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  • Travelling beekeepers surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_061107_25US.jpg
  • Travelling beekeepers at work surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_124416_91.jpg
  • Travelling beekeepers at work surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_055109_98US.jpg
  • Beehives belonging to travelling beekeepers surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_054830_77US.jpg
  • Romanian bees at the manmade beehives surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_054958_90.jpg
  • Romanian bees at the manmade beehives surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_054902_80.jpg
  • Beehives next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_124102_81US.jpg
  • Drone eggs. The drones are male honey bees and they develop from eggs that have not been fertilized, and they cannot sting, since the worker bee's stinger is a modified ovipositor (an egg laying organ). Imaged next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_060158_15.jpg
  • Romanian bees at the manmade beehives surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_054947_86US.jpg
  • Beehives belonging to travelling bee farmers surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_053200_72US.jpg
  • Romanian bees at the manmade beehives surrounded by linden trees next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_055203_00-2.jpg
  • Honeycomb is a mass of hexagonal wax cells built by honey bees in their nests to contain their larvae and stores of honey and pollen. Imaged next to the forest Valea Fagilor close to Macin Mountains National Park. Somewhere between Horia village and Tulcea, Romania.
    MLU_20130613_060638_22.jpg
  • Bee-eater tossing a bumble bee<br />
Merops apiaster and Bombus sp.<br />
HUNGARY/PUSZTASZER PROTECTED LANDSCAPE, CSONGRÁD<br />
<br />
The bee-eater is a specialist in bumble bees, wasps, bees and other larger flying insects. One of Europe’s most colourful and exotic-looking birds, the bee-eater lives in colonies in sand banks. That is why this species has benefited from human construction and roadbuilding, where gravel pits and excavation sites provide many more artificial sandbanks than untouched nature. On the other hand, widespread pesticide use in farming reduces the numbers of large insects that the bee-eater needs to survive. The bee-eater is a Mediterranean species of dry and open country, spreading northwards with climate change. Sometimes they are persecuted by bee-keepers, who are not so enthusiastic about their choice of diet.
    MVA-20080510-131842 Markus Varesvuo.jpg
  • European Bee-eater, Merops apiaster, Pusztaszer Landscape Reserve, Hungary 2008<br />
<br />
Bee-eater tossing a bumble bee (Merops apiaster and Bombus sp.), HUNGARY/PUSZTASZER PROTECTED LANDSCAPE, CSONGRÁD. <br />
<br />
The bee-eater is a specialist in bumble bees, wasps, bees and other larger flying insects. One of Europe’s most colourful and exotic-looking birds, the bee-eater lives in colonies in sand banks. That is why this species has benefited from human construction and roadbuilding, where gravel pits and excavation sites provide many more artificial sandbanks than untouched nature. On the other hand, widespread pesticide use in farming reduces the numbers of large insects that the bee-eater needs to survive. The bee-eater is a Mediterranean species of dry and open country, spreading northwards with climate change. Sometimes they are persecuted by bee-keepers, who are not so enthusiastic about their choice of diet.
    MVA-20080510-131842 (kopia).jpg