Tue, Nov 5, 1:54 AM CST

Blue-throated Bee-eater

DAZ|Studio Animals posted on Apr 06, 2023
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


Here's another bee-eater from my upcoming Bee-eaters of the World set... It is going after a Black-bellied Hornet (from Bees of the World v1). This aggressive and extremely dangerous hornet is native to Taiwan, but it also found in China, Nepal, India, Thailand, Myanmar, Sikkim, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, and Indonesia. Its venom possesses a potent edema-inducing activity, in addition to its lethal cardiovascular effect. The Blue-throated Bee-eater is found in southeastern China (including Hainan), southern Thailand and Indochina (except much of Laos) southward to Sumatra, Java, Borneo and the northern Natuna Islands. It prefers beach-front scrub, dunes, pastures, farmland, suburban gardens, tin mine tailings, sandy clearings and riversides in the lowlands. It feeds on honeybees and other members of the bee family, flies, beetles and true bugs. Some of the insects can be quite large (up to 1.6 inches (42 mm) long). It waits for passing insects from its perch in tall trees, or on telephone line/powerline, and makes a dashing pursuit-flight, returning with prey to the perch. In order to immobilize it, it beats on the perch or, in the case of a bee, to devenoms it, by rubbing off its stinger. Blue-throated bee-eaters practice asynchronous brooding, which means that chicks hatch at different times, often causing siblicide (killing of their siblings). Siblicide generally only occurs when resources, specifically food sources, are scarce. Some parents encourage siblicide, while others prevent it. By letting the offspring kill each other, it saves the parents time and energy that would be wasted on feeding offspring that most likely would not survive anyway.

Production Credits


Nature's Wonders Bee
$13.95 USD 50% Off
$6.98 USD
Songbird ReMix Bee-eaters
$19.95 USD 50% Off
$9.98 USD

Comments (5)


)

Paulienchen

1:11PM | Thu, 06 April 2023

Ein sehr schöner Render

)

Flint_Hawk

2:25PM | Thu, 06 April 2023

WOW! This is impressive!

)

anniemation

11:06AM | Fri, 07 April 2023

Interesting. Beautiful bird.

)

STEVIEUKWONDER

10:25AM | Sat, 08 April 2023

I think those birds have studied Spitfires and Meschermits during the war to battle like that! Marvelous work Ken!

Ken _Gilliland

12:19PM | Sat, 08 April 2023

probably ;)

Their most common tactic is the soar up from below and nab its prey from its underside

)

Annerose

1:06PM | Sat, 08 April 2023

Impressing live scene!


3 32 11

00
Days
:
22
Hrs
:
05
Mins
:
04
Secs
Premier Release Product
Cinxia for Genesis 8 Female
3D Figure Assets
Sale Item
$15.20 USD 40% Off
$9.12 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.