Outdoor Guide on MSN
This bright flower has invisible colors bees can see (but we can't)
If you've watched bees circling brightly colored flowers before landing to gather pollen, it may be they're getting guidance from patterns we can't see.
Bees and other pollinators don't necessarily like the flowers that we do. Fussy double-flowered peonies, vivid petunias, and scentless pelargoniums aren't of much interest to bees. In fact, bees ...
Homes and Gardens on MSN
Yes, bees can see in color – and these are the flowers they’re most attracted to
Thanks to their unique visual spectrum, bees prefer certain colors – so these are the flowers you'll want to plant in your garden this spring ...
In the natural world, certain species emit visible light when exposed to ultraviolet light. Although ultraviolet-induced visible fluorescence, or UVIVF, occurs regularly in nature, it often goes ...
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