Month: March 2013 (Page 6 of 7)

Spring Cleaning at Growing With Science

Good morning!poppy-1

As you’ve probably noticed, we’ve been doing a bit long overdue of spring cleaning over the weekend. Things are still a work in progress, but we hope you like the new look.

What to check out:

1. Collections of posts organized into archives so you can find old posts more easily. I have the  Seed of the Week archive done, and hope to refurbish the Experiment Archive and create a Bug of the Week archive soon. They will be in the navigation bar at the top.

2. I actually created a sister blog, Science Books for Kids, to archive all the science books. It has lists of books by age category and will also have books listed by themes as I get time. The idea is to make it easier to find what you need, so suggestions are welcome.

3. The next thing I would like to tackle is the Feedburner RSS feed. I have noticed it seems to be sending random groupings of posts lately instead of just the most recent post. Has anyone else had this issue?

I invite you to take a look around and let me know what you think. Hope you enjoy it!

Here Comes Comet Pan-STARRS

In case you haven’t heard, Comet Pan-STARRS is passing by this month (March 2013). If conditions are optimal it might be possible to see the comet on certain evenings without a telescope. One of the first evenings is tonight, March 7, 2013.

NASA has details in this video:

 
For more information, try:
Everything you need to know: Comet PANSTARRS in March 2013 at EarthSky

Bright Comet Pan-STARRS in Night Sky: How to See It at Space.com

Let us know if you get to see it.

Bug of the Week: Buzz Pollination by Bees

Yesterday we looked at silver senna flowers that I said were buzz pollinated. What does buzz pollination mean?

The stamens or pollen producing parts of certain flowers are enclosed, sort of like salt shakers.

buzz-pollination-flower

For example, the short, stout yellow stamens of this potato bush flower are buzz pollinated.

To get the pollen out, the bee grabs the stamens with its mandibles or jaws and then curls its abdomen around while vibrating at a certain pitch.

We have some adorable solitary bees that visit the potato bush often, but I have never been able to get a photograph of them in the act.

buzz-pollination-for-wildbuzz-pollination-2-for-wild

Close, but not in the act. The little bees are just too fast.

Today I found a video where someone has captured these bees pollinating similar pepper flowers.

Turn up the volume, and you will hear why it maybe should be called “bizz” pollination instead of buzz pollination.

The tiny bees might not be easy to photograph, but this carpenter bee was more cooperative.

buzz-pollinating-carpenter-bee

Have you ever seen bees buzz pollinating a flower?

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