I must that Ryan Clark @RyanClarkNature for helping me with the ID of this male leafcutter bee (Megachile sp. - probably M.willughbiella?).
We get a lot of female leafcutter bees in the garden but this is the first time I can recall seeing a male here.
I found it immediately after a torrential downpour, looking a little bedraggled and clinging with its jaws to a leaf.
I hadn't realised that they have such beautiful eyes.
Showing posts with label Megachile sp.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Megachile sp.. Show all posts
Sunday, June 28, 2015
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Drinks,sunbathing,drinks,sunbathing - nice work if you can get it ...
One of the wonders of blogging is that every now and then someone publishes a post that's totally inspirational - and that's the only way to describe this item on bee behaviour, posted by Africa Gomez on her Bugblog.
I've spent a lot of time recently just sitting in the sun (at last) and watching the insects in the garden, and Africa's description of leafcutter bee behaviour - bouts of foraging, interspersed with settling in sunny exposed places for a bit of grooming - perfectly describes this individual, that seems to have taken ownership of a large meadow crane'sbill plant that's growing in our garden.
It has a distinctive technique for reaching the nectaries at the base of the petals, by clasping the central column of stamens with its legs. Meadow crane'sbill flowers go through a well-defined developmental sequence when they open. First the stamens mature and release pollen, as they are in the flower above ....
... then they bend outwards and the tip of the stigma, on its long style, splits into this five-lobbed 'grappling hook' conformation, reading to receive pollen from incoming bees. This visitor must have been doing a very efficient pollination job with its constant visits.
In between its bouts of activity it took time out for some grooming and sunbathing on an old black dustbin that we use as a temporary water butt, that also probably acts as a fine absorber and radiator of heat, and for most of the day is probably the warmest object in the garden.
Incidentally, check out Africa's wonderful photos of leaf cutter bees cutting out leaf sections and carrying them away.
Labels:
leaf-cutter bee,
meadow crane'sbill,
Megachile sp.
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