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Part 2: TOEFL Lecture 1

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You'vebeen
aboutanimalbehavior.
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TOEFL Lecture 1

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You've been reading about animal behavior.

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Today we'll discuss one of the most astonishing behaviors in the animal world: dancing bees.

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Did you know that bees can dance?

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Well, neither did scientists, until the 1960s.

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That's when a German scientist, named, uh, Karl von Frisch,

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noticed something truly remarkable.

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As he was observing honeybees,

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he noticed that some of the bees, which he called scout bees,

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flew out of the hive to look for food.

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When a scout found a site where there was food,

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it flew back to the beehive and started dancing.

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This dance somehow told the other honeybees where the food was,

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because after the dance, the bees... some of the bees flew from the hive straight to the site of the food.

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Von Frisch called the bees that collect the food forager bees.

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He thought the scout bee's dance told the forager bees three things:

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first, the smell of the food it had found;

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second, which direction to fly to reach the food;

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and third, the distance of the food site from the beehive.

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Von Frisch won the 1973 Nobel Prize for this discovery,

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but many scientists were skeptical of his theory.

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They didn't believe it was the dance that led the forager bees to food.

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Instead, they thought it might be, oh, the smell of the food on the dancing bee,

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or maybe that they just followed the scout back to the food site.

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Well, very recently, some British scientists used a new type of radar

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to prove that von Frisch's theory was indeed correct.

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It is the dance that communicates this information to other bees.

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British researchers found that the scout bees perform two types of dances.

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If the food is near the hive, say, oh, about 50 or 60 meters away,

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the scout flies in a round pattern, like a circle.

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This tells the location, but not the direction, of the food site.

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If the site is farther away,

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the scout does what's called a waggle dance.

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It flies in a pattern of ovals and vertical lines.

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The speed of the waggle dance tells other bees how far away the food site is.

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The slower the dance, the farther away the food.

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If the scout flies in a vertical line up the side of the beehive,

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it's telling the foragers to fly directly toward the sun.

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If the scout flies vertically down the hive, it's saying, "fly away from the sun".

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Up is toward, down is away.

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If the scout flies at an angle to the hive,

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it's telling the foragers to fly neither toward nor away from the sun, but in between.

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The bees have a special internal mechanism to know which angle they should fly,

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based on the sun, the hive and the food site.

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They can also measure the distance they fly by recording the motion of things they see as they fly past.

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Now, um, one problem with von Frisch's theory had been this:

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It seems to take the forager bees a long time to reach the food site.

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That's why scientists thought that perhaps it wasn't the waggle dance that led them there.

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For many years, scientists couldn't follow the foragers after they left the hive

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because they didn't have the technology.

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Just a few years ago, though,

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the British scientists solved this problem using a new type of radar.

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They were able to attach a... a small radio transmitter to forager bees,

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I don't know how, but they did.

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This enabled them to follow the forager bees' flight after they left the hive.

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The radar showed that foragers, do, in fact, fly straight to the area of the food site.

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They don't follow the scout bee back to the site,

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because the scout goes into the hive after it finishes dancing.

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Well then, if the waggle dance does lead the foragers directly to the food site,

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why does it take so long for them to find the actual food?

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The answer is that the waggle dance leads the foragers only to the general area of the food.

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It doesn't tell them the exact location of the flowers or plants that have the food.

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So the foragers have to spend a while flying around the area

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before they find the exact location of what they're looking for.