Wednesday 25 November 2020

Bee Time

Then Bumblebee and the Honey Bee

Most bumblebees are social insects that form colonies with a single queen. The colonies are smaller than those of honey bees, growing to as few as 50 individuals in a nest.

A rusty patched bumblebee collects pollen and nectar from a flower. Bumblebees are large, fuzzy insects with short, stubby wings. They are larger than honeybees, but they don't produce as much honey. However, they are very important pollinators. 

The one advantage honeybees have is communication: they actually perform a dance to let their fellow workers know where good supplies of pollen can be found! Although this is good for their colony and honey production, it can actually be a disadvantage in terms of pollination. Whereas honeybees will rush off to mine a certain pollen source, bumblebees will stay around, patiently working an extended area until it is fully pollinated.

While honeybees have a clear distinction between head and abdomen, bumblebees are “all of one piece.” Honeybees also have two clear sets of wings: a larger set in front and a smaller set in back. Bumblebees are not honey producers – or rather, what they produce is for self-consumption in the nest

One final difference: honeybees can only sting once before dying. Bumblebees can sting multiple times, but they do not form swarms like honeybees and they only sting when truly provoked.

Both bee types are safe enough to host in your backyard, so take sensible precautions and don’t let fear of stings prevent you from planting wildflowers to attract bees and reverse decades of habitat loss.









                  









Sunday 8 November 2020

Wet Day Indoors

When its a rainy windy day outdoors what better thing to do than go through my recent photos and share them with you all.

The Tui always seems to catch my attention but was lucky enough to capture a wee honey bee doing what it is created to do and that's to collect the pollen on those tiny legs also captured a couple of Rosella Parrots