Bees don't have ears. However they are sensitive to vibrations through their legs, and it is thought their antennae may also be sensitive to vibrations.
A bee's sense of hearing is located in the Johnston's organ, which is located in the bee's antennae. The Johnston's organ detects vibrations in the air, allowing bees to perceive sounds and communicate with each other through buzzing and other sounds.
Bees don't have ears and do not hear sound the way we do. They feel vibrations through their legs and, it is thought, their antennae.
My sense of hearing is known as audition.
Bees and many other insects' hearing organs are mechanosensory organs known as Johnston's organs, one of which is located in the basal segments of each antenna, which is known as the pedicel. Each Johnston's organ of the bee contains 48 mechanoreceptor neurons that are tuned to different frequencies of deflection of the antenna. Some are even sensitive to static deflection, which provides the bee's gravitational sense.
Barry Gibb.
Today is the Spelling Bee makes more sense.
hearing is the last sense to leave
Hearing loss will not usually affect a persons sense of smell.
Auricular (relating to the sense of hearing) Phonics (or phonetics) I think...
A caribou has a good sense of hearing to make it harder for a predator to sneak up on it.
it send clicks that can travel more than a mile underwater.
Bees have no sense of hearing but they are very sensitive to vibration which they feel through their feet and legs