Melittosphex burmensis
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[edit] Description
M. burmensis is approximately one-fifth the size of the extant honeybee, at about 3 millimetres long. It is not related to any existing bee family. M. burmensis has some anatomical features similar to those of flesh-eating wasps, including the shape of its hind legs, but also some features of pollen-spreading bees, such as branched hairs on the body. The bee's head is heart-shaped.
The sample discovered is thought to be 100 million years old, 40 million years older than the next-oldest known bee species. The discovery of a bee from the Cretaceous Period with certain pollen-spreading features may help to explain the rapid expansion of flowering plants at that time in earth's history.
Poinar and bee researcher Bryan Danforth describe M. burmensis in the journal Science.
[edit] References
- OSU media release on discovery
- http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Ancient-Bee.html (New York Times registration required)

