Documentary shares secrets of the bees
CU Boulder researcher Samuel Ramsey served as science advisor and a producer, alongside executive producer James Cameron, forĢżSecrets of the Bees, premiering this week on National Geographic, Disney+ and Hulu
Would you like to hear a secret about bees?Ģż
Not many people know this, but bees in Southeast Asia have figured out that water buffalo dung isnāt the only pungent substance that will keep hornets away.
See, Vespa mandariniaāmore sensationally known as the murder hornetācan wreak havoc on a bee colony. One or two dozen hornets can wipe out an entire colony, although bees have developed some pretty awesome defenses. One of these involves vibrating their flight muscles to create a convection oven effect that essentially cooks invading hornets.
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Samuel Ramsey, a University of Colorado Boulder assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, served as science advisor and producer, alongside executive producer James Cameron, on the documentary Secrets of the Bees. (Photo: Shin Arunrugstichai)
However, sometimes a hornet can escape beesā defenses and flee the hiveābut not before leaving a figure-eight pattern of pheromones outside the hive that acts as a beacon to future hornet invasions. Bees deduced that theyād need something even more pungent to spread at the hive entrance to mask the hornet pheromones, āand for a long time we thought they were just relying on water buffalo dung for that purpose,ā explains Samuel Ramsey, a University of Colorado Boulder assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology.
But bees are smart. They figured out they could chew the leaves of an extremely pungent plant to spread at the hive entrance, āwhich was something weād never seen before,ā Ramsey says.
He and his colleagues discovered this behavior in pursuit of , the fifth installment of the Emmy Award-winning āSecrets ofā¦ā series premiering this week on National Geographic, Disney+ and Hulu.Ģż
Ramsey, a National Geographic Explorer, served not only as science advisor and featured expert, but as a producer alongside executive producer James Cameron.Ģż
Yes, that James Cameron.
āItās always a pleasure to say I produced a documentary with James Cameron,ā Ramsey says with a laugh. āItās opened up a lot of opportunities to talk with people about bees and together making sure that thereās unity in conceptāso weāre not talking in terms of ārightā bees and āwrongā bees, but weāre talking about what we can do to support all beesā survival.ā
Communicating science (and bees)
This all came about, in part, because ābees really, really need our help,ā Ramsey says, a fact he quickly realized as a lifelong, self-described ābug nerdā observing how human-caused changes to the natural world are affecting bee populations.
During his undergraduate and graduate studies, Ramsey focused on diseases and parasites affecting bees, particularly the Varroa mite, and began raising bees so that he could study them. When he came to CU Boulder, that move included installing a research and observation hive in his lab in the Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building.
Because his research interests also include symbiotic relationships, itās perhaps no surprise that Ramsey the scientist is also Ramsey the science communicator: passionate about describing the beauty, wonder, fragility and resiliency of the natural world to broad and interestedāalthough often non-scientificāaudiences. He has been at the vanguard of using social media to tell the dynamic stories of science.
Thanks in part to this outreach, documentarians and filmmakers began requesting his expertise and consultation. He worked on the documentary and has discussed insects on NPR, CBS and many other outlets, in addition to becoming a National Geographic Explorer. Still, he says, itās a little surreal to get that call proposing a collaboration with the director of Titanic and Avatar.
ā(Cameron) has 300 hives at his farm in New Zealand, so this really has been a labor of love for him,ā Ramsey says.
Making a difference for bees
The framework of Secrets of the Bees is to show a hive of honeybees preparing for winter, but that simple concept took Ramsey and his collaborators around the world, exploring bee colonies as the dynamic cities they are and bees not as mindless automatons, but as intelligent, adaptive creatures that form complex societies.
The filmmakers used groundbreaking technologies, including cameras similar to those used in endoscopes, to peer inside hives for never-before-seen views of bees living, working and playing together. Yes, bees play, Ramsey says, and itās a wonderful thing to see.
The cutting-edge filmmaking technology allows viewers to see close-up, time-lapse scenes of larva growing into adult bees, as well as the funerary process of pushing dead bees from the hive. āThe advent of universal childcare is what allowed this to be one of the most successful species on the planet,ā Ramsey says, āwhich you really see up-close in the film.ā
He adds that it was important to him that the documentary not sugarcoat the peril in which Earthās more than 20,000 bee species currently exist, including calamitous population declines associated with climate change, monoculture crops, parasites, chemical use and habitat loss, among other causes.
āBut the film also emphasizes hope, because there are things every one of us can do to support bees,ā Ramsey says. āSomething as simple as planting a window box with flowers can make a big difference to a lot of bees.ā
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