Discover Magazine on MSN
How stingless bees in the Amazon became the first insects with legal rights
Learn how stingless bees quietly sustain Amazonian forests — and how a new law is changing what happens when they’re harmed.
A Peruvian scientist and her team are working together to make sure stingless bees are around for generations to come by ...
Discover the world of stingless bees, unique pollinators that produce medicinal pot honey and live in vibrant tropical ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Amazon stingless bees become the 1st insects granted legal rights
In a remote corner of Peru’s central Amazon, a small, ancient pollinator has quietly rewritten legal history. Native ...
Insect pollination is a decisive process for the survival and evolution of angiosperm (flowering) plants and, to a lesser extent, gymnosperms (without visible flower or fruit). There is a growing ...
ZME Science on MSN
Peru grants legal rights to stingless bees for the first time in history
In the Peruvian Amazon, a tiny pollinator gains legal standing—and reshapes conservation.
Spring flowers have co-evolved with insect pollinators for a long time. The flowers require pollen delivery to set seed. To entice insects to visit and deliver the pollen, they produce food rewards ...
Bees and butterflies help produce our food by pollinating the crops farmers grow. In fact, 35% of the world's food crops, including fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds, depend on pollinators. But ...
AZ Animals US on MSN
How Insects Decide Which Plants Survive in Forests and Grasslands
Through pollination and feeding on all parts of plants, insects influence which plants thrive, which struggle, and even ...
The weather is cold so what is happening to the bees? Bees go into the hive in a ball called a cluster. As the temperature ...
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