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Mining bee

Andrena

Photo by Maria dB
Published on Project Noah
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35.9132, -79.0558

Field Notes

Description:

Body length commonly ranges between 8 - 17 mm with males smaller and more slender than females, which often show a black triangle (the "pygidial plate") at the abdominal apex. In temperate areas, Andrena bees (both males and females) emerge from the underground cells where their prepupae spend the winter, when the temperature ranges from about 20°C to 30°C. They mate, and the females then seek sites for their nest burrows, where they construct small cells containing a ball of pollen mixed with nectar, upon which an egg is laid, before each cell is sealed. Andrena usually prefer sandy soils for a nesting substrate, near or under shrubs to be protected from heat and frost.

Habitat:

Mason Farm Biological Reserve

Notes:

There were dozens of these very tiny flies or bees swarming around a patch of dead leaves.

Species ID Suggestions

Comments (4)

Thanks for your comments, chester, Fyn and Mandy. BugGuide identified these as Andrena.
I've been seeing them too. The females are emerging after being underground all winter, and the males buzz over the ground in a mating display, waiting for them. It's pretty cool to see all those bees!
Could be one of the Mining bees(Andrena spp.), BugEric ID'ed them for me recently. We have dozens of them swarming in localized areas down here.

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