Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Bees Are Not (Purposeful) Pollinators

Today is World Bee Day, for celebrating our favorite pollinators. I enthusiastically support increasing awareness of bees other than honey bees, but a vague mythology exists. Here is some food for thought, remembering that one out of every three bites of food we eat we owe to the efforts of pollinators.

A tiny sweat bee, genus Lasioglossum, visits a ornamental Amaryllis flower in our Leavenworth, Kansas yard. Bees prefer native plants, though.

There is something of a persistent fairy tale, if only implied, that portrays bees as little agents of plant reproduction, flying flower to flower to effect floral fertilization, like it is their job, or out of the goodness of their tiny little hearts. Nothing could be farther from the truth.

A female mining bee, genus Andrena, pauses to rest and groom between forays for collecting pollen. Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Bees are best described as “pollen harvesters,” or even, perish the thought, “pollen predators.” Female bees actively collect pollen as food provisions for their larval offspring. This definition applies to honey bees, bumble bees, sweat bees, mining bees, mason bees, leafcutter bees, digger bees, all the bees except the kleptoparastic cuckoo bees. Cuckoo bees don’t collect pollen, but lay their eggs in the nests of other bees that do. Cuckoo bee larvae feed on the stolen pollen reserves of their hosts.

Many cuckoo bees, like this one in the genus Nomada, look more like wasps, lacking the "fuzzy" appearance we associate with bees. Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Pollination occurs as a by-product of the bee’s determined, thorough gathering of pollen; and the body form of bees that allows pollen to be shed as frequently as it is foraged. Body plan and behavior therefore make bees effective pollinators.

A male Squash Bee, Peponapis pruinosa, waits in a flower for a potential mate to visit. Thes bee species visits flowers in the gourd family exclusively. Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Another facet of bee behavior is that some species are oligolectic, meaning they visit only one particular genus, or even species, of flower. This greatly increases the likelihood that pollination will happen. Many bees are generalists, and will visit a variety of flowers, lowering the possibility of compatibility of bee-shed pollen with the flower receiving the bee’s next visit. This is not usually appreciable enough to be negatively significant, but it is still worth noting.

A female sweat bee, genus Halictus, has difficulty reaching pollen and nectar in an ornamental rose flower. Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Flowers and bees have coevolved to take advantage of each other, and it is an ongoing, dynamic relationship. Human interference threatens to upend that in a variety of ways. Some plant cultivars have sterile flowers, and bees therefore waste time and energy trying to “get blood out of a turnip.” Other cultivars, bred for large, complex “double bloom” flowers, result in blossoms too complicated for bees to navigate to find pollen and nectar. Lastly, cultivars may have pollen with a much lower nutritional value than that of the native plant they were derived from.

A worker female honey bee, Apis mellifera, among the first bees active in spring. El Paso County, Colorado.

Honey bees, social bees in the genus Apis that are not native to the Americas or Australia, are the unfortunate poster children for Bee Day, thanks to public familiarity through heavy marketing campaigns by the apiculture (bee keeping) industry. While absolutely vital pollinators for industrial scale agriculture, honey bees in unmanaged, feral colonies have a serious negative impact in natural ecosystems. Honey bees hog floral resources that native bee species, most of which are solitary, need to prosper.

A female Eastern Carpenter Bee, Xylocopa virginica, robs nectar from a hosta flower, throuch a slit she cut at the base of the blossom. Leavenworth, Kansas.

Back to flowers and bees for a moment. There are long- and short-tongued bees. This difference in anatomy means that many bees are restricted to visiting flowers with shallow corollas, such that they can reach the nectar reservoirs. Some larger short-tongued bees, namely large carpenter bees in the genus Xylocopa, are able to cut a slit at the bottom of deep-throated flowers, and “rob” the nectar without dusting themselves with pollen in the process of feeding. Smaller bees follow the carpenter bee, and take advantage of the holes it cuts.

The bumble bee on the left performs proper pollination of a hosta flower, while the longhorned digger bee on the right bypasses the flower's reproductive parts and uses a slit cut by a carpenter bee to rob nectar.

