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On May 29, 7:19 am, Scott Seidman wrote:
Trodding back to my car from a day on the water, I was passing through a
phlox patch, and saw what I thought was a large honeybee gathering
nectar.
This might seem quite stupid, but I'm pretty sure it was not a honeybee.
It seemed to be about twice the size of a honeybee. The wing beats were
extremely fast, and it darted about more like what I think of in a
hummingbird-- very good hover, rapid darting pattern with extremely
sudden
stops. There were some prominent yellow and black stripes on the back,
where an abdomen would want to be--maybe two yellow and one black.
I didn't get a close enough look to categorically say there was no beak,
so
I can't be sure, but I thought I saw a rather prominent probiscus for
nectar collection-- maybe some sort of odd moth??
I was with somebody else, and neither of us would identify this as a bee.
Any ideas? I'm in Western NY, if that helps.
--
Scott
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:H..._on_flower.JPG
Probably a Hoverfly. Looks like a Honey Bee. Some look like wasps. Has a
darting flight pattern and often hovers in midair, hence the name.
Feeds on nectar of flowers.
Mike