<h2><SPAN name="GENERAL_STATEMENT_OF_THE_POLLEN-COLLECTING_PROCESS" id="GENERAL_STATEMENT_OF_THE_POLLEN-COLLECTING_PROCESS"></SPAN>GENERAL STATEMENT OF THE POLLEN-COLLECTING PROCESS.</h2>
<p>A very complete knowledge of the pollen-gathering behavior of the
worker honey bee may be obtained by a study of the actions of bees
which are working upon a plant which yields pollen in abundance. Sweet
corn is an ideal plant for this purpose, and it will be used as a
basis for the description which follows.</p>
<p>In attempting to outline the method by which pollen is manipulated the
writer wishes it to be understood that he is recounting that which he
has seen and that the description is not necessarily complete,
although he is of the opinion that it is very nearly so. The movements
of the legs and of the mouthparts are so rapid and so many
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members are in action at once that it is impossible for the eye to
follow all at the same time. However, long-continued observation,
assisted by the study of instantaneous photographs, gives confidence
that the statements recorded are accurate, although some movements may
have escaped notice.</p>
<p>To obtain pollen from corn the bee must find a tassel in the right
stage of ripeness, with flowers open and stamens hanging from them.
The bee alights upon a spike and crawls along it, clinging to the
pendent anthers. It crawls over the anthers, going from one flower
to another along the spike, being all the while busily engaged in the
task of obtaining pollen. This reaches its body in several ways.</p>
<p>As the bee moves over the anthers it uses its mandibles and tongue,
biting the anthers and licking them and securing a considerable
amount of pollen upon these parts. This pollen becomes moist and
sticky, since it is mingled with fluid from the mouth. A considerable
amount of pollen is dislodged from the anthers as the bee moves over
them. All of the legs receive a supply of this free pollen and much
adheres to the hairs which cover the body, more particularly to those
upon the ventral surface. This free pollen is dry and powdery and
is very different in appearance from the moist pollen masses with
which the bee returns to the hive. Before the return journey this
pollen must be transferred to the baskets and securely packed in them.</p>
<p>After the bee has traversed a few flowers along the spike and has
become well supplied with free pollen it begins to collect it from its
body, head, and forward appendages and to transfer it to the posterior
pair of legs. This may be accomplished while the bee is
resting upon the flower or while it is hovering in the air before
seeking additional pollen. It is probably more thoroughly and rapidly
accomplished while the bee is in the air, since all of the legs are
then free to function in the gathering process.</p>
<p>If the collecting bee is seized with forceps and examined after it
has crawled over the stamens of a few flowers of the corn, its legs
and the ventral surface of its body are found to be thickly powdered
over with pollen. If the bee hovers in the air for a few moments
and is then examined very little pollen is found upon the body or
upon the legs, except the masses within the pollen baskets. While in
the air it has accomplished the work of collecting some of the scattered
grains and of storing them in the baskets, while others have
been brushed from the body.</p>
<p>In attempting to describe the movements by which this result is
accomplished it will be best first to sketch briefly the roles of the
three pairs of legs. They are as follows:</p>
<p>(<i>a</i>) The first pair of legs remove scattered pollen from the head
and the region of the neck, and the pollen that has been moistened
by fluid substances from the mouth.</p>
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<p>(<i>b</i>) The second pair of legs remove scattered pollen from the
thorax, more particularly from the ventral region, and they received
the pollen that has been collected by the first pair of legs.</p>
<p>(<i>c</i>) The third pair of legs collect a little of the scattered pollen
from the abdomen and they receive pollen that has been collected
by the second pair. Nearly all of this pollen is collected by the
pollen combs of the hind legs, and is transferred from the combs to
the pollen baskets or corbicul� in a manner to be described later.</p>
<p>It will thus be seen that the manipulation of pollen is a successive
process, and that most of the pollen at least passes backward
from the point where it happens to touch the bee until it finally
reaches the corbicul� or is accidentally dislodged and falls from the
rapidly moving limbs.</p>
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