Bees don't have lungs.
from fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz on 16 Apr 04:54
https://mander.xyz/post/28241038

theguardian.com/…/they-survived-fire-and-lead-poi…

#science_memes

threaded - newest

Gullible@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 05:15 next collapse

So if I understand you correctly, if I remove my lungs, I’m a bee? My aunt had lung cancer, so they’ll probably kill me, anyway. I’ll report back on the results.

trxxruraxvr@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 05:26 next collapse

That is almost how it works, but to really become a bee you’ll have to turn the lungs into wings. Good luck. I’m looking forward to seeing the result.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:35 collapse

[Lung flapping sounds]

Angelusz@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:48 collapse

Mm moist.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:19 collapse

It would definitely change the nature of romance and sex.

Nougat@fedia.io on 16 Apr 05:27 next collapse

Then, when your spouse hugs you, they’ll have beauty in their eye.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:07 collapse

Bee holder

tahoe@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 05:27 next collapse

No because you’re likely too big (no offense) :(

I think insects have little holes all over their bodies, in which air gets inside by itself through some physics shenanigans. It doesn’t need to be actively sucked in like with lungs, it just happens because they’re so small.

This method doesn’t scale up though since if you’re bigger, you need more air, and having little holes all over your body won’t cut it. Thats when you know you need lungs, and that’s why you don’t see insects the size of a dog these days (thankfully).

There used to be times in the Earth’s history (Carboniferous) where the air’s composition was different though, and since it had more oxygen in it, insects could grow a lot larger.

wisely@feddit.org on 16 Apr 05:59 next collapse

So theoretically if we terraformed the Earth we would be free to genetically engineer humans to survive without lungs?

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:23 collapse

They wouldn’t be human. So much of us is built around our lungs, including our ability to speak that anything adapted to survive without them would be as different from a human as a human is from other lung-less animals. Even if they were more intelligent, they would not look or act remotely like a human.

XTL@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 12:51 collapse

Keyword suggestion: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transhumanism

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:56 collapse

Okay, first of all, how dare you bring evidence and reason into this.

On a more serious note, I agree with the position mentioned in the second paragraph that transhumanism results in a posthuman being, that is, a species that is not human.

Cethin@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 20:33 collapse

Human is such a flaky word, and species isn’t much better. I’d bet there could be a situation in which they can successfully interbreed with relatively modern humans and still produce viable offspring, so still the same species. Human doesn’t even require homo sapiens though. It can include other species that have the traits of humans.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:38 collapse

You’re not wrong. One group will displace the other, though. Some of us Homo Sapiens still have genes from Homo Neanderthalensis. Neanderthals aren’t around anymore, though. Also, archeological evidence suggests they didn’t spend much time together.

Metz@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:34 next collapse

Fun fact: Cutaneous respiration (aka “Skin breathing”) is something we humans do too. But it accounts only for 1% to 2% of our oxygen input.

However, the cornea of ​​our eyes doesn’t have its own blood vessels to supply it. Therefore, it relies on direct gas exchange with the environment—in other words, skin respiration.

Our eyes breath like bees.

dave@feddit.uk on 16 Apr 07:06 next collapse

Is that why bees can’t wear contact lenses?

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:14 collapse

No, it’s because they have compound eyes. Even if they could afford all the different lenses they need, they’d never have enough time to put them in and take them out, while still working a full day.

Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 08:23 collapse

surely they could just make one big lens with facets in it? sure they’re gonna be hellishly expensive but at least they’re usable

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:03 collapse

Honestly, I was already out of my depth with the entomology and ophthalmology discussed here. The economics of bee optometry might be a bridge too far for me. Can a bee make enough honey to afford such lenses? If so, does it improve the bee’s ability to make honey enough to justify the cost? I have no idea and no clue regarding how to investigate this issue.

Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 11:49 collapse

perhaps we’re coming at this from the wrong direction, does a bee even need lenses? maybe what they actually need is just eye protection, which would make everything much cheaper

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:36 next collapse

Interesting hypothesis. I guess the best way to test it would be to try to sell bee safety glasses to beekeepers.

DarkDarkHouse@lemmy.sdf.org on 17 Apr 10:54 collapse

You can alway upsell them on bee ears to hold the glasses on

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 21:44 collapse

Genius. Genetic modification of bees. What could possibly go wrong?

