-
Random Facts
- Who Was Aristotle?
- Who Was the Oldest Person Who Ever Lived?
- Is quinoa a grain from the Andes high in calcium and what are other sources of calcium?
- Do bears hibernate in the winter like other animals or do they just take a long nap?
- Does Canada have a Loch Ness Monster?
- What Are Your Senses?
- Does England have a Horse 180 Feet Long?
- Who was Otto Lilienthal?
- What does the name of the star Betelgeuse mean?
- Can foot-and-mouth disease and mad cow disease be spread to humans by dairy products?
-
Recent Comments
- irwin county school on Who Invented the First Computer?
- Jamie on Who Invented the First Computer?
- irwin county indians on Who Invented the First Computer?
- Your mom on Can an Egg Drop 600 Feet and Not Break?
- Hobo on How Are You Like Your Parents?
- Johnny on How Does a Radio Work?
- joseph on Why Do Jellyfish Sting?
- joseph on Why Do Jellyfish Sting?
- super man on Were Humans Hunters or Farmers First?
- Djeison on When Were Knives, Forks, and Spoons First Used?
Tags
-
Pages

Why Doesn’t The Bee Eater Bird Die After Eating Honey Bees?
Before eating its meal, the bee-eater removes the sting by hitting the insect on a hard surface. During this process, most of the venom is extracted.
Areas of Africa where there are few trees or bushes is the native habitat of the bee eater. It spends time riding around on the backs of other animals for fun. About 10% of its time is spent on comfort activities.
This brilliantly colored small bird is just what its name implies, an eater of bees. When not out hunting bees, it can be found perched in a tree. In areas where perches are hard to find, this bird will often perch and ride around on the backs of ostriches, sheep, and even the large ground-dwelling bird called the bustard.
These animals don’t seem to mind taking the bee eater for a ride, and while it is riding, the bee eater sits very quietly and enjoys the ride, until it gets hungry and flies away to hunt bees.
In the United States, many robins and catbirds have the habit of following along behind a farmer who is digging or plowing a field. These birds drop down after the farmer has passed and pick up any grubs or earthworms his work has turned up.
Chimney swifts and swallows often fly behind a farmer plowing a field and feed on the insects his noisy machine sends flying into the air.