Came home from vacation to find this happening on an open flower. The bee was clearly dead or paralyzed, at least...not moving even a bit. If it were on the ground somewhere, I'd guess the other bug was feeding on a dead or dying bee, but since this is on a flower, I figured it was some sort of predator.
(http://img530.imageshack.us/img530/8896/killingmybee01nv3.th.jpg) (http://img530.imageshack.us/my.php?image=killingmybee01nv3.jpg)
(http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/2730/killingmybee02vk1.th.jpg) (http://img521.imageshack.us/my.php?image=killingmybee02vk1.jpg)
it's a bee eating bug :-D
Its a little difficult to decipher from the pictures, but we have assassin bugs here, they are very common and eat a few bees, actually they have an appendage that folds under their mouth that can be turned up and puncture a bee, then they suck the fluids like with a straw.
JP, I think that you are right. Assassin bugs are true bugs, true bugs are depicted by the "shield" shaped body.
Moonshae, that is too bad, seeing any kind of bee dead is sad. Maybe the bee died of old age and the bug decided to simply clean up the death. I can't stand the thought that quite possibly it actually killed the bee, but JP is probably right, it killed her. Have a wonderful day still, great life. Cindi
I often see assassin bugs on my hives with a bee attached to its appendage, sucking the bee dry. I figure one bee here or there can't be bad, and the assassin bugs are colorful and interesting.
http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/iiin/soldier.html
Some kind of soldier beetle...I've always seen them on the goldenrod in the fall, but I never realized that they are predatory.
-rick
I thought the bug on Moonshae's flower looked like a beetle, but don't know of any right off that are predatory, most beetles I know of are scavengers, or nest in rotting wood that the larvae eat.
Yep, I believe Rick found your answer, a soldier beetle.
One of these:
http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=robber+fly&btnG=Search+Images&gbv=2
Or these:
http://images.google.com/images?svnum=10&hl=en&gbv=2&safe=off&q=Assassin+bug&btnG=Search+Images
Really cool sites there Mb, enjoyed the pictures. Aren't insects magnificent creatures.
Quote from: JP on July 05, 2007, 11:34:39 PM
Really cool sites there Mb, enjoyed the pictures. Aren't insects magnificent creatures.
You'd love this site (http://whatsthatbug.com), then. It's one of my favorites!
Check out the bee page (http://whatsthatbug.com/bees.html).....
Thnks reinbeau, I'll certainly check them out. ;)
The robber fly is the one that can catch a honeybee and keep it far enough away with it's long legs so the bee cannot sting it. Then it punctures the bee and sucks it dry.
Seen it happen.
doak
That is a fire-fly scavaging on an already dead bee.