XTL@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 12:47 collapse

Correction or no, it seems something like goggles is the solution. Boggles?

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:12 next collapse

I like this fact. That’s why it’s so important to take out certain kinds of contacts at night.

hperrin@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:06 next collapse

So what you’re saying is I have two eyes in my beeholes?

milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 12:00 collapse

1-2% is more than I’d have imagined!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:10 next collapse

Adding to this, the holes (spiracles) connect to the tracheae, which connect to air sacs. While respiration is almost entirely passive in smaller species, larger species actually force air through the system to aid the otherwise passive process.

…m.wikipedia.org/…/Respiratory_system_of_insects

Side note: Spiders have book lungs. They’re not insects, but like insects, they are arthropods.

joelfromaus@aussie.zone on 16 Apr 21:41 collapse

It’s been a long time since I’ve seen it but the movie Mimic had bugs that had grown to the size of a human and taken on a vaguely human form in order to hunt us.

The movie used the reasoning that the bugs had developed basic lungs which enabled them to grow past the limits of their usual breathing apparatus.

No point to make here, I just remember it being cool that they put a small amount of thought into why the bugs could grow to human proportions.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 17 Apr 00:03 collapse

Kafka's Gregor would like a word.

massive_bereavement@fedia.io on 16 Apr 07:21 next collapse

If you like reading, maybe a half-way solution could be achieved with book lungs like a spider.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:17 collapse

Non-insect arthropods FTW!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:37 next collapse

Yeah, and if you pluck a chicken, it will be a human, because it’s featherless and stands on two legs.

hperrin@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:04 next collapse

But what came first, the human or the egg?

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:12 collapse

I don’t have a clever response, so I’ll just point out that eggs predate vertebrates by millions of years.

milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 11:58 next collapse

Nah-ah, that makes it a dinosaur!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:30 collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/eb7d1011-8c2c-4a8e-ab96-346ac1a5aa73.jpeg">

Akasazh@feddit.nl on 16 Apr 16:37 collapse

Wait till you hear about Eric the half a bee

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 18 Apr 15:24 collapse

I do love me some Monty Python. I can never pick a favorite sketch. It keeps changing. The Parot sketch is definitely top ten.

GreatRam@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 00:03 collapse

Diogenes my goat

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 02:09 collapse

Glad you brought this up. I’m doing some work in this rich guy’s house and I can’t find a single spittoon.

FauxLiving@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 18:25 next collapse

My Aunt Bee had lung cancer

BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 12:51 collapse

left wiggle, right wiggle, left wiggle, buzz

WHAT! MY MOTHER WAS A SAINT!

happybadger@hexbear.net on 16 Apr 05:27 next collapse

We should all aspire to be more like bees.

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 05:30 next collapse

“fall asleep” sounds like a nice way to say ded

unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 06:17 next collapse

If they “survived the fire” then they probably dont die from oxygen depravation or at least not quickly.

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 07:33 collapse

Temporarily “fall asleep” then.

massive_bereavement@fedia.io on 16 Apr 07:19 next collapse

Just let the old ticker get some time off.

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 07:32 collapse

Honestly i wouldn’t mind “fall asleep” now.

massive_bereavement@fedia.io on 16 Apr 07:43 collapse

Sorry but we need you to do your part. Can't do it without you ;)

XTL@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 12:53 collapse

Shareholder value isn’t going to increase itself

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:03 collapse

To bee, or not to bee, that is the question:

Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer

The stings and sparrows of outrageous fortune,

Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,

And by opposing end them: to die, to sleep

No more; and by a sleep, to say we end

The heart-ache, and the thousand natural shocks

That Flesh is heir to? 'Tis a consummation

Devoutly to be wished. To die, to sleep,

To sleep, perchance to Dream; aye, there’s the buzz,

For in that sleep of death, what dreams may come,

When we have fluttered off this mortal coil,

Must give us pause.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 16 Apr 23:58 collapse

Well-done, Hamlet's ghost Jr! 👏👏👏

Spacehooks@reddthat.com on 16 Apr 06:10 next collapse

I remember the first time I heard bugs dont have lungs. Like wtf? Just no internal ventilation pumping air as needed. Seems wierd but also thx God. They are annoying enough.

antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 06:35 collapse

They also have no blood or blood vessels, just a little heart and blood-like stuff splashing around.

