A scientist is studying which flower color attracts the most bees. To do this, the scientist releases a group of ten honey bees into a chamber with white walls. The chamber contains potted flowers of the following varieties: yellow daffodils, red roses, white daisies, purple asters, and orange lilies. The results of the experiment is shown in the table below: From the data, the scientist concludes that bees prefer red flowers. Are the scientist's conclusions valid? A. Not necessarily; the honey bees may have been attracted to traits other than flower color. B. Yes, the honey bees visited the
No, the honey bees showed relatively the same interest in all of the flowers except the daffodils. Yes, bees are always attracted to the brightest colored flower, which is why there are very few kinds of white flowers.
And here is the chart
@dan815
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@Photon336
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@JB1625 it seems that the scientists conclusions are correct because red flowers have the most visits.
Thank you I was already pass this by the time that I got to this question but thank you for trying to help me anyways:D
@Photon336
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