An interesting case with parasite involvement supporting this hypothesis has been described from honeybees in their new range.
Similarly, the honeybee, the second most frequent visitor on male flowers, was 4.4 times more abundant on male than on female trees.
They are more effective than honeybees as pollinators of fruit trees.
They have observed, for example, that the way in which honeybees judge distances could well be used in a variety of applications.
Soya-bean flowers: nectary ultra-structure, nectar guides, and orientation on the flower by foraging honeybees.
Similarly, farmers like to have flowers on the farm, which add to the aesthetic appearance of the family farm, and the flowers themselves serve as foraging plants for honeybees.
Honeybee dances communicate distances measured by optic flow.
In both groups, this has led to powerful social learning for food selection, and among honeybees, perhaps the most complex representation of spatial cues in animal communication.