Spacehooks@reddthat.com on 16 Apr 11:20 next collapse

I didn’t know that either wow. Really freaking and interesting

scbasteve7@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 12:10 collapse

Bugs are fucking weird.

count_dongulus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 06:23 next collapse

Beekeepers intentionally use smoke to make bees docile during collection time, transfers, etc

milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 11:57 collapse

However, what I’ve heard from a beekeeper is that the smoke triggers a flight response in them (from fire) so they consume honey ready to flee, and that’s actual what makes them docile/drowsy.

faythofdragons@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 13:47 next collapse

You’re telling me the bees get the munchies when they smoke…

EvacuateSoul@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 16:35 collapse

Pretty shitty instinct if it means they end up sleeping instead of fleeing.

milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 22:25 collapse

I think if it comes to it they just flee, drowsily, with full bellies of honey - so they’ve got energy to fly and something left over to start the new hive.

pruwybn@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 06:34 next collapse

But that’s illegal!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 07:49 collapse

You wouldn’t not have a car.

You wouldn’t not have a handbag.

You wouldn’t not have a television.

You wouldn’t not have lungs.

Lacking lungs is not having them.

Not having lungs is against the law.

Lunglessness, it’s a crime.

massive_bereavement@fedia.io on 16 Apr 11:39 next collapse

Lungs, not even once.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:39 collapse

Just say anything because doing so proves you have lungs to power your larynx.

massive_bereavement@fedia.io on 16 Apr 20:20 collapse

I only communicate through stridulation

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:40 collapse

And not a dance like the noble bee?

massive_bereavement@fedia.io on 17 Apr 01:53 collapse

Only when someone asks me for directions

WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 13:47 collapse

Arrest Neelix!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:06 collapse
match@pawb.social on 16 Apr 07:27 next collapse

they don’t have circulatory systems either they’ve basically just pushing things through themselves and tryna make it work

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:19 collapse

Pedant here. They absolutely do have circulatory systems. They have what’s known as an open circulatory system, whereas we have a closed circulatory system.

hperrin@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:03 next collapse

Hold on, wait a minute, pause. There are people who think that bugs have lungs?

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:17 next collapse

To be fair, while bugs and other insects don’t have lungs, some arthropods do. The differences among arthropods, insects and bugs aren’t exactly common knowledge.

T156@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 11:54 next collapse

Usually not lungs as they exist in mammals, though.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:33 collapse

You’re right. They’re different.

TomasEkeli@programming.dev on 16 Apr 11:54 collapse

some have book-lungs not true lungs. Only us fish have “true” lungs

edit: this thread turned into nerd-heaven. i love it!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:33 next collapse

Agreed. I was referring to book lungs.

Also, I feel like you got some ‘splainin’ to do regarding the fish reference.

frigidaphelion@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 13:33 next collapse

In a nutshell: speaking cladistically, there is no such thing as a fish, or alternatively, all tetrapods are fish. You cant define a monophyletic group that includes “fish” that doesnt also include humans (and all other tetrapods eg birds and such). That’s my understanding anyway

faythofdragons@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 13:45 next collapse

From what I understand, this is sorta like a hangover from pre-DNA taxonomy. We went “yeah, those all look like fish, we’ll put them in the fish group”, only to find out later that a bunch of them weren’t very closely related at all. So now we have a ‘fish’ group that’s a total mess, and we’re in the middle of getting it organized and re-labelled.

frigidaphelion@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 13:53 collapse

Yeah exactly lol science is full of silly stuff like that but that’s the price of knowledge and of using models to understand things. Same with trees and such, they look alike to us so we call a lot of organisms trees but they are VASTLY different from each other in many cases

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:26 collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/6789957f-12b4-48f8-9d50-e9e87f0c6420.jpeg">

frigidaphelion@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 18:04 collapse

Excellent pic and excellent username. The tooooth!

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 18 Apr 15:03 collapse

Thanks frigidaphelion!

Is there a better way to link a user?

