Apis cerana is the sister species of our bees (A. mellifera). It is the original host of the varroa mites (Varroa jacobsoni, Varroa destructor). Bees are generally smaller and with more striking bands on the abdomen compared to our bees. Most photoes take
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A bee foraging on sweet ternera (Turnera ulmifolia, Turneraceae). Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, China. May 2001. - cerana_banana8
A cerana worker foraging for pollen on banana flowers (Musa spp, Musaceae). Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, China. April 2002. - DSCN1781_JPG
A bee foraging on day flowers (Commelinaceae). This bee was foraging before there was full light (around 5 am). Yunnan, China. May 2001. - cerana_aster
A bee approaching an aster (Asteraceae). Photo by Wenquan Zhen. Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, China. - DSCN1344_JPG
A bee foraging on prevet (Ligustrum spp, Oleaceae). Yunnan, China. May 2001. - DSCN1376_JPG
A bee foraging on Scarlet sage (Salvia splendens, Lamiaceae). Yunnan, China. May 2001. - DSCN1375_JPG
A bee foraging on Scarlet sage (Salvia splendens, Lamiaceae). Yunnan, China. May 2001. - DSCN1275_JPG
A bee foraging on a dahlia flower (Dahlia spp, Asteraceae). Yunnan, China. May 2001. - DSCN1236_JPG
A bee foraging on a begonia (Begoniaceae). Yunnan, China. May 2001. - DSCN1223_JPG
A bee foraging on a begonia (Begoniaceae). Yunnan, China. May 2001. - P3220061
An Apis cerana foraging on dianthus flowers (Dianthus spp, Caryophyllaceae). Chiangmai, Thailand. March 22, 2000. - P3220062
An Apis cerana foraging on dianthus flowers (Dianthus sinensis, Caryophyllaceae). Chiangmai, Thailand. March 22, 2000. - P3220063
An Apis cerana foraging on a mustard (Brassicaceae). Chiangmai, Thailand. March 22, 2000. - cerana_foraging
Three bees foraging on a poppy (Eschscholzia spp, Papaveraceae). Chiangmai, Thailand. May 2000. - cerana_solanacea2
A cerana worker foraging for pollen inside a flower of datura (Datura stramonium, Solanaceae). The bees hover inside the large flower to get pollen, luckily my Nikon 990 can be twisted such that I can shoot upwards without me lying down in mud. Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, China. April 2002.