A Peruvian scientist and her team are working together to make sure stingless bees are around for generations to come by ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Stingless bees become world’s first insect to be granted legal rights in Peru
In a global first, Peru recognizes stingless bees as rights-bearing species, reshaping how insects fit into environmental law ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
How stingless bees in the Amazon became the first insects with legal rights
Learn how stingless bees quietly sustain Amazonian forests — and how a new law is changing what happens when they’re harmed.
AZ Animals US on MSN
Why Drunk Bees Aren’t Allowed Back in the Hive Until They Sober Up
Bees can get drunk from fermented nectar, and guard bees may eject intoxicated foragers to protect the hive from harm.
Researchers uncover how the fruitless gene steers brain development and social feeding behavior in male honeybees.
Diversity dude calls for crashing the economy so that White people do not stop White Genocide in time. We need an emergency ...
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