Possible species of "Ground" or "Digger" bees...don't know, can't find much info on them. Lucky you you don't have to deal with aggressive bees, out here they are pretty much all aggressive.
Hey Joe,
What kind of bees are these? They seem to be nesting in the ground in the edge of the bank on the side of the Tennessee River right on a trail that goes down to the water. They're about 1/2- 5/8 inch long, very active and curious but not aggressive at all as far as I could tell. I stood in the middle of them a few times over the course of two days watching them swarm around and though they'd fly by and look at me mostly they just went about whatever it is they are doing.
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“When men speak ill of thee, live so that nobody will believe them.” - Plato
B.H. #27
Possible species of "Ground" or "Digger" bees...don't know, can't find much info on them. Lucky you you don't have to deal with aggressive bees, out here they are pretty much all aggressive.
Mist
this might be what you are looking for. they are just called ground dwelling bees i guess
http://mcdowellces.blogspot.com/2011...ling-bees.html
scroll down for ground dwelling bees
http://www.caes.uga.edu/extension/co...ments/Bees.pdf
The whole "Africanized" thing was blown out of proportion due to media paranoia IMHO. Its really limited mostly to Arizona, NM, and parts of Southern CA, and almost exclusively in remote areas. But we do have "regular" honey-bees, yellow jackets, several species of wasps, huge black death bees(carpenter bees) that chase you, bumblebees etc. We have also started to see spider wasps(wasps that kill and eat spiders) around...I have anyway.
I don't know anything about bees, but.....
those are some really good pictures.
Since we are on the subject of bees...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPiK_071rmg...yeah I know it's a hornet.
Mist....I've got those same type of bees in my yard ! Just started seeing them last summer...I was wondering the same thing ?!
The media always does that crap to increase their ratings. It sucks that things are such that they are more interested in sesationalism and one-upping eachother than they are in actually informing anyone. I don't watch television at home and I can't even watch news at a friends house without hearing Don Henley singing "Dirty Laundry" in my head.
I started researching the Africanized bees when I found the first odd swarm of honey bees here in my own neighborhood a few years ago when all of the honey bees started disappearing from bee farms. The information I had read said that while Africanized bees produced more honey than European bees, they saw the collection of it as an invasion and tended to relocate so that got my curiosity up. I got two feet from the swarm in a neighbor's pear tree and photographed it. They never bothered me, just buzzed a lot louder when I got too close too them so I backed back off to about three or four feet and just observed them. I'm really not sure if they were European Honey Bees or Africanized bees, but probably European. From what I'm reading it's really hard to tell the differrence just looking at them. A friend who raises bees in Australia said looking at the photos they could easily be Africanised bees.
Definitely non aggressive. I've stood right by their nest and had them all around me for an hour at a time three days in a row just observing them. They never did more than fly by me checking me out. I was really careful not to step on any or any holes and just stood and watched them go about their business. I find bees, wasps, and hornets fascinating. I've never been stung by anything I didn't endanger first.
Yeah, it is crazy. The first time I saw it was right after I hab been watching what turned out to be a cicada killer flying around in my yard. I had to get good pics of the cicada killer so I could blow them up and was hoping it wasn't a Japanese hornet.
“When men speak ill of thee, live so that nobody will believe them.” - Plato
B.H. #27
No Japanese bees in the US, they are an anomally when they take over a whole hive like that.
It is a digger bee. Miner bee more or less. I can't tell from the pics but I'm almost 100% sure its in the genus Andrena.
Check out how old that bee in the second picture is. All the fuzz has sloughed off from moving in and out of the tunnel
Thanks for the reply Joe. I was just curious because I don;t recall seeing that nest last year. There is a lot of kudzu, honeysuckle, and blackberry briers right there, and that's the same exact spot I was taking pics of the Giant Resin Bees last year, but that nest wasn't there then.
“When men speak ill of thee, live so that nobody will believe them.” - Plato
B.H. #27
I was in the Bush a couple of times and saw a blue bee with white stripes ...never knew about them before.
Thats certainly true. These were definitely bees , they looked like a regular bee except for the colouring , and they had pollen stashes on their legs and were going from flower to flower.
I saw them several times over a period of time a couple of years, in the same forest.
I know theres some native blue bees but these looked EXACTLY like a typical european type bee.Only Blue with white stripes instead of black.
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