Welcome back to Bazinga Log in to your secure account here. Bazinga Comics, San Antonio, Texas. 18,624 likes 175 talking about this 819 were here. At Bazinga Comics, our friendly and professional staff of comic consultants is eager to help you find. Bazinga is Sheldon's interjection of choice after sarcastic comments and his 'classic pranks'. Bazinga was first mentioned in the Season 2 finale, The Monopolar Expedition, when Sheldon used the word three times, and was last used by Sheldon in The Stag Convergence. Jim Parsons and the show's writers have said that Bazinga was something a former The Big Bang Theory writer, Stephen.
Euglossa bazinga | |
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Euglossa bazinga | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Apidae |
Genus: | Euglossa |
Species: | |
Binomial name | |
Euglossa bazinga Nemésio & Ferrari, 2012 |
Euglossa bazinga is a euglossine bee species found in Brazil. It is named after the catchphrase of the fictional character Dr. Sheldon Cooper from the television show The Big Bang Theory. It was previously misidentified as Euglossa ignita,[1] and is threatened with habitat loss.
Euglossa bazinga is one of around 130 species currently identified within the orchid bee genus Euglossa.[2]E. bazinga had previously been misidentified as Euglossa ignita Smith, 1874. Brazilian biologists André Nemésio of the Universidade Federal de Uberlândia and Rafael R. Ferrari of the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais identified the species as distinct, with his findings published in the December 2012 issue of the journal Zootaxa.[3] The authors named the species in honor of the catchphrase of the character Sheldon Cooper, played by actor Jim Parsons, from the television show The Big Bang Theory.[3] Nemésio said of the name, 'Sheldon Cooper's favorite comic word 'bazinga', used by him when tricking somebody, was here chosen to represent the character. Euglossa bazinga has tricked us for some time due to its similarity to E. ignita, what led us to use 'bazinga'.'[4] Ironically, the character is allergic to bees.[5]
E. bazinga has been identified in the central and northern areas of Mato Grosso, Brazil. It is one of the few examples of its genus that occur in the Cerrado, a savanna ecosystem.[2]
E. bazinga is the smallest of the Euglossa species belonging to the subgenus Glossura, but has the longest tongue in proportion to its body size.[6]