Why are dozens of colorful boxes stacked in this field? To provide homes inside their walls for millions of honey bees, those hardworking pollinators, producers of honey, and tormenters of Winnie-the-Pooh. Wild honey bee colonies build their nests in trees and caves, but manmade boxes also do the trick, and humans have been building their own beehives since antiquity. The modern beehive boxes shown here contain frames to hold honeycombs that bees produce to store their honey, pollen, and young. When the bees have produced plenty of honey, the beekeeper can simply remove the frames to extract some of it, leaving the rest to nourish the hive.
Is that a buzzing sound?
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Cetacean Saturday
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Skyscraper Day
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Lower Antelope Canyon, Arizona
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Ancient art in the Amazon
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Twas a night just like tonight
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The first ascent
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Bridge of Sighs in Venice, Italy
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Southern lights for Antarctica Day
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Global commerce in motion
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Speed skaters in the Gangneung Oval, Pyeongchang, South Korea
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World Poetry Day
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Wild garlic in bloom at Hainich National Park, Germany
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International Jazz Day
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St. Michaels Mount in Marazion, Cornwall, England
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Reflecting on one of the world s strangest rivers
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Great cormorants
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Cedar Mesa, Utah, for Indigenous Peoples Day
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World Penguin Day
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Celebrating Take Your Dog to Work Day
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Inhale and exhale, it’s Yoga Day
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Into the woods
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Going head-to-head with winter
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A polar bear near Churchill, Manitoba, Canada
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A fortress in the sky
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In memory of those lost
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Here we mark the price of freedom
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Meet our fuzzy Earth Day mascot
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Holey moley–it’s National Doughnut Day!
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Hohenzollern Castle near Stuttgart, Germany
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Shadows on the solstice
Bing Wallpaper Gallery