Soggy@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:07 next collapse

Fish is a polyphyletic group. It’s a shorthand to refer to various lines of aquatic vertebrates with a similar anatomy. It’s not a clade but that’s not the only way to logically group organisms. People trot it out like a “gotcha” or just misuse it in much the same way they don’t understand speciation (or most science terminology, to be frank)

We are not fish by anyone’s honest definition, but “there’s no such thing as a fish” is the kind of attention-grabbing false revelation I hate: it’s the headline with none of the understanding to actually learn something.

(I’m not annoyed at you, I think you understand perfectly based on your wording)

frigidaphelion@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:24 collapse

My knowledge on the subject is purely at a youtube video level so i am happy to have someone else provide better knowledge and insight

faythofdragons@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 18:33 collapse

I too have seen that Clint’s Reptiles video, lmao

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:20 collapse

Can’t we just un-fish it like we do for other clades when we need to?

“There’s an ape in the office!”

“Yes, his name is Tom. More importantly, he is a human being, and we don’t refer to them as apes outside of an academic context and even then, only when necessary.”

[Tom eats a banana, screams at an intern, and starts picking his nose]

Klear@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:34 collapse

No, fuck paraphyletic groups.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 18:02 collapse

I meant, can’t we just be more specific rather than use paraphyletic grouping?

“What’s for dinner?”

“Fish”

“That could mean anything!”

“You know I meant Actinopterygii.”

“Still pretty broad.”

“Oncorhynchus.”

“You know how I feel about trout.”

“Ugh. tshawytscha.”

“Well, why didn’t you just say so in the first place?”

FauxLiving@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 18:23 collapse

Some commenters here really need to go and come into contact with Eremochloa ophiuroides

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 19:09 collapse

Respectfully, I must disagree. I recommend Poa pratensis, but I admit that this varies based on the USDA plant hardiness zone.

FauxLiving@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:07 collapse

I certainly agree that the texture of Poa Pratensis is much more pleasurable. However, being in zone 8 and not wanting to seed my entire lawn every year, I’m more familiar with E. ophiuroides and Zoysia japonica.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:43 collapse

That was a way more thorough response than I was expecting.

Also, “zoysia” is a name I haven’t heard in a long time. How do you keep it under control?

FauxLiving@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 00:07 collapse

My yard is surrounded by pine forest, nature does a good job of keeping it from spreading too far. No flower beds, decorative plants in pots.

It’s low maintenance and looks good enough for the backyard and I don’t have neighbors close enough to complain about rhizomes.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 02:07 collapse

Sounds like paradise. Keep living your best life.

WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 13:44 collapse

We’re all descended from fish.

Also, IIRC, some fish are more closely related to us than they are to other fish, making it impossible to biologically define a category of animal that includes everything we call a fish but doesn’t include us.

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:27 collapse

Thanks!

Also, I recognize your username. I feel like you may have encountered my ignorance on at least one previous occasion.

Dasus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:00 collapse

Only us fish have “true” lungs

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/b1f8f630-7255-42c2-8db2-34b656c44342.gif">

Maalus@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:24 next collapse

It’s funny that this is biology in 4th grade and half the people here are shocked

frostysauce@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:36 next collapse

I didn’t think bees had lungs. I also didn’t think bees didn’t have lungs…

SuperSaiyanSwag@lemmy.zip on 17 Apr 12:58 collapse

I’m less bothered by that person not knowing and way more bothered by them just being so confidently incorrect. Doesn’t take long to just look it up yourself. Unless the whole post was an educational setup?

Alpha71@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 08:36 next collapse

Hunh. TIL.

AppleTea@lemmy.zip on 16 Apr 08:51 collapse

Not just bees, it’s true of all insects.

Consequently, the amount of oxygen in the air determines how big bugs can grow. Get too big, and the oxygen can’t diffuse into the body fast enough. This even shows up in the fossil records, with larger bugs being found alongside evidence of eras that had more oxygen in the atmosphere.

Tlaloc_Temporal@lemmy.ca on 16 Apr 13:12 next collapse

They aren’t insects, but most arachnids have book lungs, which are basically a pocket full of air gills.

Korhaka@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 19:08 collapse

How much was the oxygen and where has it gone since then?

