When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bee-eater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee-eater

    Bee-eaters consume a wide range of insects; beyond a few distasteful butterflies they consume almost any insect from tiny Drosophila flies to large beetles and dragonflies. At some point bee-eaters have been recorded eating beetles, mayflies , stoneflies , cicadas , termites , crickets and grasshoppers , mantises , true flies and moths.

  3. European bee-eater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_bee-eater

    This bird breeds in open country in warmer climates. As the name suggests, bee-eaters predominantly eat insects, especially bees, wasps, and hornets. They catch insects in flight, in sorties from an open perch. Before eating a bee, the European bee-eater removes the sting by repeatedly hitting the insect on a hard surface.

  4. Rainbow bee-eater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainbow_bee-eater

    Rainbow bee-eaters mostly eat flying insects, but, as their name implies, they have a real taste for bees. [3] Rainbow bee-eaters are always watching for flying insects, and can spot a potential meal up to 45 metres away. Once it spots an insect a bee-eater will swoop down from its perch and catch it in its long, slender, black bill and fly ...

  5. Nyctyornis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyctyornis

    In common with other bee-eaters, they predominantly eat insects, especially bees, wasps and hornets, which are caught in the air, but they have a rather different strategy. They hunt alone or in pairs, rather than in groups, and sit motionless for long periods before pursuing their prey. [9] The blue-bearded bee-eater will also clamber in ...

  6. Merops (genus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merops_(genus)

    They predominantly eat insects, especially bees, wasps and hornets, which are caught in the air. All bee-eaters are in the genus Merops and subfamily Meropinae except for three Asiatic bearded bee-eaters in the subfamily Nyctyornithinae (in genera Nyctyornis and Meropogon ).

  7. Southern carmine bee-eater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_carmine_bee-eater

    The southern carmine bee-eater occurs from KwaZulu-Natal and Namibia to Gabon, the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and Kenya.The bee-eater is a migratory species, spending the breeding season, between August and November, in Zimbabwe and Zambia, before moving as far south as South Africa for the summer months, and then migrating to Equatorial Africa from March to August.

  8. White-fronted bee-eater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-fronted_bee-eater

    White-fronted bee-eaters nest in colonies averaging 200 individuals, digging, roosting, and nesting holes in cliffs or banks of earth. A population of bee-eaters may range across many square kilometres of savannah, but will come to the same colony to roost, socialize, and to breed. White-fronted bee-eaters have one of the most complex family ...

  9. Little bee-eater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_bee-eater

    Just as the name suggests, bee-eaters predominantly eat insects, especially bees, wasps and hornets, who are caught in the air by sorties from an open perch. This species often hunts from low perches, maybe only a metre or less high. Before eating their meal, a bee-eater removes the stinger by repeatedly hitting the insect on a hard surface.