This anomaly is possibly misnamed as the enlarged bees within it are possibly a by-product rather than the core of the anomaly itself. The anomaly itself has a mutagenic compound saturated into the soil. This compound has then leached into the plant life and mutated it. It also appears to have then mutated bees that fed off those plants. This last supposition requires further field testing.
The bees are approximately twice the normal size of a typical bumblebee and with a sting that appears to induce anaphylaxis and coma within a few seconds. The hive they built seems normal and is housed within a tree stump.
A second instance of this anomaly has been discovered, this time containing a single large brown lizard egg. The fluids within the egg were highly volatile and potentially explosive, suggesting extremely high levels of mutation if those fluids were to sustain an embryo. A sample of the embryonic fluids was extracted.