Is it a bee, is it a hummingbird no it's a hover fly.......the bee-fly (bombylious major) Often seen hovering around flowers collecting nectar with its proboscis it also twerks! What's not to like? "Parasitic larvae Aside from its deceptive appearance, the bee fly is best known for the strange behaviour of its females. On a sunny day in spring, you may catch the sight of the female bee-fly performing an odd-looking manoeuvre, not unlike a twerk, in front of the nest holes of solitary bees and wasps. She covers her eggs in sand and then, with a thrust of her abdomen, flicks them towards the entrances of the nest holes. The eggs hatch into larvae, crawl further into the hole, and wait for one of their host’s eggs to hatch. They then attach to the bee’s larva and begin to suck out its body fluids. So not only do bee flies imitate their namesakes, they snack on their larvae, too." | |