‘Flying bulldog’: world’s largest bee rediscovered

Published February 22, 2019
This undated handout photomontage provided by Global Wildlife Conservation on Thursday shows a living giant bee (Megachile pluto) (right), which is approximately four times larger than a European honeybee. It was rediscovered 
in the Indonesian islands of North Moluccas.—AFP
This undated handout photomontage provided by Global Wildlife Conservation on Thursday shows a living giant bee (Megachile pluto) (right), which is approximately four times larger than a European honeybee. It was rediscovered in the Indonesian islands of North Moluccas.—AFP

PARIS: The world’s largest bee — a giant insect roughly the size of a human thumb — has been rediscovered in a remote part of Indonesia in its first sighting in nearly 40 years, researchers said on Thursday.

Despite its conspicuous size, no one had observed Wallace’s giant bee — discovered in the 19th century by British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace and nicknamed the “flying bulldog” — in the wild since 1981, the Global Wildlife Conservation said.

“To actually see how beautiful and big the species is in life, to hear the sound of its giant wings... was just incredible,” said Clay Bolt, a specialist bee photographer who snapped the enormous insect.

“My dream is now to elevate this bee to a symbol of conservation in this part of Indonesia, a point of pride for the locals there.” The bee (full name Megachile pluto), which lives in the Indonesian island region of North Moluccas, makes its nest in termite mounds, using its large fang-like mandibles to collect sticky resin to protect its home from the termites.

The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species lists the bee as “vulnerable”, meaning that while its numbers are relatively solid, the remoteness of its population makes it hard to study.

Several previous expeditions to the region where the bee lives failed to spot it.

Published in Dawn, February 22nd, 2019

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