Scientists are using tiny QR codes to track honey bee movements and gather groundbreaking insights into their foraging habits. By monitoring thousands of bees, researchers have discovered that while ...
Recognizing internal talent and finding ways to offer bonuses and good pay helps Anaïs Beddard keep Lady Moon Farms’ team ...
In a recent conversation with Peter Gloor at MIT, we talk about swarm creativity, COINs, AI and a collective human-AI future.
Oxford and Miami is home to multiple clubs dedicated to building habiatat for  wildlife to bolster local conservation efforts ...
Scientists with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology say a new breed of tiny flying robots that weigh less than a gram ...
Butterflies and bees are important garden visitors — they’re both pollinators, which means they help plants reproduce. When ...
Found in a roughly 350-year-old manuscript by Dutch biologist Johannes Swammerdam, the scientific illustration shows the brain of a honeybee drone.
Scientists glued teeny tiny QR codes, that are smaller than a pinky nail, to the backs of young bees to figure out how much time the pollinators spend buzzing outside their hives, collecting pollen ...
Digitizing the bee collections at museums could answer important questions like whether certain species are still buzzing in ...
At Penn State Extension's Greenhouse Growers Day, Patricia Prade presented ways to protect pollinator insects when using ...
Researchers put a sensor at the entrance of beehives to register each time the pollinators entered or exited, and how long ...
Entomologists are gluing tiny QR codes on honey bees to better track the pollinators’ travel habits and life cycles. In doing ...