If it seems like the myth of the hard-working bee might be falling apart a little, then what about other pollinators like butterflies, moths, wasps, flies, beetles, hummingbirds, and bats? Well, those organisms are not even coming to flowers for pollen, with a few exceptions. They are “flower visitors” that want nectar as sugary fuel for their high metabolism. Setae (hairs), feathers, and fur will accumulate pollen, and shed it, so again, pollination can be achieved, but it is not some kind of selfless mission of the critter.

A female leafcutter bee, genus Megachile, shears a piece from a redbud leaf to use in fashioning a cell in her nest. She can do quite a bit of cosmetic damage, but the shrub will be fine. Leavenworth, Kansas.

All of this is not to say that bees are not loveable, and in need of conservation. Here are some neat facts, tips for helping bees, and resources to investigate:


  • There are over 4,000 species of bees found north of Mexico. Hotspots include the Mojave Desert, and Colorado.
  • Most native, solitary bees nest in burrows underground, so leave some bare patches of soil in your yard for them.
  • ”Bee hotels,” aka bee condos, bee blocks, are for solitary bees that nest in natural cavities in wood. Avoid commercial products, and make your own; or, better yet, leave stumps and solid wood logs in the yard that have obvious holes from beetle borings. Snip old, hollow twigs and woody stems so bees can use those upright tunnels, too.
  • Consult online gurus like Dr. Kit Prendergast (“The Bee Babette”) of Australia, and Krystle Hickman (“beesip”) of southern California, for friendly presentations on bees, and tips on how to help them.
  • Watch My Garden of a Thousand Bees, a fascinating documentary set in the United Kingdom, but applicable elsewhere in the northern hemisphere.
  • Landscape with native plants whenever and wherever you can. Be tolerant of the damage done by female leafcutter bees making their nests by cutting chunks of foliage.

A female sweat bee, genus Lasioglossum, lives up to her name and sips perspiration from my hand. Leavenworth, Kansas.

Enjoy the rest of National Bee Day, and get ready of National Pollinator Week, coming June 22-28, 2026.

Friday, May 8, 2026

City Nature Challenge 2026 Recap: Insects

My anticipation for the annual City Nature Challenge usually begins with great anxiety around the weather, and ends with nice surprises and unexpected species. This year was no different. I have the luxury of time, and knowledge, to make the most of the event regardless.

A male fire-colored beetle, Neopyrochroa femoralis, at our backyard blacklight, Leavenworth, Kansas.

A week prior, the forecast was looking like a nearly complete washout, with high chances of rain, if not storms. It turned out that the few inclement periods happened mostly in the overnight hours. It was still windy, or at least gusty, most of the time, with some hide-and-seek sun, too.

Eastern Tailed-blue butterfly in Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

More angst surrounded the changes we experienced at some of the parks we frequent. Our local “wild” park, Havens Park in Leavenworth, Kansas, USA, is installing a frisbee golf course, and has cleared patches of forest in the process. Meanwhile, in Wyandotte County Lake Park to the southwest, we noticed substantially clearing of vegetation around one of our favorite sites, a backwater pond. If they were going after invasive honeysuckle, great, but it appeared that it was that particular plant that was rebounding after the cutting and scraping.

The male Orange Spur Fly, Teuchocnemis bacuntius, waving hello. Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

Despite the setbacks, I managed to find some interesting insects. Chief among them was a unique syrphid fly, the Orange Spur Fly, Teuchocnemis bacuntius, that I spied at the edge of the forest near the front of Havens Park. This is a fairly large fly, named for the spur on the hind tibia of the male. Little is known about its life history, and mine is the only Kansas record for both iNaturalist and Bugguide, online.

A male Goatweed Leafwing, defending territory in Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.
A male Harvester on the lookout for passing females. Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

We have had a warm, early spring, and many species had come and gone by the time the City Nature Challenge began. It was difficult to find some butterflies, for example, that peaked earlier in April. I still managed to spot two that I was hoping for: The Goatweed Leafwing, and the Harvester.

Hayhurst's Scallopwing skipper, Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

Duskywing skippers were so faded and tattered that identification was nearly impossible, but I was delighted to see a perfect specimen of a Hayhurst’s Scallopwing.

