When flying in turbulent winds. Traveling smoothly through a turbulent medium is no mean feat, as anyone who regularly flies in an airplane can attest. Scientists have investigated how fish navigate through turbulent currents, but until recently they had not addressed the analogous issue of animal flight through turbulent air. Now biologist Stacey Combes has filmed male orchid bees (genus Euglossa) flying in turbulent airstreams and, with colleague Robert Dudley, has described the effects of the turbulent air on the bee’s flight stability and maximum speed. Combes induced the bees to fly in a turbulent airstream by luring them with an attractive scent. As the airspeed increased, the bees found it increasingly difficult to avoid rolling. When the airspeed was high enough and maintaining stable flight difficult enough, the bees extended their hind legs, as depicted in the photograph. That move increased the moment of inertia about the roll axis...

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