Blue Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa caerulea), family Fraser's Hill, Malaysia
photographs by Nick Volpe

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Blue Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa caerulea), family Fraser's Hill, Malaysia
photographs by Nick Volpe
Bug of the Day
It's National Pollinator Week! Please enjoy this short video where I poorly follow and film a bumblebee visiting the native shrub honeysuckle in my yard! (I promise it gets *almost* into focus by the end lol)
Trichopria sp. ♂
A new study is adding to evidence that a popular class of pesticides, neonicotinoids, can harm wild bees, like bumblebees.
Wild bees, such as bumblebees, don't get as much love as honeybees, but they should.
They play just as crucial a role in pollinating many fruits, vegetables and wildflowers, and compared to managed colonies of honeybees, they're in much greater jeopardy.
A group of scientists in the United Kingdom decided to look at how bumblebee queens are affected by some widely used and highly controversial pesticides known as neonicotinoids. What they found isn't pretty.
Neonics, as they're often called, are applied as a coating on the seeds of some of the most widely grown crops in the country, including corn, soybeans and canola. These pesticides are "systemic" — they move throughout the growing plants. Traces of them end up in pollen, which bees consume. Neonicotinoid residues also have been found in the pollen of wildflowers growing near fields and in nearby streams...
Bi-colored Sweat Bee (Agapostemon virescens), eat a tasty nectar!!!, family Halictidae, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
photograph by George Wakeling