20250412Apismellifera01 Type post Author Eric Cassell Date February 17, 2026 CategoriesIntelligent DesignZoology Tagged , animal behavior, Apis mellifera, bees, behavior, behavioral decisions, brain, communication systems, decision-making, depth, engineering, flower print, flowers, food, foraging, honeybees, intelligent design, Lars Chittka, learning, mantids, memory, mimicry, nectar, noise, pollen, predators, primates, psychology, punishment, quinine, Radar, reward, signal-to-noise ratio, spiders, sugar, trade-offs, University of Sheffield, vegetation, World War II Sophistication of Bee Decision-Making Is a Mystery, Unless Design Hypothesis Is Permitted Eric Cassell February 17, 2026 Intelligent Design, Zoology 8 Distinguishing a real flower from a flower print on a woman’s dress can come into play, possibly requiring some experimental probing. Read More ›