Abstract
Honey bees have long been assumed to build their comb with the cells in either of two preferred orientations with respect to gravity ("vertical" or "horizontal"). I show here that these typical cell orientations in fact derive from substrate orientation and a simple building rule, rather than the influence of gravity itself. When bees were induced to build comb on substrates at four different orientations with respect to gravity, they always made cells with one vertex pointing directly toward the substrate. This produced horizontal and vertical cells on vertical and horizontal substrates, respectively, but yielded intermediate orientations on oblique substrates. The apparent preference for vertical and horizontal cells may simply reflect substrate orientation in the rectilinear hives from which cell measurements have been taken.
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Received: 27 July 1999 / Accepted in revised form: 20 September 1999
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Pratt, S. Gravity-Independent Orientation of Honeycomb Cells. Naturwissenschaften 87, 33–35 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s001140050005
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s001140050005