Times of Oman

World’s biggest bee rediscover­ed in Indonesia

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Times News Service

MUSCAT: The world’s biggest bee has been rediscover­ed in Indonesia, a team of wildlife researcher­s have confirmed.

With a wingspan of six centimetre­s, Wallace’s giant bee is the largest in the world, but since it was last spotted in 1981 scientists had believed it had gone extinct.

However, a small team of researcher­s who set out to find the creature earlier this year, found a lone queen living on an Indonesian island group called the North Moluccas.

Team member and honorary professor Simon Robson from the University of Sydney said, “Amid such a well-documented global decline in insect diversity it’s wonderful to discover that this iconic species is still hanging on.”

Conservati­on photograph­er Clay Bolt, who was also a part of the expedition, said of the experience, “it was absolutely breathtaki­ng to see this ‘flying bulldog’ of an insect that we weren’t sure existed anymore.”

“To see how beautiful and big the species is in real life, to hear the sound of its giant wings thrumming as it flew past my head, was just incredible.”

Female giant bees make their nests in active arboreal termite mounds which is where the team located their specimen after staking out the site for five straight days. The species takes its name from Alfred Russel Wallace, an English naturalist who developed a theory of evolution through natural selection concurrent­ly to Charles Darwin.

Wallace spent between 1854 and 1862 exploring the region around Indonesia documentin­g wildlife, which was when he stumbled upon the giant bee, describing it as “a large black wasp-like insect, with immense jaws like a stag-beetle.”

It was not seen again until 1981 by entomologi­st Adam Messer who located it on three different Indonesian islands and was able to document some of its behaviour before it was lost again for close to four decades.

 ??  ?? BELIEVED TO HAD GONE EXTINCT: With a wingspan of six centimetre­s, Wallace’s giant bee is the largest in the world.
BELIEVED TO HAD GONE EXTINCT: With a wingspan of six centimetre­s, Wallace’s giant bee is the largest in the world.

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