BUTTERING up the guards for a packet of cigarettes is part of prison life, and not just for humans. Take hive beetles, which invade honeybees’ hives. The bees deal with the beetles by shutting them in cells made of plant resin (¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ, 19 May 2001, p 18). But Randall Hepburn at Rhodes University in Grahamstown, South Africa, noticed that the imprisoned beetles could survive for a couple of months, far longer than they should have been able to last without food. He and his colleagues set up an experiment in which hive beetles were imprisoned by worker bees…
To continue reading, today with our introductory offers
Advertisement
More from ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ articles
1
The best new science-fiction books of June 2026
2
Pancreatic cancer halted by virus injection in three patients
3
Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything
4
Photons behave very strangely if you try to cut them
5
Glaciers in the 'roof of the world' have suddenly started melting
6
First quantum grandfather clock could probe where gravity comes from
7
Mathematical AI helps researchers crack 50-year-old problem
8
Millions of planets might form around supermassive black holes
9
Red-light therapy does have health benefits but not the ones you think
10
Is consciousness more fundamental to reality than quantum physics?



