03-20-2008, 07:52 PM
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#15 (permalink)
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Sun Whorshipper
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: A Desert Rat that has found herself in Maryland
Posts: 12,638
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chase
Since I'm deaf and need binoculars to see farther than I can put a shot, my sense of smell must have used the abandoned nerves, as even the de-scented skunks smell bad to me. But they sure are cute, especially the kittens following along in line like a string of ducklings.
Skunks are a natural enemy of bees, but they don't tear up the hives as bears do. Skunks scratch at the entryway, and when guard bees and drones pile outside to fight and bluff, the skunks sweep up the bees with their brushy tails. It appears that the heavy scent stuns the bees, because they're easily combed from the tails with claws and eaten. At any rate, skunks don't seem to mind an occasional sting inside the mouth.
A healthy hive has about 75,000 bees, and a dining skunk will take half before waddling away full.
When I smell skunks in the vicinity, we trap them live, and fish and wildlife people haul them away. Better them than me.
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A month ago, our class' Literacy theme was "Information Literacy" and we read about bees. During that week, I was surprised to learn that one of the listed enemies for bees was the skunk.
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~Shel~
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