Showing posts with label Native Bees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Native Bees. Show all posts

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Native Bee Swarm

The bee swarm on the barrens has come early this year.  I was out trying to determine just what the bees were trying to accomplish.  There were bees both on the ground and in the air that all seemed to be interacting in some way.

The area of activity was this steep, south facing slope of short grass and bare soil.  Hundreds of bees participated in the frenzy that covered a circular area roughly 60 feet across.  This annual event always occurs in this same location and has never been found anywhere else on the property.

Mating was a definite priority activity.  The ground was littered with small clusters of male bees competing for a female.

What I was trying to figure out was the relationship between the bees and the various holes in the ground.  Some holes were shallow excavations of less than a quarter inch deep.

Other holes were surrounded by a pile of debris that suggested a substantial underground excavation.

Still others showed no signs of any sort of digging.

The thing they all had in common was bee activity.  This bee stayed at the entrance to the hole as if it were a guard.  It would retreat inward when approached and come back to the entrance once the danger had passed.

Bees on the wing were constantly coming in low to investigate the hole, but the guard would not leave.  Mounded holes without guards were frequently entered.  What I assumed was the same visiting bee would leave the hole a couple of seconds later.

Bees behaved similarly in the unmounded holes.  I speculated that the mounded holes were for newly constructed brood chambers and the others were empty chambers from which this year’s brood emerged.  It just seemed that the entering and exiting of holes was too random for bees preparing brood chambers.  I also thought it possible that the visiting bees were all males searching for newly emerged females.  It probably requires more than an hour of casual observation to piece together the whole story.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Mating Bees

Insects spend most of their lives doing what’s necessary to produce more insects. These ground nesting bees, female to the right and male on the left, are just two of many hundreds that were busily searching out mates.

I was walking across one of the barrens when I encountered a swarm of insects rapidly criss-crossing an area about 70 feet across. They gave way as I walked into the swarm, so I sat down in the grass to see if they would come close enough for me to get a good look. They obliged and proceeded to put on a very interesting show.

Apparently, the insects in the air were males of a species of ground nesting bee that had recently emerged from their buried pupae. Occasionally, a female would work its way out of the ground and fight her way up through the matted grass. As soon as she got clear of the grass, several males would rush to her and struggle to be the lucky mate.

I kept moving the grass away, trying to get a clear shot at the struggling mass, but the group kept rolling down the hill as fast I could get them uncovered. I counted eight males wooing this female.

After a couple of minutes, the group broke apart and the female emerged with the lucky suitor. The pair did a bread-N-butter around a dead grass leaf and had to stay put a while for some photos. Several pairs formed during the short time I sat watching. It’s amazing how emerging insects can time things so perfectly. The barrens offer some perfect bare soil sites for ground nesting bee species. Managing for this type of site is one of the key activities for those trying to increase native bee populations.