1 00:00:01,920 --> 00:00:06,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey 2 00:00:06,519 --> 00:00:10,719 Speaker 1: brain Stuff, Lauren Vogelbaum. Here, around two hundred and eighty 3 00:00:10,720 --> 00:00:13,960 Speaker 1: five million years ago, if you had been walking through 4 00:00:14,080 --> 00:00:17,400 Speaker 1: a Permian floodplain, you might have seen a griffin fly 5 00:00:18,280 --> 00:00:22,200 Speaker 1: dragonfly like insect the size of a crow. It was huge, 6 00:00:22,640 --> 00:00:26,000 Speaker 1: partly because atmospheric oxygen during this time was something like 7 00:00:26,160 --> 00:00:31,360 Speaker 1: thirty it's down around today, And it turns out that 8 00:00:31,400 --> 00:00:34,040 Speaker 1: the amount of oxygen present in the atmosphere is the 9 00:00:34,159 --> 00:00:38,760 Speaker 1: limiting factor in how big a bug can get. Although 10 00:00:38,800 --> 00:00:41,960 Speaker 1: we no longer have dragonflies flying around with two foot 11 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:45,960 Speaker 1: wingspans that's over half a meter, there are some standouts 12 00:00:46,000 --> 00:00:51,520 Speaker 1: among modern insects. Take Wallace's giant b a taxonomical name 13 00:00:51,720 --> 00:00:56,200 Speaker 1: Mega chile pluto. It's the world's largest B. Females of 14 00:00:56,240 --> 00:00:58,120 Speaker 1: the species can grow up to the size of an 15 00:00:58,160 --> 00:01:01,040 Speaker 1: adult humans thumb that's about one and a half inches 16 00:01:01,080 --> 00:01:04,280 Speaker 1: long or nearly forty millimeters, with a wingspan of two 17 00:01:04,319 --> 00:01:07,720 Speaker 1: and a half inches or over sixty millimeters. That's about 18 00:01:07,840 --> 00:01:10,800 Speaker 1: five times the size of the European honeybees you're used 19 00:01:10,840 --> 00:01:14,920 Speaker 1: to seeing. The females also have large mandibles used for 20 00:01:15,080 --> 00:01:19,399 Speaker 1: scraping up tree resin to line their nests, but it 21 00:01:19,440 --> 00:01:21,440 Speaker 1: was recently thought to have gone the way of the 22 00:01:21,440 --> 00:01:25,479 Speaker 1: griffin fly. Nobody had seen Wallace's giant bee since nineteen 23 00:01:25,520 --> 00:01:28,800 Speaker 1: eighty one, and before that no scientists had clapped eyes 24 00:01:28,880 --> 00:01:31,800 Speaker 1: on it since its discovery in eighteen fifty eight by 25 00:01:31,840 --> 00:01:36,640 Speaker 1: Alfred Russell Wallace, the English biologist who independently conceived of 26 00:01:36,640 --> 00:01:39,280 Speaker 1: the theory of evolution through natural selection at the same 27 00:01:39,319 --> 00:01:42,880 Speaker 1: time as Charles Darwin. Of course, researchers knew this didn't 28 00:01:42,959 --> 00:01:46,399 Speaker 1: necessarily mean it was extinct. It's just very difficult to 29 00:01:46,440 --> 00:01:49,520 Speaker 1: prove that an organism exists if you can't find it alive. 30 00:01:50,960 --> 00:01:54,440 Speaker 1: But in January of twenty nineteen, a team of researchers 31 00:01:54,480 --> 00:01:57,840 Speaker 1: traveled to a collection of little islands in Indonesia called 32 00:01:57,840 --> 00:02:01,800 Speaker 1: the North Malaccas, and they found this be beheemoth nesting 33 00:02:01,840 --> 00:02:05,760 Speaker 1: in a termite nest on a tree trunk. Clay Bolt, 34 00:02:05,920 --> 00:02:09,360 Speaker 1: a natural history photographer who captured the first photos and 35 00:02:09,520 --> 00:02:12,799 Speaker 1: video of a live giant bee, said in a press release, 36 00:02:13,280 --> 00:02:16,079 Speaker 1: to actually see how beautiful and big the species is 37 00:02:16,120 --> 00:02:18,760 Speaker 1: in life, to hear the sound of its giant wings 38 00:02:18,800 --> 00:02:22,040 Speaker 1: thrumming as it flew past my head was just incredible. 39 00:02:23,560 --> 00:02:26,320 Speaker 1: Over the years, a few research expeditions had set out 40 00:02:26,360 --> 00:02:29,840 Speaker 1: to find Wallace's Giant bee, but they came up empty handed. 41 00:02:30,440 --> 00:02:33,480 Speaker 1: In the meantime, however, specimens would show up for sale. 42 00:02:34,040 --> 00:02:37,720 Speaker 1: One appeared on eBay in the auction for nine thousand 43 00:02:37,800 --> 00:02:41,079 Speaker 1: one dollars. In case you were wondering, that's more than 44 00:02:41,120 --> 00:02:44,880 Speaker 1: what the corpse of an insect usually goes for. The 45 00:02:44,919 --> 00:02:47,280 Speaker 1: exact island on which the bee was found is a 46 00:02:47,320 --> 00:02:51,040 Speaker 1: secret because the researchers fear that if they published that information, 47 00:02:51,360 --> 00:02:54,240 Speaker 1: the remaining Wallace's Giant bees might not be long for 48 00:02:54,280 --> 00:02:59,040 Speaker 1: this world given that type of auction price tag. Since 49 00:02:59,080 --> 00:03:01,040 Speaker 1: the bee has only been viewed a few times in 50 00:03:01,080 --> 00:03:03,480 Speaker 1: the wild, not much is known about its habits in 51 00:03:03,520 --> 00:03:06,080 Speaker 1: life history, other than that it seems to like to 52 00:03:06,120 --> 00:03:10,440 Speaker 1: live in termite nests in lowland forest areas. Indonesia lost 53 00:03:10,480 --> 00:03:14,000 Speaker 1: fift of its tree cover between two thousand one seventeen 54 00:03:14,120 --> 00:03:18,200 Speaker 1: to make way for agricultural fields, So our rekindled romance 55 00:03:18,240 --> 00:03:21,560 Speaker 1: with Wallace's Giant b might not last long if conservation 56 00:03:21,560 --> 00:03:25,720 Speaker 1: efforts aren't put in place soon. But in the meantime, 57 00:03:25,840 --> 00:03:28,600 Speaker 1: it's nice to know that Wallace's Giant B is still 58 00:03:28,639 --> 00:03:32,080 Speaker 1: buzzing through the forest like a tiny helicopter the giant 59 00:03:32,160 --> 00:03:34,920 Speaker 1: griffin flies of the Permian. Shirley would have wanted it 60 00:03:34,960 --> 00:03:43,000 Speaker 1: that way. Today's episode is based on the article Wallace's 61 00:03:43,040 --> 00:03:46,960 Speaker 1: Giant B World's largest Rediscovered on house to forks dot com, 62 00:03:47,080 --> 00:03:49,800 Speaker 1: written by Jesslin Shields. Brain Stuff is a production of 63 00:03:49,840 --> 00:03:52,160 Speaker 1: by Heart Radio in partnership with house toworks dot com, 64 00:03:52,200 --> 00:03:54,960 Speaker 1: and it is produced by Tyler Klang. Four more podcasts 65 00:03:55,080 --> 00:03:58,320 Speaker 1: my heart Radio, visit the heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, 66 00:03:58,400 --> 00:04:00,200 Speaker 1: or wherever you listen to your favorite show else