Video: A California Teen’s Research on Bees’ Memory Is Helping Avert Colony Collapse Disorder
With the help of a local beekeeper, San Jose’s Rory Hu launched an experiment where artificial flowers helped boost learning within bee colonies
When Rory Hu came across a news article about the global decline in honey bee populations, she was inspired to do something about it. Known as Colony Collapse Disorder, it puts the global food supply at serious risk.
The teen from San Jose, California, dug deeper, discovering in her research that harmful pesticides can damage the honey bees’ learning and memory. Impaired bees can’t harvest pollen well and have a hard time finding their way back to the hive.
With the help of a local beekeeper, Hu set out an experiment to mollify these effects. She created artificial flowers tinged with caffeine and a food supplement called T-Polyphenol. The experiment intended to use the compounds to improve the bees’ memories. Her experiment worked. The bees thrived.
Rory won the Department of Defense STEM Talent Award of $10,000 for her experiment at the 2022 Broadcom MASTERS, a national science and engineering competition for middle school students. “Knowing that I would even be able to have a small part in [solving the problem],” she says, “it would be extremely gratifying to me.”
Click here to see & share Hu’s story — and check out this other recent coverage of teenagers breaking new ground in STEM:
- Florida Teen Invents World’s First Sustainable Electric Vehicle Motor
- 14-Year-Old Wins $25,000 Prize For Robotic Hand He Built For Less Than $100
- Meet the 16 Under 16 in STEM Achievers
—Produced & Edited by Jim Fields
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