A bee's colour vision extends well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum, but not so far as ours into the red end of the spectrum.
Bees can also distinguish plane polarized light, which we can't.
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Bees can see higher frequencies of electromagnetic waves than humans can. Bees see flowers in different colors then we do. Bees see color about triple the speed as humans do.
Very dark red
Yes they do see in ultraviolet color. I just saw it for the question "How do Honeybees see?" answer.:)
Yes, bees can see color, but their color vision differs from that of humans. They are particularly sensitive to ultraviolet light, which allows them to see patterns on flowers that are invisible to us. Bees can perceive colors in the blue and green spectrum, but they cannot see red. This unique vision helps them identify and locate flowers more effectively for foraging.
Of course - that's why so many plants have evolved brightly colored flowers! These attract the bees and other pollinating animals.
Butterflies, Honey bees, Birds, and Jumping Spiders. See link for source.
the colour of bees blood is pale amber.
Nobody knows why bees are the color they are, it's just the way it is. But good question, though!
the colour of bees blood is pale amber.