Saturday

Orchid bee in genus Euglossa (above and left)
Orchid bees (Euglossine), jewels of the forest. Between 2021 and 2023, I spent a lot of time photographing (or attempting to photograph) orchid bees in Costa Rica, Peru, and Panama. 

I managed to capture good images of about half a dozen species and learned a lot. In some areas, these fantastic little bees (~8mm) are at risk from habitat loss, climate change, and the overuse of insecticides.  Encouragingly, most research shows that populations are stable in protected areas. 

However, other surveys elsewhere in Central and South America show declines, especially in Brazil, where the wholesale destruction of their habitat is ongoing. 

Orchid bees are a challenging macro subject. They are small, nervous, fast, reflective, seasonal, and willful. But they are also perfect subjects for the tenacious photographer because, absent photographs, they are too small and fast-moving to make out any detail with the naked eye. If you watch them coming to flowers to feed, I doubt you’ll be able to see the details of their fuzzy little bodies, cute faces, and brilliant colors. I can't, and I've had a lot of practice.

If you know what to look for, you’ll sometimes see something like a stinger protruding between their rear legs. That’s their tubular tongue which is so long some species need to tuck it under their bodies and only deploy it when feeding on nectar. 

I’ve been using both my old Zuiko 60mm and the newer Zuiko 90mm. The magnification on the 90mm helps “get in close” (photo below) and works well when they are perched. But keeping them in the frame when they move is nearly impossible. I also found that using one or two off-camera flashes is really helpful.

These little beggars fly extremely fast and do a lot of their perfume hunting a couple of hundred feet off the ground in the canopy.  The females are equally fast and they tend to work early in the morning and not at all unless there are flowers to visit. There are over 200 species, and many are quite similar in appearance so ID-ing is hopeless. Researchers have watched them raise young, but I do not believe anyone has yet managed to video their courtship and mating. 

You can read more about orchid bees and see more photos here




Monday

Lives of Beetles


Lives of beetles. It is always nice to have photos purchased for publication. And it is especially nice when the book in question is authored by Virginia Commonwealth University Professor Arthur Evans and published by Princeton University Press. Dr. Evans is a ranking authority on Coleoptera in general and “the” authority on US beetle species. I use a couple of his excellent books regularly and highly recommend them as a source. It's a nice book to give as a gift to someone who is just getting interested in nature or wants to learn more about beetles.  It is written for the lay reader but has enough sciency stuff that any naturalist will get a lot out of it.

There are a handful of my photos in this book (not the cover shown on the left) from Costa Rica, SE Asia, and the USA.

Over the last decade or so I've attempted to build a library of arthropod, amphibian, and reptile photos that are of value to researchers, educators, publications, and users in the field of conservation. I have 10,000+ and add a few thousand each year from the tropics and the Eastern US.  Seeing them in print is always a pleasure!

“Lives of Beetles” is available from Amazon or the Princeton University Press website. I recommend you buy it before it sells out. Then buy another copy and give it to that niece or nephew who spends too much time playing video games or listening to K-pop. You may set a career path or save a mind, and you certainly won’t do any harm.

BTW, if you live in the USA and are interested in beetles, Dr. Evans’ book “Beetles of Eastern North America” is the bible of beetling in this area and essential for identifying Coleopteran friends. Buy it as a companion to “Lives of Beetles.”