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  2. Insectothopter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insectothopter

    The Insectothopter was the size of a dragonfly, and was hand-painted to look like one. It was powered by a miniature fluidic oscillator to propel the wings up and down at the proper rate to provide both lift and thrust.

  3. Eristalis tenax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eristalis_tenax

    The adult fly that emerges from the pupa is harmless. It looks somewhat like a drone honey bee, and likely gains some degree of protection from this resemblance to a stinging insect. The adults are called drone flies because of this resemblance. In its natural habitat, E. tenax is more of a curiosity than a problem.

  4. Eristalis arbustorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eristalis_arbustorum

    Eristalis arbustorum, the European drone fly, is an abundant Northern Hemisphere species of syrphid fly, originally officially described by Linnaeus in 1758 as Musca arbustorum. The name "drone fly" is related to its similar appearance to the drone of the honeybee. Hoverflies get their names from the ability to remain nearly motionless while in ...

  5. Here’s the truth behind 6 of the most widely circulated ...

    www.aol.com/news/truth-behind-6-most-widely...

    It looks like it could be a lighted drone but it looks like a picture that is way out of focus, a lighted subject. “This one is very blurred. It could be distorted lights on a drone or a ...

  6. China has built a giant Osprey-like drone that engineers say ...

    www.aol.com/china-built-giant-osprey-drone...

    A new VTOL drone designed to fly at 6 tons was just completed in China, a local report says. The Lanying R6000 is meant to take up to 10 passengers, fly up to 2,400 miles, and reach 340 mph.

  7. Eristalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eristalis

    Several species are known as drone flies (or droneflies) because they bear a resemblance to honeybee drones. Drone flies and their relatives are fairly common generalist pollinators , [ 2 ] the larvae of which are aquatic, and breathe through a long, snorkel -like appendage, hence the common name rat-tailed maggots .