AppleTea@lemmy.zip on 17 Apr 00:57 collapse

Currently oxygen is about 20% of the atmosphere. In the Carboniferous period, 60 million years ago, it’s thought to have gotten as high as 30%.

Oxygen is highly reactive, and the O2 configuration is not particularly stable, so over time it gets locked up in other molecules, which are then burred or deposited at the bottom of bodies of water.

Oxygen has always been plentiful on earth, but for most of geologic history it was bound up in solid molecules in the crust. Nearly 2.5 billion years ago, bacteria began “unlocking” gaseous O2 as a byproduct of the nitrogen based chemical reaction they lived on.

LordOfLocksley@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 09:38 next collapse

Huh, the Greek hero Spiracles saved the bees

milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 11:55 next collapse

TIL

faythofdragons@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 13:35 collapse

Obviously, the Greek hero Spiracles also rhymes with the bees

woodenghost@hexbear.net on 16 Apr 10:37 next collapse

It’s what limits their size. If insects had lungs, they could get larger. 300 million years ago, when the oxygen content in the atmosphere was temporarily higher, there were huge dragonflies with 75 cm wingspan (2.5 ft).

manny_stillwagon@mander.xyz on 16 Apr 11:22 collapse

In the original Jurassic Park novel by Michael Crichton, one of the animals they’ve cloned are these giant dragonflies. Its only one line in the book (Tim, one if the kids, sees one fly by and recalls reading about them) but it caught my attention as just straight impossible. I remember thinking, “Unless you’re somehow controlling the oxygen level of the air around this entire island, there’s no way that bug can’t breathe.”

tiredofsametab@fedia.io on 16 Apr 11:26 next collapse

And, for the most part, humans' lungs don't have bees!

I somehow forgot about bees not having lungs. I knew some other small things didn't.

krolden@lemmy.ml on 16 Apr 12:14 next collapse

Speak for yourself

lennivelkant@discuss.tchncs.de on 16 Apr 13:57 collapse

I find that hard to beelieve

Empricorn@feddit.nl on 16 Apr 22:48 collapse

I’m skeptical too, but that’s the buzz.

Soggy@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 16:54 next collapse

Most invertebrates have no internal air sac breathing organ. Arachnids kinda do, and I’m seeing something about semi-aquatic snails, but direct diffusion is pretty efficient at that scale.

Korhaka@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 19:04 collapse

Axolotls have them despite not needing them because they can live just fine without ever inhaling air for their entire life. But they sometimes do it for fun and then blow out bubbles.

Soggy@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 22:54 collapse

Amphibians are the weirdest vertebrates.

Korhaka@sopuli.xyz on 17 Apr 06:41 collapse

Looking at my axolotl that is currently trying to pretend to be a plant, yep.

Klear@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:32 collapse

What’s that? Human lungs don’t have bees?!

A large influx of bees ought to put a stop to that!

samus12345@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 19:08 collapse
JamesBoeing737MAX@sopuli.xyz on 16 Apr 16:48 next collapse

They breathe their own farts. Well.

SanndyTheManndy@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 17:11 next collapse

insects are also all upside-down

Atomic@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 18:40 next collapse

Insects don’t have lungs. It also means their potential size is directly limited by the oxygen content in the air.

Which is why we don’t see cat sized insects roaming around.

vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 18:54 next collapse

Which is why you don’t see cat sized insects roaming around, I live next to a tarantula trail and some of them fuckers get BIG.

samus12345@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 19:07 next collapse

Spiders aren’t insects. Though like them, they don’t have lungs! Not ones like ours, anyway.

vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 21:23 collapse

In my defense I am a smartass not smart.

samus12345@lemm.ee on 16 Apr 21:25 collapse

Eh, you were close enough.

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:57 next collapse

Wait… tarantula trails are a thing?

vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 21:25 collapse

Yeah they followed paths, I think it’s a way of avoiding dangerous terrain. They are rather fragile beasts.

Anomalocaris@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 01:15 next collapse

tarantulas do indeed have lungs though

Atomic@sh.itjust.works on 18 Apr 08:11 collapse

Arachnids are not insects though.

dariusj18@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:58 collapse

Related is this awesome video discussing dinosaur breathing

youtu.be/WuMHfWSyoGI

TomasEkeli@programming.dev on 17 Apr 11:22 collapse

that was great! thanks!

