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Why Bees Fly With Landing Gear Down

 
 
Reply Tue 11 Apr, 2006 11:44 am
Why Bees Fly With Landing Gear Down

Sara Goudarzi
LiveScience Staff Writer
LiveScience.com Tue Apr 11, 10:00 AM ET

Unlike landing gears that are retracted during a jet's flight, some bees leave them down as they buzz along.


Orchid bees swing their hind legs forward to reach top speed, a new study finds. The legs also generate lift, which keeps the bees balanced and helps prevent rolling.

"The hind legs resemble airplane wings, which probably explains why they also generate lift," said Stacey Combes of the University of California, Berkeley.

It was just earlier this year that other researchers figure out how bees fly. In order to examine their flight mechanism more closely, Combes and colleagues encouraged the bees to fly in an outdoor wind tunnel by enticing them with aromatic oils.

They found that as speeds got higher, the bees extended their hind legs to maintain a stable position. But at the highest speeds, even those with fully extended legs reached their limit and lost their balance. This instability came from the rolling force on their legs.

"They roll all the way to the side or often upside down, and crash to the ground," Combes said.

Bee speed is limited not by muscle power or how high they can flap their wings, but on how they balance themselves during unstable conditions, the researchers found.

The dangling legs help them keep their balance, similar to when a spinning figure skater extends her arms, Combes explained.

Understanding the mechanism of bee flight could help engineers design small flying machines for search and rescue missions or surveillance.

The study was presented last week at the Annual Meeting for the Society for Experimental Biology.
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Wolf ODonnell
 
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Reply Tue 11 Apr, 2006 12:54 pm
As interesting as this is, I don't think it would be very safe. The moment the engines stop, down you go as a brick. It's just like a helicopter in that regards... which also has its "legs down".
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coluber2001
 
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Reply Tue 11 Apr, 2006 01:54 pm
http://www.livescience.com/images/060410_bee_flight_02.jpg

Interesting article, but a little short. The top of the legs must be curved like an airfoil to generate lift. I've though about whether the elytra-the fore wings of beetles, which are rather rigid and just crank up out of the way instead of flapping-act as wing foils since the top surface is curved. I've always discounted this because the airspeed is so low compared to birds; however, since the insect is so tiny and its gravitational pull so low, the small lift generated may be effective.

http://www.fotosearch.com/comp/CRT/CRT197/009807IL.jpg
Stag beetle in flight. Notice the curved upped surface of the fore wings, and though much smaller than the flight wings, they may exert some lift.
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