07-24-2012, 10:39 AM
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#1
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I wonder . . .
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: The Left Coast, a pretty good place to be.
Posts: 1,278
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July 24, 2012 - RIP Mr. Bee
THE HONEYBEE’S FINAL STING
Quote:
If you’ve ever wondered why honeybees tend to die after stinging someone this picture says it all. In an incredible capture by Kathy Keatley Garvey, a UC Davis Communications Specialist in the Department of Enomology, we see a bee stinging a person’s arm and then attempting to fly away as the stinger remains lodged in the victim. That trail of goo you see? It’s actually the bee’s abdominal tissue. The remarkable capture netted Garvey the first-place gold feature photo award in an Association for Communication Excellence competition.
An opportune time came for Garvey to capture this photo when she was walking with a friend and a bee came close to him and starting buzzing in a high-pitch. She said that's normally a telltale sign that a bee's about to sting, so she readied her camera and snapped four photos.
The images represented the progression of the sting, but the most interesting part was that the bee's abdominal tissue that lingered behind, she said.
Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/06/13/455...#storylink=cpy
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Photograph by Kathy Keatley Garvey
Thanks to Twisted Sifter for posting this image.
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