Love is in the air!

seen from Australia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Singapore
seen from Netherlands
seen from Poland

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Bulgaria

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Australia
seen from Yemen

seen from United States

seen from Poland

seen from United States
Love is in the air!
I wish I spoke bee so I could tell her how much I love her and hope she has a good day
Tachysphex erythropus
A type of square-headed wasp found in Mediterranean Europe and west Asia.
image by sylvester_k
America's 4,000 species of native bees you've never heard about.
They are all native bees of America that do not make honey, wax, or hives. These include mining bees, mason bees, leafcutter bees, sweat bees, carpenter bees & cuckoo bees. Most of these bees are solitary, so in terms of a queen, she's her own queen, provisioning her own offspring, with 70% of them building their own nests underground in sandy soil, in bare patches, in lawns (I've seen some), in cemetery grounds & on road edges. The rest nest in hollow stems, abandoned beetle holes, rotting wood, snail shells, or cracks in stone. Females can sting, but the stings are extremely gentle. And because their stingers are not barbed, like bumblebees or honeybees, they do not die after stinging. These species do have males, but they are never at the nest. Their sole role is in reproduction. Native bees' key ecological role is to pollinate, & they are far more efficient than honeybees for many crops. Native bees evolved with North American plants for millions of years, making them the backbone of U.S. ecosystems.
Native Stingless bees with pollen pants
These bees sure are busy!
They appear to be nesting inside an old plastic fountain. I’ve also seen them nest in walls, cracked concrete, really anywhere that’s good for them.
The bees are also carrying big balls of pollen. Because of the position of the pollen on their legs, it looks like they’re wearing puffy pants ❤
Unidentified, Tribe Meliponini
02/01/23
this very polite little gal (Bombus impatiens) landed on me while I was on a hike yesterday. she landed on my shirt, looking a bit sluggish, so I decided to (gently) scoop her onto my hand to give her an opportunity to drink a bit of my sweat before relocating her to a flower, where she promptly got lost in the sauce. while reviewing the photos for iNat, I realized there was something on her leg. I'm not too adept with bumblebees and their various parasites; does anyone know what that is? for all I know, it could just be a clump of pollen, but I've never heard of pollen pants being asymmetrical. TIA!
very tiny, very sleepy.
Unknown Sweat Bee (subgenus Austronomia), April '24.