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Quiz 11 - Anatomy Quiz: minutes left!
20 multi-choice questions, choose the correct answers, you have 5 minutes!.
What physical features help us accurately define a honeybee as an insect?
- A small animal that crawls with many legs and flies with wings.
- A body in three main parts, compound eyes, 3 pairs of legs, 1 pair antennae, 2 pairs of wings.
- A multi-cellular organism with 8 pairs of legs and 2 pairs of eyes.
- An animal with 1 pair of wings, 2 pairs of legs, and 2 pairs of antennae.
What are the names of the three main boby parts of an insect?
- The head, abdomen, and the legs.
- The thorax, abdomen, and the legs.
- The head, the thorax, and the abdomen.
- The thorax, head and torso.
Which body part of an insect has no appendages?
- The head has no appendages but has antennae.
- The thorax has no appendages, they are found on the head and abdomen.
- Each body part has a pair of appendages, antennae, legs of wings.
- The abdomen has no apendages, but contains the reproductive organs.
Why do honeybees not require a well developed sense of taste?
- Their sense of smell is more important for detecting pheromones and food.
- Because they can get nourishment from almost anything.
- Unpallatable food will be rejected by the bees gut automatically.
- The bees always recognise pallatable food by sight.
What are pheromones as used in the honybee colony?
- They are small traces of feces left to mark out honeybee territory.
- Chemical substances used as an advanced communication method in the colony.
- They are strong tasting substances in the waste materials bees pass out.
- They are the visual indcators given off by the bees to instruct other bees.
Why is sight an important sense for bees to possess?
- It saves them from colliding with the hard parts inside the hive.
- So that they can signal to each other as members of the same colony.
- It is neccessary for accurate locaton, orientation and recognition.
- They need good eyesight to find the brood inside the dark hive.
How do honeybees navigate accurately to find forage and get back to the hive?
- They use good eyesight, a keen sense of smell, and the suns position.
- They follow well established foraging routes.
- The location of forage is instictive and inherant in all honeybees.
- They watch for other bees with nectar and pollen and follow them.
How do bees communicate the distance, type, and location of forage to the colony?
- They use special bodily tail waggling movements called the 'Bee Dance'.
- They lead scout bees to the site and back again to learn the route.
- They pass the foraged food round the hive to get others bees attention.
- They use audible sounds to alert the foraging bees of good forage.
Bee space is important, how do bees manage to achieve this?
- They chew their way through small spces to open them up.
- They count the wax cells they use for building to maintain accruacy.
- They use their antennae and body hairs to measure accuratley.
- they use the width of their heads to measure the gap.
Bees have no ears, so how do they hear things in the hive?
- They use their compound eyes instead to receive messages.
- They detect sound vibration with their antennae and hind legs.
- They can detect sound with their sensitive wings.
- Sounds and vibrations are picked up through the bees feet.
How do honeybees transport nectar and pollen back the hive?
- Foragers mix them together and carry between their front legs.
- Bees have a special pouch under their bellies for carrying things.
- They carry nectar in a special stomach, and pollen on their rear legs.
- They coat their abdomen with nectar and pollen then lick it off in the hive.
What is the process for turning nectar into honey?
- Bees store nectar in wax cells where it slowly ferments into honey.
- Nectar is mixed with pollen to chemically change into honey.
- the bees heat the nectar in the comb to change it into honey.
- Bees mix the nectar with enzymes from their saliva to create honey.
Nectar and newly made honey has a runny consistency, how do bees change this?
- They mix the nectar with pollen to stiffen it up in the cells.
- They seal the nectar over in the cells with wax to set it hard.
- The bees fan it with their wings to reduce the water content down.
- Bees cluster over the cells to heat it up and evaporate the water out.
Which part of the honeybees digestive sytem is used for manipulating wax?
- They use there honey crop, or pre-stomach for this.
- The lower part of their gut where honey and pollen is absorbed.
- Wax is manipulated from the rear end of their long gut.
- They use their mandibles for ingesting pollen and manipulating wax.
Do female wroker honeybees lay some of the eggs in the hive?
- Yes, they share the egg laying duties with th e queen.
- No, but some may start to lay infetile eggs in the absence of a queen.
- Not usually, they will only lay eggs if the queen needs a rest.
- Yes, but workers lay in the lower parts of the hive only.
How do honeybees breath the oxygen they need to survive?
- They breath through their mouths like other mammals.
- They breath through the tubes in their antennae.
- They absorb oxygen through their wings when flying.
- They pass air through spiracles on the side of their bodies.
What do bees have in place of normal red celled blood found in mammals?
- Haemoglobin
- Immunogloblin
- Cryoprecipitate
- Haemolymph
Which gland is responsible for the production of brood food and royal jelly?
- The Mandibular Gland.
- The Nasonov Gland.
- The Hypopharyngeal Gland.
- The Wax Secreting Glands
Which gland is responsible for indicating a bees position to others?
- The Salivary Gland.
- The Nasonov Gland.
- The Sting Scent Gland.
- The Mandibular glands
Which glands are responsible for the production of material for building comb?
- The Wax Secreting Glands.
- The Sting Scent Glands.
- The Mandibular Glands
- The Salivary Glands.
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