Human societies throughout the world have measured
their calendars according to the changes in seasons. Today is the winter
solstice, the day with the shortest sunlight and longest night. Peoples around
the world have studied the change through the year in the length of the day and
the angle of the sun. Early agrarian societies observed the movement of the sun
and learned to time the planting of their crops with changes in seasons. This
timing was important for maximizing the reproduction of precious crop seeds for
feeding expanding human populations. Just as plant reproduction is associated
with the seasons, so is the reproduction of many animal species. Today, on the
winter solstice, honey bee queens start reproducing the first young for the
next year. Most colonies interrupted their queen from laying eggs in the fall
by restricting the food they feed her.
Successful reproduction is so important that it
leads the activity of most species. The process is not always accurate, though.
A report in The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/27/science/in-nature-fatal-attractions-can-be-part-of-life.html,
describes attempts in nature for reproduction between members of different
species. Antarctic fur seals occasionally attempt to mate with king penguins,
birds that the seals normally hunt and eat. It is unknown whether such acts, known
as “misdirected mating,” are simply a matter of mistaken identity or if there
is another cause. The Times piece
also describes misdirected mating involving California sea otters and Pacific
harbor seals. In the Bahamas, bottlenose dolphins regularly attack smaller
spotted dolphins in acts of sexual violence. Similar occurrences of misdirected
mating occur in a number of other animal species. At Peace Bee Farm, we
regularly observe drone honey bees chasing purple martins as if they were
following a queen bee. Today’s photo, taken in July, shows three drones in
pursuit of a purple martin. Today, the winter solstice, the migratory martins
are in their winter home in South America. Two bald eagles circle the bee farm;
the bees remain clustered in their hives.
--Richard
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