Walk through Times Square—you're bombarded with advertising. And it turns out, a bumblebee might have a similar feeling, buzzing through a field of flowers. "So these flowers are these billboards, they're advertising a commodity, this delicious nectar (花蜜) reward, and bees are very picky shoppers," says Anne Leonard, a pollination (授粉) biologist at the University of Nevada, Reno.She describes a flower field as a sort of pollination marketplace. "Bees are nectar experts. They are really good at assessing even really small differences in the sugar concentration of nectar." They also scope out flower shape and size, color and scent. And now Leonard and her colleagues have discovered that bumblebees are also sensitive to pollen.What does the author compare a flower field to?A. Times Square.B. A shopper.C. A commodity.D. A billboard.
Walk through Times Square—you're bombarded with advertising. And it turns out, a bumblebee might have a similar feeling, buzzing through a field of flowers. "So these flowers are these billboards, they're advertising a commodity, this delicious nectar (花蜜) reward, and bees are very picky shoppers," says Anne Leonard, a pollination (授粉) biologist at the University of Nevada, Reno.
She describes a flower field as a sort of pollination marketplace. "Bees are nectar experts. They are really good at assessing even really small differences in the sugar concentration of nectar." They also scope out flower shape and size, color and scent. And now Leonard and her colleagues have discovered that bumblebees are also sensitive to pollen.
What does the author compare a flower field to?
A. Times Square.
B. A shopper.
C. A commodity.
D. A billboard.