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Showing posts with label honey bee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label honey bee. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2015

10 Admirably Beautiful Insects


We would never usually associate insects and creepy crawlies with beauty. In fact, many of us find them more annoying creatures with painful bites or stings. However, if we take the time to really look at them, they do have a few physical features that make them beautiful.
Here are 10 insects that you might not mind admiring.

Stick Insect
Stick Insect
At times, beauty isn’t measured with gorgeous colors. With stick insects, you can find their appeal in how they are shaped. They have top rating in camouflage since they look exactly like a stick and are almost impossible to spot when mixed with twigs and leaves.

Christmas Beetle
Christmas Beetle
Imagine a bug that comes in all the colors of the rainbow. The Christmas Beetle’s shell has a shimmering, metallic quality to it that makes it shine and reflect different colors. They may not look the prettiest, but they are the most colorful.

Honey Bee
Honey Bee
Something about their stripes and furry bodies make them a favorite subject for photos. Honey Bee are very well loved by gardeners since they help pollenate plants, plus they produce honey, which can make any baked good taste so much more awesome.

Signature Spider
Signature Spider
Although most of us hate spiders because they just look scary, signature spiders come in different lovely colors that you’d forget that they make your skin crawl. These are found all over Asia and are generally harmless.

Grasshopper
Grasshopper
You might think of these insects as boring because they are commonly seen in either green or brown, but some species of grasshoppers are actually quite colorful. They’re a visual surprise when seen in a group.

Caterpillars
Caterpillars
Most prefer to wait for these bugs to turn to butterflies before calling them beautiful, but caterpillars can be a stunning surprise to see on a leaf. They come in all different colors and patterns, some even having textured bodies that just add to their appeal.

Ladybugs
Ladybugs
Also known as ladybirds, these insects are probably one of the first things we think of seeing in gardens filled with flowers. They come in vivid yellow, orange, and the most common, red. Although they’re tiny, a closer look on their glossy colorful shells and black spots will make you appreciate them more.

Dragonfly
Dragonfly
Delicate and colorful, anyone can say that a dragonfly is beautiful when they spot one. You can see iridescent greens and blues on their wings and thin, long bodies. But since they’re very fast and small, you get to see their full beauty when they’re resting.

Praying Mantis

Praying Mantis
It sound crazy to call a praying mantis beautiful, but some species come in an array of wild, colorful wings that look amazing when they flutter them. These insects are strangely beautiful.

Butterfly
Butterfly
You can argue that butterflies are the most spectacular insects on the planet. From something that looked more like a worm, to a hard shell that hung from a twig, they emerge with wings that have vivid and outstanding colors and patterns. There’s something calmingly beautiful abut butterflies which makes them even more welcomed in gardens.
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Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Giant Hornets Take on Honey Bees

During spring, when all the lovely flower bloom, you can also expect to see a lot of flying friendly insects like bees. They’re a big help when it comes to pollinating flowers and they play a vital part in any Eco-system. Not a lot of other insects are aggressive when it comes to bees, but one certain specie really takes their aggression on them to a different level.
giant hornets and hony bees
The Japanese giant hornet, an Asian giant hornet subspecies that’s native to Japan, is one of the biggest hornet species around. They can reach up to 2 inches when fully grown and have stingers that can grow to about a quarter-inch long. They’re also fast, reaching a flying speed of 25 mph. what makes these hornets even more dangerous and scary is that they can inject venom which is so strong that I can dissolve human flesh and damage our nervous system. People in japan tend to keep away from these hornets, but unfortunately, they’re drawn to honey bees which some of the locals keep.

They commonly take on a hive of European honey bees, no matter how outnumbered they are. Japanese farmers have taken care of European honey bee hives and harvest their honey, but these giant hornets have become a threat to the bees and to the community as well. When a hornet discovers a honey bee hive, it them marks it with a certain pheromones, signaling other hornets to approach the hive. The team of hornets then attacks the bees by biting their heads off, then take the honey for themselves.
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Sunday, January 12, 2014

Dancing Animals With Some Serious Moves

So, you think you can dance?
Dancing Peacock Spider
Animals dance, too. They don’t all do it quite the same way we do, but they often shake their stuff for the same reasons (showing off for the opposite sex) and sometimes for vastly more complex ones. See our list of animals with smooth moves.

Source: Here
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Thursday, January 2, 2014

How Molecular Switch for Sex Evolved in Honeybees Revealed

A group of researchers from Arizona State University have carried out a study in which they have revealed about how the evolution process of molecular switch for sex in honeybees has taken place.
It was in the mid-1800s that Johann Dzierson, a Silesian monk, came up with a genetic mechanism for sex determination. One thing he could not was how male and females were produced in honeybee colonies.

Source: Here
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Thursday, September 5, 2013

Red Honey

Utah beekeepers have been noticing an unusual red coloring and hints of coconut, cherry, and mint in their honey.
State inspectors believe the honey's strange properties is a product of bees munching on a cocktail of "crushed, rehydrated candy canes and other candy materials." KSL.com reported.

Source: Here
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