wild bee habitat into intensive agriculture.</p> December 21, 2015 - 12:00am IET WebDev /news/wild-bees-decline-where-crop-pollination-most-needed-study-finds 4 Animal Studies for the Wild and Endangered /news/four-animal-studies-wild-endangered <p>Frustrated elephants, human-hippo conflict, endangered killer whales, climate change for bees. These are the topics that draw people to ϲϿ Davis graduate school.</p> February 12, 2015 - 8:00am Robyn Frances Huey /news/four-animal-studies-wild-endangered