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originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: jerich0
"Wild cane" do you mean like Bamboo?
Would not be the first time i was huckled off in shame like.
Anyroad im bang on about the raw honey, its the "bees knees".
originally posted by: BrokenCircles
a reply to: Vasa Croe
Like 'network dude', I too was curious how you knew they were there, but I was also wondering if you were expecting there to be anywhere near that many of them?
originally posted by: manimal
...
It wouldn’t be by chance if it were evolution. The most efficient way of construction would have been selected for over generations. For example, if all bees made square comb and then one weirdo beehive started making hexagons, the hexagon May last longer because it would be stronger. The longer the hive lasted, the more offspring would be produced and the more likely that the hexagon hive would split and produce more hexagon hives until all hives were hexagon.
originally posted by: whereislogic
originally posted by: manimal
...
It wouldn’t be by chance if it were evolution. The most efficient way of construction would have been selected for over generations. For example, if all bees made square comb and then one weirdo beehive started making hexagons, the hexagon May last longer because it would be stronger. The longer the hive lasted, the more offspring would be produced and the more likely that the hexagon hive would split and produce more hexagon hives until all hives were hexagon.
The bolded part sounds like a chance-based event to me. Anyway, we have no evidence of honeybees ever making square-shaped chambers for their honeycombs, so it's a bit moot to speculate about it to fit it into some evolutionary storyline/narrative, to make it sound like a more plausible pathway to get there. In the sciences, it's supposed to be all about the evidence, not good storytelling (telling a hopefully convincing story, making that your goal; of course in practice, that does often happen that way and focus on the evidence is lost or even obscured when the factual or observed evidence is pointing in another direction than the storyline one wishes to promote).
originally posted by: ANNED
If you want to have problems with ants, just poison a honeybee hive in a wall of your home.
As soon as the bees are dead the ants will go after the honey, and you will have a fight for years trying to kill off the ants.
It's always better to remove a hive and relocate it