Reading Unit 17:: Bees Text
Reading Unit 17:: Bees Text
Collecting Nectar
Bees make honey to survive. It is their only essential food. If there are 60,000 bees in a hive about one
2 third of them will be involved in gathering nectar which is then made into honey by the house bees. A
small number of bees work as foragers or searchers. They find a source of nectar, then return to the hive
to tell the other bees where it is.
Foragers let the other bees know where the source of the nectar is by performing a dance which gives
information about the direction and the distance the bees will need to fly. During this dance the bee
shakes her abdomen from side to side while running in circles in the shape of a figure 8. The dance
follows the pattern shown on the following diagram.
The diagram shows a bee dancing inside the hive on the vertical face of the honeycomb. If the middle
part of the figure 8 points straight up it means that bees can find the food if they fly straight towards the
sun. If the middle part of the figure 8 points to the right, the food is to the right of the sun.
The distance of the food from the hive is indicated by the length of time that the bee shakes her abdomen.
If the food is quite near the bee shakes her abdomen for a short time. If it is a long way away she shakes
her abdomen for a long time.
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READING SAMPLE TASKS
MAKING HONEY
When the bees arrive at the hive carrying nectar they give this to the house bees. The house bees move
the nectar around with their mandibles, exposing it to the warm dry air of the hive. When it is first
gathered the nectar contains sugar and minerals mixed with about 80% water. After ten to twenty
minutes, when much of the excess water has evaporated, the house bees put the nectar in a cell in the
honeycomb where evaporation continues. After three days, the honey in the cells contains about 20%
water. At this stage, the bees cover the cells with lids which they make out of beeswax.
At any one time the bees in a hive usually gather nectar from the same type of blossom and from the
same area. Some of the main sources of nectar are fruit trees, clover and flowering trees.
Source: “Hum Sweet Hum”, National Foundation for Educational Research, 1993.
GLOSSARY
house bee a worker bee which works inside the hive.
2
mandible mouth-part.
QUESTION 17.1
What is the purpose of the bees’ dance?
A. To celebrate the successful production of honey.
B. To indicate the type of plant the foragers have found.
C. To celebrate the birth of a new Queen Bee.
D. To indicate where the foragers have found food.
QUESTION 17.2
Write down three of the main sources of nectar.
1.
2.
3.
QUESTION 17.3
What is the main difference between nectar and honey?
A. The proportion of water in the substance.
B. The proportion of sugar to minerals in the substance.
C. The type of plant from which the substance is gathered.
D. The type of bee which processes the substance.
QUESTION 17.4
In the dance, what does the bee do to show how far the food is from the hive?
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TAKE THE TEST: SAMPLE QUESTIONS FROM OECD’S PISA ASSESSMENTS - ISBN 978-92-64-05080-8 - © OECD 2009