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Laboratory investigations of the electrical characteristics of honey bees and their exposure to intense electric fields

✍ Scribed by Vytautas P. Bindokas; James R. Gauger; Bernard Greenberg


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1989
Tongue
English
Weight
745 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0197-8462

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✦ Synopsis


Bees exposed to 60-Hz electric (E) fields >I50 kV/m show field-induced vibrations of wings, antennae, and body hairs. They also show altered behavior if exposed while in contact with a conductive substrate. Measurements indicate that approximately 240 nA is coupled to a bee standing on a conductive substrate in a 100-kV/m E field. In lab experiments, bee disturbance and sting result from exposure to E field >200 kV/m (bee current >480 nA) and reduced voluntary movements at >300 kV/m (>720 nA bee current) only if the bee is on a conductive substrate. It is hypothesized that in the latter situation coupled bee current drains through the lower thorax and legs to the conductive substrate, and that the resulting enhanced current density in these regions is the cause of observed responses. The observation that bees exposed to intense E fields on an insulator show vibration of body parts but no behavioral response suggests that vibration contributes little to the disturbance of bees in intense E fields.

Lab measurements of bee impedance from front-to-rear leg pairs were made on wet and dry conductors. Measurements validate the selection of 1 M a as a middle value for bee impedance used in the design of devices used to generate step-potential-induced currents in bees.


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