A male Common Baskettail dragonfly, Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.
A male Springtime Darner dragonfly, Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas.
A male Blue Corporal dragonfly, Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas.

Other charismatic “bugs” included dragonflies, and I was fortunate to see a few of them perch. Common Baskettail is typical for this time period, as is the Springtime Darner, and Blue Corporal. Variegated Meadowhawk can be seen almost year round.

Six-spotted Tiger Beetle on a trail in Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas.

Beetles were out both day and night. Six-spotted Tiger Beetle is always a delight, and hard to miss with its bright green color. We even found a pair of mating Spring Treetop Flasher fireflies, over at Weston Bend State Park in Missouri.

Spring Treetop Flasher fireflies at Weston Bend State Park, Missouri.

Also at Weston Bend, I noticed what I thought at first was a bumble bee or carpenter bee, but it was flying a little slower, and silently. It was an American Carrion Beetle! I managed to knock it down, and brought it home for a photo shoot, before releasing it in our yard (I had one in our yard a couple years ago).

Studio portrait of American Carrion Beetle from Weston Bend State Park, Missouri.

Among the new species we recorded for our home property was a checkered beetle on the side of our house: Madoniella dislocata. It preys on small wood-boring beetles, so maybe it flew over from the logs and brush pile in the back yard.

Checkered beetle, Madoniella dislocata, at our Leavenworth, Kansas home.

I did blacklighting twice. The first night in the front yard, where we have a big old Pin Oak tree, was probably too cold and clear, and barely anything flew in.

This Isabella Tiger Moth, adult of the familiar "woollybear" caterpillar, was one of the few insects to come to our front yard blacklight on April 24, in Leavenworth, Kansas.

The next night, in the back yard, was the much more successful, the weather being warmer.

Faint-spotted Palthis moth, Palthis asopialis, at the backyard blacklight, Leavenworth, Kansas.
A Two-spotted Diaperis beetle, Diaperis maculata, at the backyard blacklight, Leavenworth, Kansas.

The nocturnal insect crowd included many kinds of beetles, flies, true bugs, moths, and wasps. The diversity was greater than the quantity of any one taxon. That will change soon, as caddisflies and rove beetles assert their dominance later, often overwhelming the sheet.

A stink bug, genus Banasa, at the backyard blacklight, Leavenworth, Kansas.
The largest moth visitor we had at the backyard blacklight was this American Dagger, Acronicta americana.

Bees were not as abundant as I was expecting, but several species had mostly come and gone already, especially cellophane bees (aka “polyester bees,” genus Colletes). The early mason bees, genus Osmia, were mostly finished, too.

A mason bee, genus Osmia, investigates some damp soil as potential material for her nest. Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

Kleptoparasitic bees, namely Nomada and Sphecodes, were still evident. They make their living in the larval stage feeding in the nests of other solitary bees.

A "blood bee," genus Sphecodes, from Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

Wasp diversity was quite high, too. I saw a couple of mating pairs of mason wasps, and there were at least four genera that I observed.

Mating mason wasps, Euodynerus foraminatus, male on top, in Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

One of the most interesting wasps found me. I noticed it on the sleeve of my shirt, took a picture, and then captured it for a controlled photoshoot at home. I thought it was a large eupelmid (family Eupelmidae), but in seeking further help with identification via a Facebook group, I learned it was something else entirely.

The Cleonymus magnificus wasp, maybe five millimeters, from Sportsfield Park in Leavenworth, Kansas.

Meet Cleonymus magnificus. Until recently, it was placed in the family Pteromalidae. It is now in its own family, the Cleonymidae. I will eventually write a blog post about this insect specifically, so stay tuned.

Please see my other blog, Sense of Misplaced, for a companion post that treats the birds, mammals, and other non-insect wildlife that I was fortunate enough to see during the City Nature Challenge. I promise there are some cuties in there.

A small but attractive longhorned beetle, genus Callidium, that I captured in Havens Park, Leavenworth, Kansas.

All of my observations for the 2026 City Nature Challenge can be found at this iNaturalist link. Feel free to share a link to your own observations in the comments. I would love to see what you discovered!