Nangijala@feddit.dk on 16 Apr 18:45 next collapse

Next you’re gonna tell me that plants don’t have a neocortex!?

Umbrias@beehaw.org on 16 Apr 19:11 next collapse

am i the only one who notices that this logic makes no sense? it doesnt matter that they have no lungs, they still are susceptible to both heat and airborn toxins, they perform gas exchange. They lived because the heat and smoke were below lethal toxic levels for them.

Anomalocaris@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 01:17 collapse

this is true,

but the main takeaway is that some people learned that not all animals have or need lungs.

as a kid I assumed insect anatomy was like human but insect shaped, learning how alien they are for the first time is a fascinating experience I wish I could relive.

Umbrias@beehaw.org on 17 Apr 13:24 collapse

they are indeed very alien it’s true. And i suppose, i just dont really want people thinking bees are immune to smoke or other airborne toxin.

Another fun fact is that bee flight muscles are directly saturated with oxygen and have a power density comparable to helicopters. The whole bee in flight is comparable to a car. Crazy creatures.

pyre@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:09 next collapse

don’t beekeepers use smoke or some such?

tpyoman@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:15 next collapse

Yea tobacco smoke I think but want to say they were being stopped for that n9t sure.

kattfisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 21:01 collapse

I don’t believe they’d use tobacco, as nicotine is especially toxic to insects (and has a long history of being used as an insecticide).

Beekeepers burn paper, woodchips, or really anything that burns well that they have on hand (that isn’t toxic). Source: Have used smoker while handling beehives.

tpyoman@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:28 collapse

That makes sense after reading up more I believe I’m wrong I feel like I’d heard that they used nicotine and hadn’t fully researched and took it at face value. Thabks for the information!!

kattfisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 17 Apr 12:20 collapse

Looking around there does seem to be people who use tobacco. I guess poisoning the bees probably makes them more docile 😅 Still a bad idea though

tpyoman@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 19:26 collapse

Muh profitsis probably.

Leeks@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:50 collapse

Yup. It simulates a forest fire and encourages them to gorge themselves on honey and leave the hive. They get less protective of the hive (because they think it is doomed) which makes it easier to work. They will check back in under an hour to see if the hive made it, and if so, will regurgitate the honey back and continue on with their day.

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 20:56 next collapse

Bees are so fricking cool.

Leeks@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:05 collapse

Fun additional bee fact! Bee hives have personalities and each hive has a different one! Some hives are very easy going and have no problems being worked. Other hives don’t like to be touched and will get defensive quickly. When working hives, one of the things you look for is bees lining up on the edge of a frame staring you down. If you see that, hit them with some more smoke else you are about to be stung!

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:06 next collapse

Love it! More!!!

Leeks@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:12 collapse

Bees navigate using the sun. It doesn’t really seem that they make a map, but more seem to know where they are by the process of directions that got them there. When they return to the hive they just reverse the way they got there. If you stand in front of the entrance to a bee hive for a few minutes then turn around to face away from the hive, you will see a swarm of bees flying in a holding pattern waiting for you to move so they can return. Once you move the entrance to the hive gets really busy. They don’t seem to know to go around you, they just wait till the path is clear!

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 21:16 collapse

You realize I would have you posting bee facts all day if I could, right?

kerntucky@infosec.pub on 16 Apr 22:36 next collapse
Leeks@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:30 collapse

Here’s another for the road: mites are a big problem for bees. They latch on to the bees and the bees don’t feel them. One way bee keepers can encourage bees to clean themselves and knock off the mites is by covering the bees in powdered sugar! This makes it look like there are a bunch of powder white bees flying around for a while.

WrenFeathers@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 02:28 collapse

Love it! (Not the mites)

Maeve@kbin.earth on 16 Apr 23:44 collapse

Your comment prompted me to recall a great movie, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Secret_Life_of_Bees_(film)

bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 21:27 next collapse

They stay in the hive if it’s not hot iirc

Leeks@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:22 collapse

Yup, if it’s cold they stay inside the hive and ball up! They vibrate against each other to make heat and stay warm.

kattfisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 16 Apr 21:38 collapse

This sounds strange. You really don’t want to make them abandon the hive. You want to disrupt the hive as little as possible.

