Let's bust some nature myths

It's time to set the record straight on some of the more common ones

|  Story by Meghan McMahon |

1/24/2024

Myths are a funny thing. Some are based on facts, with some elements twisted and stretched beyond the truth. Some are downright incorrect, but the wrongness is widely accepted as true because it has been passed down from generation to generation with no reason to think it’s anything but accurate. Some are simply a nice thing to believe, and so we do. 

But myths being myths, they aren’t hard truths. They aren’t truths at all. They are embellishments, exaggerations and misunderstandings of facts. In nature, myths abound. Here are a few — and the truth behind them.  

The full moon alters human behavior 

A full moon is seen through a bare tree canopy.

(Photo via Shutterstock)

It’s pretty much an established fact that a full moon makes humans act a little out of sorts, right? Not so fast. No scientific study has ever been able to conclusively establish a link between the full moon and altered human behavior, the Washington Post reports

Numerous studies have been done to prove the link, but the research was conducted poorly and often did not account for variables. To date, no study has proven what we generally regard to be fact.  

The premise that the moon affects how humans behave is often attributed to the moon’s gravitational force, which causes the oceans’ tides. But three principles explain why the moon’s gravity doesn’t affect us. First, the gravitational pull is not powerful enough to change human brain activity, according to Scientific American. Also, the moon can only create tides in open bodies of water, like oceans. Our bodies are a body of water, but they are a closed body of water. Lastly, the moon’s gravitational force is always the same; it is not greater during a full moon than a new moon. 

Lightning can’t strike the same place twice 

Lightning strikes in an open field with rows of crops.

(Photo via Shutterstock)

The belief that lighting can’t or won’t strike the same place twice is a dangerous one because it certainly can — and it often does.  

Lightning often — but not always — strikes the tallest object nearby because it is the easiest path for the electricity to take, according to the National Severe Storms Lab. Think about skyscrapers in big cities. They are often struck by lightning because they are the tallest object around.  

Sometimes it’s a statistical anomaly that lightning strikes the same place twice, but some factors can make it more likely for a specific spot to be struck more than once, the storm lab reports. Places where metal objects like pipes lay below the ground’s surface may make a spot more likely to get struck, and even things like moisture content or presence or absence of rocks may make a spot more likely to be struck. 

While we are on the topic of lightning, let’s also clear up another myth. There is no such thing as heat lightning. The lightning we refer to as heat lightning is just lightning from a thunderstorm that is too far away to feel the other effects of, according to the National Weather Service.

Mother birds will abandon their babies if you touch them

Baby robins sit in a nest while it's mother watches over.

(Photo courtesy of Chad Morsch)

You probably learned as a kid that you should never touch a baby bird because its mother will reject it and abandon it. This is half right. You shouldn’t touch a baby bird, but not because its mother will abandon it. In fact, in many cases a mother bird won’t even know you handled her offspring. 

Most birds don’t have a good sense of smell, so they won’t be able to smell that a human has touched their baby, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Birds also won’t abandon a nest if humans touch their eggs. They may rebuild if a predator disturbs the nest, however. 

The reason you shouldn’t touch a baby bird is because in most cases they don’t need help. They may look helpless on the ground, but it’s all part of their development. Young birds seen on the ground are often fledglings. These birds are getting ready to leave the nest and learn how to fly. 

If you see a young bird without feathers laying on the ground, it may need help. These birds are typically nestlings that are not yet ready to leave the nest. Sometimes they are blown or fall out of their nests. Look at nearby bushes and trees to see if you can find the nest. Once you spot it, gently place the nestling back inside. 

RELATED: WHEN DOES A BIRD NEED HELP?

Bats are blind 

A brown bat in a cave shows off its fangs.

(Photo via Shutterstock)

The refrain “blind as a bat” is a common one, but most bat species see very well. Some bats, like fruit bats, even have much better vision than humans, the National Park Service reports.  

The myth that bats are blind may have been started because bats often fly erratically. However, their erratic flight patterns are because they use echolocation to navigate. Echolocation is basically sound waves created by the bats that bounce off objects to let them know exactly where they are. This is why they can fly so close to objects without flying into them, the park service reports. 

Because bats can see and because they use echolocation to precisely maneuver in flight, we can bust another myth too. Bats don’t often fly into people’s hair, getting caught in the process.  

Daddy long legs are one of the most venomous spiders in the world 

A harvestman and its long legs walk on a tree trunk.

(Photo by Glenn P. Knoblock)

This myth can be busted in a few ways. To start, daddy long legs aren’t actually spiders. They are harvestmen, which are spiderlike creatures, but they lack venom and silk glands and only have two eyes, while virtually all spiders have eight eyes, according to the Missouri Department of Conservation.  

The term daddy long legs is often used generically, however, and may be a reference to spider species like cellar spiders and others. While these spiders are venomous — virtually all spiders are — they pose no risks to humans.  

In fact, the venom from cellar spiders is relatively mild by spider venom standards, the Missouri Department of Conservation reports. And the vast majority of spiders pose no risk to humans. Only 1/20th of 1% of all the spider species in the world are dangerous to humans, according to the Burke Museum.  

Bees die when they sting you 

A bee collects nectar from a yellow flower.

(Photo by Glenn P. Knoblock)

It might provide some comfort to know that bees die after they sting you because at least you’ll be spared any additional pain, but in many cases it simply isn’t true. 

Honeybees do die after using their stinger to inject venom, but many other kinds of bees and stinging insects do not. Honeybees die after using their stingers because they can’t retract them and instead they become disemboweled after using them, Bee Culture reports. But wasps, hornets and many other kinds of bees, including bumble bees and carpenter bees, can safely remove their stinger after injecting it, allowing them to sting again and again. 

Don’t be too bummed out by this news because while some bees are capable of stinging more than once, most bee species aren’t capable of stinging at all. Of the more than 20,000 be species in the world, only about 500 are capable of stinging, the BBC reports.

It can be too cold to snow 

A snow-covered trail with a covered tree canopy and snow-covered branches.

(Photo by Chad Merda)

Our most frigid winter days are often clear and sunny, but don’t let that fool you into thinking it’s too cold to snow. It can’t be too cold to snow — ever, according to AccuWeather.

The idea that it’s too cold to snow may have come about because most heavy snowfall occurs when the temperature is at least 15 degrees Fahrenheit. Heavy snow doesn’t usually fall when it’s colder than that because moisture is important in the development of snow, and the air is usually too dry when it is below 15 degrees for heavy snow to develop. 

At lower temperatures, snow crystals still form, but they don’t develop into large flakes because there isn’t enough water in the atmosphere for them to grow, according to EarthSky. These tiny ice crystals do fall to the earth, but they typically evaporate before reaching the ground. 

Fawns are born without a scent 

A fawn gets licked by its mother in a field of grass.

(Photo courtesy of Amy Miller)

This myth can be busted — fawns do have a scent at birth — but it’s close to true. Fawns are born with a scent, but it’s a faint one. And their faint scent serves them well for exactly the reason you might think. 

Fawns have only a faint scent because their scent glands are not fully developed at birth, but this is useful because it makes it harder for predators to sniff them out, according to the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station.

Because they are hard for predators to find using scent alone, mother does often leave their fawns for long periods. While she never travels too far from them, she only visits them a few times a day to nurse.

(Lead image of bluebirds via Shutterstock)

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