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Date: | Wed, 19 Jun 1996 08:30:02 EDT |
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The following was sent to me by Liz Day (remember Liz?) who picked this
up from BIRDCHAT. Please respond to BEE-L (as I would like to read the
answer, and I don't follow birdchat). Too much information and too
little time! I'll send any responses back to Liz and she'll forward
them to BIRDCHAT.
>> Sender: "National Birding Hotline Cooperative (Chat Line)"
>> <[log in to unmask]>
>> From: Marcia Braun <[log in to unmask]>
>> Subject: bee killed purple martin
>> To: Multiple recipients of list BIRDCHAT
>> <[log in to unmask]>
>>
>> My husband and I were witness this weekend to a strange
>> example of insect/bird interaction in our back yard.
>>
>> We were watching a female purple martin feed two youngsters on
>> the porch of the martin house. Honey bees from a hive on the
>> other side of the garage were heading out to forage, steaming
>> by the martin house. As we watched, one young martin suddenly
>> leaped off of the house and fluttered to the ground. We went
>> to investigate and found the bird lying panting on the ground,
>> with a honey bee stinging it on the back of the neck. Ron
>> knocked the bee off. The bird died a few seconds later. The
>> mother martin flew about wildly when the young bird leaped
>> from the house, and continued to call after we left the area.
>>
>> We are guessing that the bee flying by collided with the bird
>> and then stung it. Probably it was the sting and not the fall
>> that killed it. The bees were not trying to take over the
>> house -- that is, it was not an instance of a swarm looking
>> for a new nest site.
>>
>> This seems unusual to us, so I wanted to ask if anyone else
>> has heard of honey bees stinging birds.
>>
>> Marcia Braun
>> Houston, TX
>> [log in to unmask]
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