Gallery pages: < 1 2 3 4 >
LONG-HORNED BEE, FRONT
A male Long-horned Bee on stalk of dwarf Fakahatchee Grass (Tripsacum floridanum)
A series of images combined on 14 layers.
Caption by Mark Deyrup:
When a male Long-Horned Bee looks you in the eye, you have to be impressed by his long antennae, his glowing eyes, and his attractive yellow face, especially if you are a female bee. The yellow coloration of the lower part of the face (technically called the clypeus) is a feature that occurs in males of a wide variety of bees and wasps. It probably signals the sex of the insect, both to females and to other males.

LONG-HORNED BEE, FRONT
A male Long-horned Bee on stalk of dwarf Fakahatchee Grass (Tripsacum floridanum)
A series of images combined on 14 layers.
Caption by Mark Deyrup:
When a male Long-Horned Bee looks you in the eye, you have to be impressed by his long antennae, his glowing eyes, and his attractive yellow face, especially if you are a female bee. The yellow coloration of the lower part of the face (technically called the clypeus) is a feature that occurs in males of a wide variety of bees and wasps. It probably signals the sex of the insect, both to females and to other males.
Gallery pages: < 1 2 3 4 >