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After they fail to get inside the tube lights they suicide!!!
i wud like to know the wierd reason...

2007-05-03 05:11:24 · 2 answers · asked by prabhu 1 in Science & Mathematics Zoology

2 answers

Tube lights emit some light in the ultraviolet range as well as visible light. Your standard bug zapper light tends to be bluish because it is designed to shine with lots of UV.

Many flowers shine colors in the UV range that we can not see, reflecting it the way they do any other color from the sun. Flowers often indicate their center with UV patches pointing inward like a starburst. Bees and wasps can see in this range, and are attracted to UV light because of this reason. Nothing in their evolutionary history prepared them for a thing that shine UV and is deadly! poor guys...

2007-05-03 05:19:51 · answer #1 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

They view the world (and flowers for food) with an emphasis on UV and tube lights give off a bunch of UV. You can get a filtered fluorescent that looks yellow to us and blocks most of the UV

2007-05-03 05:16:06 · answer #2 · answered by Mike1942f 7 · 0 0

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