Leeks@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:20 collapse

My main goal is to not get stung! Also you only go into the hives every few weeks so it’s not a major disruption. Also they only temporarily abandon the hive. They check on it later to see if it made it and then keep on living in it.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 16 Apr 23:47 next collapse

For jarred honey with comb in it, how does that affect the hive?

Leeks@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 01:56 collapse

Bee keepers move comb in and out of the hive frequently during the producing seasons. If they just cut the caps (top layer of wax) off the honeycomb, drain it, and then put the comb back in the hive, the bees have to use less energy to make comb, so they make more honey. If you put an “empty frame” (a spot with no honeycomb already on it) it takes the bees a lot more energy to make the comb so there is less honey. So it’s a trade off from the bee keepers’ perspective.

Maeve@kbin.earth on 17 Apr 02:13 collapse

Thanks! TIL.

kattfisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 17 Apr 12:47 collapse

Never found even harvesting to require more than the occasional puff of smoke. But we had Buckfast, and made sure to replace the queen of any aggressive colony. Maybe you have more aggressive breeds.

Leeks@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 12:57 collapse

Yeah the Russians are a little meaner, but do better with the mites and winter. The Italians are much easier to work, but require a lot more “hand holding”. Either way I normally knock with some smoke at the entrance/through the screened bottom for 2-3 puffs, then when I crack the top or move off a super, add a puff at the location. If I’m working slow and see them start staring me down, they get a little more.

I work bare handed because gloves loose too much dexterity, but that also gives them a giant target.

MyNameIsIgglePiggle@sh.itjust.works on 16 Apr 22:17 next collapse

Well that’s a Christmas spiracle

ADTJ@feddit.uk on 17 Apr 12:06 collapse

Just laughed aloud in a café, thanks for that

AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net on 16 Apr 23:12 next collapse

Next they’re going to tell me that bees don’t have hearts

Anomalocaris@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 01:15 collapse

they actually do, they have a “blood” vessel they use to transfer nutrients back and forth their bodies, no need for oxygen distribution though.

Reddfugee42@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 23:56 next collapse

This is (fortunately) why there’s a maximum size on insects. The environment is less oxygen rich today than in the eras of giant insects in the past. They reach a size where oxygen can’t penetrate deeply enough onto their bodies.

Enceladus_One@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 01:09 next collapse

Yeah giant insects would be utterly terrifying (and deadly).

Anomalocaris@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 01:13 next collapse

maybe once I have money for hobbies, but I really want to make oxygen rich terrariums, and selectively breed tarantulas to see if I can make them larger.

kandoh@reddthat.com on 17 Apr 02:15 next collapse

And a separate tank for Scorpions to fight them, we’ll make a killing

And009@lemmynsfw.com on 17 Apr 08:12 collapse

Then a youtube channel to praise the crowd

Deepus@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 03:10 next collapse

No!

Anomalocaris@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 10:39 collapse

Keep in mind it will be inherently escape proof.

if I manage to make meter wide spiders, they would suffocate as soon as they leave the enclosure.

Reddfugee42@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 10:48 collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ac4d6dbb-1d37-4714-a036-2fab7161a848.gif">

Anomalocaris@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 12:58 collapse

although If they get big enough, I could have oxygen breathers I could attach to their tracheas.

try escaping my giant semi mechanised murder wasps

BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 04:06 next collapse

This is giving Island of Dr. Moreau

WinterBear@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 07:30 collapse

As long as you leave the centipedes out of it

Gladaed@feddit.org on 17 Apr 08:01 next collapse

On lungless insects. If they develop to be larger they will get lungs!

And009@lemmynsfw.com on 17 Apr 08:11 collapse

As long as they mutate it

QuantumStorm@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 12:18 collapse

As lung* as they mutate it.

excral@feddit.org on 17 Apr 12:45 collapse

It’s all based on a very fundamental mathematical law: if you increase the size of something, the volume increases with the third power while the surface area increases with the second power. An insect twice as large would be 8x as heavy and need 8x as much oxygen but 4x as much surface area.

