Copy of Electricity – Video 7 – Second Timers Quiz
Quiz Summary
0 of 10 Questions completed
Questions:
Information
You have already completed the quiz before. Hence you can not start it again.
Quiz is loading…
You must sign in or sign up to start the quiz.
You must first complete the following:
Results
Results
0 of 10 Questions answered correctly
Your time:
Time has elapsed
You have reached 0 of 0 point(s), (0)
Earned Point(s): 0 of 0, (0)
0 Essay(s) Pending (Possible Point(s): 0)
Categories
- Not categorized 0%
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- Current
- Review
- Answered
- Correct
- Incorrect
-
Question 1 of 10
1. Question
ECHIDNAS: The echidna is a little mammal that has 40,000 receptors in its nose that detect electrical fields. It’s able to tell where earthworms are based on what little electricity they give off when they fire their muscles.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 2 of 10
2. Question
THE ECHIDNA: The echidna is a little like a spiky ant eater.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 3 of 10
3. Question
BEES AND FLOWERS:Â As bees fly, they lose electrons to the air around them. This gives their tiny little bodies a slightly negative charge.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 4 of 10
4. Question
BEES AND FLOWERS: The earth has a slightly positive charge because of lightning strikes hitting the ground around the world and things happening deep in the earth. This positive charge of the earth transfers up through the ground to plants and up to the plants’ flowers that bees gather nectar from.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 5 of 10
5. Question
BEES AND FLOWERS: When bees land on flowers, they cancel some of the negative charge of the flower because the bees are positively charged. For a tiny space of time from seconds to minutes, the flower has less of a negative charge than other flowers around it.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 6 of 10
6. Question
BEES AND FLOWERS: When a bee hovers over plants covered with flowers, it’s detecting the electrical fields of the flowers with some of the most sensitive electrical detectors on earth. They are tucked in her ultra-tech antennas. If a flower has a slightly positive charge to it, the bee avoids that flower because its nectar supply has recently been eaten by another bee. If the flower has a negative charge, then the bee lands and drinks up the nectar in it.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 7 of 10
7. Question
BEES AND FLOWERS: Flowers slowly refill themselves. A flower’s nectar supply is drained by one bee then becomes available for other bees later after it is refilled. By reading the electrical fields of the plants, the bees can tell which flowers are ready and which flowers will not have nectar.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 8 of 10
8. Question
THE HONEYBEE’S HIDDEN HELPS: After discovering flowers with good nectar supplies, a scout bee flies to the hive and does its boggle dance in the dark to tell the other bees where nectar is.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 9 of 10
9. Question
THE HONEYBEE’S HIDDEN HELPS: If bees find danger at flowers that scout bees are telling other bees to go to, they return to the hive. When the scout bee begins its waggle dance again to send more bees into the danger zone, the surviving bees make loud buzzes. The scout bee will stop her dance when she hears these buzzes, then return to her scouting to look for safer locations.
CorrectIncorrect -
Question 10 of 10
10. Question
BEES AND RAIN: When it is just about to rain, the electrical fields in the atmosphere change slightly. Bees don’t like rain. They detect the electrical changes around them which indicate a storm is coming and they head back to the shelter of the hive!
CorrectIncorrect