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Revision as of 17:08, 28 November 2018

Counting the ancestors of honeybeesXXX

Honeybees (henceforth referred to as bees) have a very peculiar characteristic: a male bee has just one parent. This has a very interesting consequence as we are about to see. A male bee has only one parent: a female bee. A female bee has two parents: a male bee and a female bee. To count the number of ancestors of a male bee, observe that:

  • It’ll have 1 parent bee which will be a female
  • Considering that there’s 1 female parent bee, there’ll be 1 male bee and 1 bee female because of female child: there’ll be 2 grandparents
  • There’ll be 1 female parent because of 1 male bee and 1 male parent and 1 female parent because of 1 female child: there’ll be 3 great-grandparents
  • There’ll be 2 pairs of male and female bees because of 2 children female bees + 1 female bee because of 1 male child: there’ll be 5 great-great-grandparents
  • There’ll be 3 pairs of male and female bees because of 3 female children + 2 female bees because of 2 male children: there’ll be 8 great-great-great-grandparents

Similarly, counting the number of ancestors of a female bee and tabulating the results below we see an interesting phenomenon:

Gender # parents # grandparents # great-granparents # great-great-granparents # great-great-great-granparents
Male 1 2 3 5 8
Female 2 3 5 8 13

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Alumni Liaison

Recent Math PhD now doing a post-doctorate at UC Riverside.

Kuei-Nuan Lin