That’s also the reason why insects are as strong as they are. The strength of a muscle scales primarily with the cross section area of it, which again scales with the second power. So if you’d increase the weight of an ant by a factor 10,000,000 (e.g. 5mg to 50kg), the expected strength would increase by 10,000,000^(2/3) ≈ 46,400. If it could lift 10x it’s weight at the original size, it could now only lift about 4.6% of it’s weight

Sauerkraut@discuss.tchncs.de on 17 Apr 12:55 next collapse

Reminds me of how the damage to roads scales with the weight of the vehicle to the 4th power, so someone driving a 6000lb pickup does 16x more damage to roads than a 3000lb sedan

EddoWagt@feddit.nl on 17 Apr 16:13 collapse

How does double the mass increase the damage 16 fold? I understand surface area vs volume, but that doesn’t seem relevant when working with mass

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 18 Apr 03:16 collapse

It’s more about a minimum of weight or pressure that affects it. So the higher the pressure the more likely it is to flex the road where a small vehicle with light pressure might not make it flex at all. The heavier it is the more the weight will flex the subsurface and cause more damage.

forbes.com/…/how-roads-fail-and-why-theyre-set-to…

“To give you an example of that impact, let’s do a quick calculation. Here in New Zealand, the heaviest vehicle allowed on (some of) our roads is the 50MAX truck. It has nine axles and a total weight of 50 tonnes, so the load-per-axle is 5.55 tonnes. The best-selling car in NZ in 2022 was the Mitsubishi Outlander. It weighs 1.76 tonnes, so its load-per axle is 0.88 tonnes. The fourth-power law says that to calculate the relative stress that these two vehicles apply to a road, you take the ratio of their loads-per-axle and raise the result to the fourth power. In this case, (5.55 / 0.88)4 = 1582. In practical terms, it means that a 50MAX truck applies as much stress to a road as 1,582 cars (or quite literally billions of bicycles)”

Reddfugee42@lemmy.world on 22 Apr 05:22 collapse

Square Cube Law

Jimmycrackcrack@lemmy.ml on 17 Apr 02:35 next collapse

Why doesn’t the damaging and hot particulate matter in smoke do any harm to or otherwise clog up their spiracles like it does to the inner lining of lungs? I gather lungs are wet and also very delicate, but if they’re directly oxygenating their organs through these spiracles eventually it must get to somewhere wet and delicate for the smoke to get in and potentially harm.

ulterno@programming.dev on 17 Apr 10:21 collapse

Maybe something like:

  • The spiracles stop working and the insect stops most major movements
  • When the air becomes better, the new air fills the spiracles and reinvigorates the insect

vs

  • Humans need to use their muscles to start breathing, or they will require external assistance
Wilco@lemm.ee on 17 Apr 11:43 next collapse

Wait until this person hears about fish.

BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 12:57 next collapse

Like most others I have not read the article. But someone please answer me this:

If the bees fell asleep, then why didn’t the fire kill them? I can accept that insects don’t have lungs, I mean some people are doing well without hearts… but am I supposed to accept that bees are also immune to fire damage?

Plaidboy@sh.itjust.works on 17 Apr 13:12 next collapse

The bees were on a different lower down roof from the main roof (which is the one that burned). The article notes that bee wax melts at 70C and they didn’t see any of that under the hives, so they know temperatures stayed below that. So the bees were likely only exposed to some smoke and maybe some slightly elevated temperatures.

Abird1620@sh.itjust.works on 18 Apr 03:37 collapse

Put simply smoke doesn’t have to be hot. Smoke is just unburnt fuel caused by a process called offgassing (solid turning to a gas).

An example of cooled down smoke is a fire that starts in a well sealed room. It burns through as much fuel as possible, and while the solids are hot they turn into gas, however, due to a lack of oxygen, you don’t necessarily see combustion. So then the fire snuffs itself out and what you are left with is a cooling smoke.

So let’s say that the fire is on an upper floor. Heat goes up, cold goes down. So as smoke travels through a building it cools, and may eventually sink towards the ground or a lower level (this can be especially possible in a building as large as a cathedral) smoke sinks and interacts with bees at a “manageable temperature”.

Tldr: smoke isn’t always hot. The bees are happy.

NoOutlinesBand@lemmy.world on 17 Apr 13:02 collapse

“I’ve been trying to quit smoking. I want to take better care of my spiracles”