Phys.org, Jul 25, 2013
…Now research from Cardiff University's School of
Engineering, published in Journal of the Royal Society Interface, has found that
the cells in a natural honeybee comb have a circular shape at "birth"
but quickly transform into the familiar rounded hexagonal shape while the comb
is being built.
The research led by Professor Bhushan Karihaloo, Cardiff
School of Engineering with co-authors
from Beijing Institute of Technology and Peking University
also shows how this transformation takes place.
"People have always speculated how bees have formed
these honeycombs," said Professor Karihaloo "There have been some
incredible, esoteric, even bizarre explanations; they believed the bees had an
uncanny ability to measure angles. But it's actually much more
straight-forward."
The answer, according to a new study, is that the cells do
not start out as hexagons but as circles. Darwin in fact had suggested this but
he had no supporting evidence.
They gradually form into hexagons by a flow of the wax,
which is turned semi-molten by the heat from specialist "heater"
worker bees. At approx 45°C, the wax starts to flow slowly as an elastic
liquid. The wax, softened by the heat, then gets pulled into hexagonal cells by
surface tension at the junctions where three walls meet…
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