Black banded bee fly, a member of Order Diptera, flaunts a velvet-like cloak of dense pile, which especially adorns the thorax. Adults visit flowers for nectar, elegantly hovering and darting with precision, akin to their aviation kin. The larvae lead a markedly different existence, dwelling within the nests of solitary bees, wherein their early life is spent as cleptoparasites, surreptitiously consuming the provisions stored by their unwitting hosts.