gaybugsdoart - Gay bugs? Gay bugs
Gay bugs? Gay bugs

Artist into bugs23 (she/her)https://linktr.ee/gaybugsdoart

27 posts

Used Pride Flag Colors For Some Of My Characters, I Should Probably Do More Honestly

Used Pride Flag Colors For Some Of My Characters, I Should Probably Do More Honestly
Used Pride Flag Colors For Some Of My Characters, I Should Probably Do More Honestly

used pride flag colors for some of my characters, I should probably do more honestly

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More Posts from Gaybugsdoart

10 months ago

I'm proud of them tbh...

9 months ago
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Keep reading

9 months ago
My Sluguenda Animation Set Is Growing
My Sluguenda Animation Set Is Growing
My Sluguenda Animation Set Is Growing
My Sluguenda Animation Set Is Growing
My Sluguenda Animation Set Is Growing
My Sluguenda Animation Set Is Growing

My Sluguenda animation set is growing <3 :D

8 months ago

Apparently a part of the reason why farmed bees stay in the beehives that humans build for them is because the farm hives are safer and sturdier. I don't know how a busy Discord server's worth of bugs that only have one brain cell each would logically conclude that the humans protect them from outside threats, illness and parasites, but if I understood right, the bees would be free to move away and build a new nest somewhere else any time they'd want, and they simply choose not to.

You know how in almost every culture, people have some concept of "if I sacrifice something that I made/grew/produced to the Gods, they will ward me and my harvest from evil"?

So, in a way, don't the bees willingly sacrifice a part of their harvest to an entity not only far greater than them, but nearly beyond their comprehension, in exchange for protection against natural forces wildly outside of their own control?

So tell me, beekeepers, what are you to your bees, if not a mildly eldritch God?

9 months ago

Rare images of a leafcutter bee sharing its nest with a wolfspider:

Rare Images Of A Leafcutter Bee Sharing Its Nest With A Wolfspider:

These photographs were taken in Queensland, Australia, by an amateur photographer named Laurence Sanders.

Rare Images Of A Leafcutter Bee Sharing Its Nest With A Wolfspider:

The leafcutter bee (Megachile macularis) can be seen fetching freshly-cut leaves, which she uses to line the inner walls of her nest. The wolfspider moves aside, allowing the bee to enter the nest, and then simply watches as the leaf is positioned along the inner wall.

Rare Images Of A Leafcutter Bee Sharing Its Nest With A Wolfspider:

After inspecting the nest together, they return to their resting positions -- sitting side-by-side in the entryway to the nest.

The bee seems completely at ease in the presence of the wolfspider, which is normally a voracious predator, and the spider seems equally unfazed by the fact that it shares its burrow with an enormous bee.

This arrangement is completely unheard of, and the images are a fascinating sight to behold.

Sources & More Info:

Brisbane Times: The Odd Couple: keen eye spies bee and spider bedfellows in 'world-first'

iNaturalist: Megachile macularis