As someone who spews out questions like a manky router in promiscuous mode, this seems quite strange to me.
I don't know why you'd find it strange to see high-rep users with low numbers of questions. Stack Overflow rewards both questions and answers, and people with lots of answers (implying a larger body of knowledge and experience) naturally have fewer questions.
Is there some kind of bias against asking questions?
Absolutely not, but there's a bias against bad questions, and we have very well formed opinions on what constitutes good questions.
... but it has been galling to have someone tell me that my question is bad, then I go to their profile, and I see that they have only ever asked one question, and they are a very senior member of this site.
Why? Most food critics aren't cooks. Most movie reviewers have never made a movie. Most people have opinions on music but will never record a song.
Some senior members may have asked few questions, but they've probably read thousands. You don't have to write questions to know what makes a question easy to read. Indeed, writing a lot of questions gives you almost no insight into what makes a good question for the people writing answers.
The bigger problem, by far, is that it's too easy for people to ask hundreds of questions without ever reading anybody else's questions. We have many users who ask huge numbers of questions which are universally of mediocre quality. These people aren't interested in the site or other people's contributions, they just want answers.
On a personal note, I've asked 12 questions in 5 years, but I've posted over 2000 answers, visited the site on 1600 days, read who knows how many thousands of questions and made 6700 edits. I'm pretty sure I can tell a good question from a bad question.