When a Bee Falls In Water, It 'Surfs' Tiny Ripples to Safety

A flurry of wingbeats creates a pattern of waves that nudge bathing bees shoreward.

By Leslie Nemo
Nov 20, 2019 10:00 PMNov 20, 2019 10:21 PM
Swimming-Bee
When a bee falls in water, it uses a flurry of wingbeats to surf to safety. (Credit: Caltech)

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When bees accidentally land in water, their wet wings keep them from lifting off and flying away. So instead, the insects reach the water’s edge by becoming tiny surfers. 

A close examination of how bees swim, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows they use their wings to generate small ripples that the insect can ride atop to move forward. Understanding the physics governing how bees navigate water opens up a new way to look at designing devices that fly and swim, says study author Chris Roh, a research engineer at Caltech.

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