If they fly in different directions, the momentum (which is a vector quantity) of the individual insects can cancel.
If they fly in different directions, the momentum (which is a vector quantity) of the individual insects can cancel.
If they fly in different directions, the momentum (which is a vector quantity) of the individual insects can cancel.
If they fly in different directions, the momentum (which is a vector quantity) of the individual insects can cancel.
Bees will instinctively swarm around their current queen. A swarm of reporters descended on the mayor's office after the announcement.
For honeybees, probably around 20,000 workers and one queen, but if it is a secondary swarm, or cast, there could be far fewer.
Well in an honest saying I think it will. Mostly because people say when you go into a pond of water bees will stop following you. But that's all I know.
P. morabilis is characterized by its swarming ability. On a nutritive media plate the organism will swarm the entire plate due to its hyper mobility from its peritrichious flagella. Colonies can generally be seen to be opaque with irregular borders and have a smooth texture.
The Layers of the Atmosphere We live at the bottom of an ocean of air - several oceans, in fact, as the atmosphere can be divided into layers distinguished by temperature. Starting at the surface of the earth's crust, the layer which most apparently affects us is called the troposphere. It extends roughly 5 miles above the poles and 10 miles above the equator, and contains about 75% of the total mass of the atmosphere. Due to its closeness to the earth's surface, nearly all water vapor and solid particles (from forest fires, volcanoes and the burning of fossil fuel, for example) are found in this sphere. All of earth's plant and animal life exist within the troposphere or the waters beneath it. Climate and weather are conditions within the troposphere. It is also the layer where most of the heat exchange between the earth and the atmosphere takes place, and where heat is distributed through the overturning of air (tropo means "to turn"). Temperature in the troposphere decreases with height to -76 degrees Fahrenheit. The stratosphere extends to about 30 miles above earth, and can itself be subdivided (strato means "layers") In the lower levels of the stratosphere the temperature remains the same, but in the upper levels the temperature actually increases to roughly the same as that at sea level. This is due to the ozone layer, where a high concentration of ozone, a molecular variation of oxygen, absorbs ultraviolet rays from the sun. Because of this temperature distribution the over-turning of air is much less than within the troposphere below, and the stratosphere becomes a kind of giant lid. Debris from violent volcanic eruptions, like Mt. St. Helens in 1980, sometimes enter and remain suspended in the stratosphere for years before settling back to the earth's surface. The troposphere and stratosphere combined contain 99% of the total mass of the atmosphere. In the mesosphere, which extends to about 50 miles, temperature drops again to as low as -173 degrees F. Meteors, small pieces of matter drawn to the atmosphere by earth's gravity, become visible to the naked eye as they enter the mesosphere and are heated through friction caused by collisions with air molecules. These "falling stars" usually disintegrate before they reach the earth's surface. Spectacular meteor showers can be observed at certain times of the year when the earth, in its orbit, passes through a swarm of particles generated from the breakup of a comet. The troposphere, stratosphere and mesosphere make up what is called the lower atmosphere.
The tiny, flying insects that swarm around horse manure are called fly predators. While they are a nuisance, they do not present any potential threat as they do not bite or sting.
There is no specific collective noun for a group of flying June bugs. The general collective noun for flying insects will work: a swarm of June bugs.
The crossword answer to the clue "swarm of insects" is typically "cloud." This term is often used to describe a large group of flying insects, such as bees or locusts, moving together. Other possible answers could include "hive" or "plague," depending on the specific context of the crossword puzzle.
A group of insects is commonly called a swarm, colony, or horde, depending on the specific type of insect and their behavior.
A Swarm
A swarm.
a swarm
swarm
The collective noun for insects are a swarm of insects.
This is a swarm.
The collective noun for a group of wasps is a "nest" or a "swarm." While "swarm" can refer to various flying insects, it is commonly used for wasps when they are gathered together. Additionally, you might also hear "clutch" or "plague" in some contexts.
they don't.not mine anyways.i watch them come out in spurts that leave the underside of a bridge.they come out like clockwork.and! what i think is cool.. they get the heck separated asap. very hard to call them a swarm after about 200 ft .. they swarm out of the sleeping area then go mad flying all over the place. so they are only a swarm for a few seconds.. then they are more like a "cloud"..