Oh. Honey bees have five eyes. Bees have two eyes. I was wrong.
To see with
Just the same as any other bee: 5. They have two compound eyes on either side of the head, and three simple eyes, called ocelli, on the top of the head.
Bees have five eyes. There are three simple eyes, called ocelli, in a triangle on the top of the head. These really only detect the difference between light and dark: they do not form an image. Bees also have two compound eyes each side of the head. These form a mosaic-like image. Bees do not see fine detail, but their eyes are very sensitive to movement. Their colour vision is also different from ours. It extends well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum, but not so far into the red end of the spectrum. They are also sensitive to plane polarized light, which they use for navigation.
They dont . They have little eyes on there bodies.
Oh. Honey bees have five eyes. Bees have two eyes. I was wrong.
honey bees have 5 eyes
"B". Bees have 5 eyes.
To see with
2 compound, 3 simple-5 total.
Well nobody really knows why they have hair on their eyeballs. :))
Bees only have 2 eyes which are split into separate segments. This is called compound eyes and allow the bee to see in several directions. Compound eyes allow the bee to find food, protect itself, and meet the other needs it requires for survival.
Sounds like honey bees. All insects have two large compound eyes and three simple eyes between them, so five in total. Bees dance to communicate; to tell others where food can be found, to be precise. ^^
Yes, he really is allergic to bees.
Just the same as any other bee: 5. They have two compound eyes on either side of the head, and three simple eyes, called ocelli, on the top of the head.
Bees have five eyes. There are three simple eyes, called ocelli, in a triangle on the top of the head. These really only detect the difference between light and dark: they do not form an image. Bees also have two compound eyes each side of the head. These form a mosaic-like image. Bees do not see fine detail, but their eyes are very sensitive to movement. Their colour vision is also different from ours. It extends well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum, but not so far into the red end of the spectrum. They are also sensitive to plane polarized light, which they use for navigation.
Through their eyes.