In the late 1820s Thomas Nutt of Moulton Chapel developed and patented an improvement to beehives that allowed for heat regulation through improved ventilation, helped to prevent swarming, and encouraged bees to occupy other adjacent hives, thereby obviating the need to destroy bees in the collection of honey.
12.
Burrowing is probably the most important behavior modification for heat regulation in " Pimelia ", because it permits access to a broad range of ambient temperatures . " Pimelia " are diurnal, emerging in early morning and late evening but remaining under the sand during the hot hours of the day.
13.
:: : : No, it could not " very well be true "; plenty of complex organisms require heat regulation of one form or another, but they do this for reasons of homeostasis, to avoid tissue damage-- not because they will burst into flames otherwise . talk 16 : 49, 4 February 2015 ( UTC)