“…The observed increase in ground speeds for bees approaching moving obstacles in wind is unexpected because bees, as well as many other insects, are known to regulate their ground speeds based on optic flow from the surrounding visual environment, allowing them to maintain a preferred speed despite any ambient wind (Kennedy, 1951;Willis and Arbas, 1991;Barron and Srinivasan, 2006;Fuller et al, 2014;Copley et al, 2018). In our experiment, bees did display fairly consistent ground speeds when approaching stationary obstacles, regardless of flow condition: the averages [and 95% confidence intervals: (lower, upper limits)] of median ground speeds when bees approached stationary obstacles were 0.36 m s −1 (0.30, 0.43) in still air and 0.39 m s −1 (0.32, 0.47) in tailwinds, and declined slightly to 0.26 m s −1 (0.22, 0.32) in headwinds (slight declines in ground speed were also seen in headwinds by Barron and Srinivasan, 2006).…”