Bees See Your Face as a Strange Flower

Researchers have sequenced the genome of the domestic honey bee.
(Image credit: Scott Bauer, USDA/ARS (Agricultural Research Services).)

Bees can learn to recognize human faces, or at least face-like patterns, a new study suggests.

Rather than specifically recognizing people, these nectar-feeding creatures view us as "strange flowers," the researchers say. And while they might not be able to identify individual humans, they can learn to distinguish features that are arranged to look like faces.

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