Orchid Bees In Flight

These videos supplement the full article "Taming Turbulence," November-December 2009. 

Amid turbulent conditions, orchid bees in flight prevent themselves from rolling by extending their rear legs. 

Moving the mass in its legs aways from its body increases the orchid bee's resistance to rotation, in the same way figure skaters slow a fast spin by extending their arms and legs.

 

As windspeed and turbulence increase, an orchid bee homing in on a desirable scent is ejected from the airstream.


An orchid bee's use of its rear legs to maintain stability in turbulent conditions is especially clear in this slow-motion video.

 

All videos courtesy of Stacey Combes/The Combes Laboratory


Click here for the November-December 2009 issue table of contents

Sub topics

You might also like

Understanding AI Vulnerabilities

As artificial intelligence capabilities evolve, so too will the tactics used to exploit them. 

Crypto—To Regulate or Not?

The former director of Harvard’s fintech lab reflects on the future of digital assets.

The Psychology of Virtual Reality

Harvard’s Steven Pinker on the psychology underlying the experience—and limitations—of VR

Most popular

Danielle Allen Debates Far-Right Blogger Curtis Yarvin

Popular monarchist debates Allen on democracy.

The New Gender Gaps

What to do as men and boys fall behind

Harvard Releases Antisemitism and Anti-Muslim Task Force Reports

University publishes findings from thorough examinations of campus conditions.

Explore More From Current Issue

Making Green Energy Projects Financially Viable

A proposed “green” swap enables decarbonization of emerging market development projects.

Chinese Immigrants in Early America

Michael Luo ’98 on the first great wave of immigration—and of nativist anti-immigrant reaction