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2006-08-29 20:19:59 · 6 answers · asked by Roy W 3 in Science & Mathematics Zoology

6 answers

Bees are woodland insects and evolution has taught them to
fear fire more than anything else. When smoke enters a
hive the bees are immediately diverted to eat as much honey
as possible as there may be a need to abandon the hive at a
moments notice. This diverts them whilst the beekeeper
takes their home apart.

The wasp commonly called a "yellow jacket" is not much larger than the average bee. The primary difference is in how they are wired. Wasps are predators, and behave as such.

2006-08-29 20:36:33 · answer #1 · answered by < Roger That > 5 · 0 0

I kept bees for diverse years and in quite some situations worked with them with a smoker. My impact has continually been that smoke changed into an illustration of hearth that ought to damage the hive. once you smoke the bees they initiate ingesting honey, probably so that they have got the skill to secrete wax for progression a sparkling comb in a sparkling area. A bee that's finished of honey is amazingly docile, that's why you may cope with a swarm of bees with little possibility of being stung, except you're taking position to overwhelm one, that receives them aroused. If the smoke from the smoker is too warm the bees are disturbed fairly than calmed. i wouldn't have self assurance the smoke to have a similar outcome on wasps, alongside with yellowjackets or hornets. I actual do not recognize no matter if smoke with diverse odors ought to produce diverse consequences on honeybees. also the idea that the smoke interferes with the alarm pheromone is one i have in no way heard before, and that i don't recognize no matter if that's actual or not.

2016-11-23 14:03:11 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I didn't think the smoke calmed the bees, I thought the smoke dried out the bees making them seek the hive to get some honey and it is the honey that acts as a narcotic to bees.

2006-08-29 20:26:25 · answer #3 · answered by quntmphys238 6 · 0 0

they breathe in the smoke and the lack of oxygen makes them less active. living creatures need oxygen to maintain movement. your blood actually carries oxygen from your lungs to every cell i your body because cells cannot function without it. the more active you are the more oxygen your cells and musckes need. bees are constantly active and therefore use a lot more oxygen to move quickly. they're whole breathing system is an oxygen powerhouser and they're bodies rely on oxygen intake a lot. thats they slow down when they are breathing the smoke. if they continued to move as quickly or as much they would die.wasps arent constantly busy. they arent constantly moving like bees are. bees are constantly doing something even if they look liek they arent. wasps arent liek that. tey're systems arent built like bees. so they arent as sensitive to lack of oxygen as bees are, because they're cells dotn rely on oxygen the way the bees cells do.

2006-08-29 20:24:30 · answer #4 · answered by oxenofterror 2 · 1 0

yeah, thats wierd, smoke calms just about everything

2006-08-29 20:21:37 · answer #5 · answered by chancethepug 4 · 0 0

cuz

2006-08-29 20:26:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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