How Bumblebee Queens Can Survive Underwater for Days
The discovery that bumblebee queens could shake it off and emerge unscathed after more than a week submerged in water stunned scientists back in 2024.
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lamplighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2026/03/14
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Hibernating bumblebee queens can breathe underwater to survive a flood, a new study shows. Their metabolisms also switch to strategies that don't rely on oxygen. https://www.sciencenews.org/article/bumblebee-queens-breathe-underwater[image or embed] -- Science News (@sciencenews.bsky.social) Mar 10, 2026 at 11:17 PM
Hibernating bumblebee queens can breathe underwater to survive a flood, a new study shows. Their metabolisms also switch to strategies that don't rely on oxygen. https://www.sciencenews.org/article/bumblebee-queens-breathe-underwater[image or embed]
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More from the article ...
... Now, a new paper reveals how they do it. Included in the bumblebee survival toolkit is the remarkable ability to extract oxygen from the water around them " literally allowing them to breathe underwater temporarily. It's a skill set that can help the heart of a colony weather a crisis such as a flooded burrow, allowing her to survive and rebuild when conditions are more stable. And its discovery suggests that some species may have hidden reserves of resilience against environmental extremes. "Our findings," writes a team led by evolutionary physiologist Charles Darveau of the University of Ottawa in Canada, "reveal a remarkable flooding-tolerance strategy and provide a foundation for exploring the limits, mechanisms, and ecological significance of underwater survival in terrestrial insects." ...
It's a skill set that can help the heart of a colony weather a crisis such as a flooded burrow, allowing her to survive and rebuild when conditions are more stable. And its discovery suggests that some species may have hidden reserves of resilience against environmental extremes.
"Our findings," writes a team led by evolutionary physiologist Charles Darveau of the University of Ottawa in Canada, "reveal a remarkable flooding-tolerance strategy and provide a foundation for exploring the limits, mechanisms, and ecological significance of underwater survival in terrestrial insects." ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-03-12 12:15 AM | Reply
Very interesting
It reminded of a carpenter bee who was in distress, upside down on one of our decks because of the intense outdoor temps during a drought. A few minutes after I picked it up and placed it upright on the edge of a bread plate with sugar water, it flew directly in front of my face. It was good to see. There've been one pair or another living there for many years. If it gets too hot and dry we put out a saucer of water. Same on the front porch in case a lost or stray dog is wandering around needing hydration.
#2 | Posted by AMERICANUNITY at 2026-03-12 01:46 PM | Reply
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