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Hi All,
I’m in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula on Lake Superior. Fairly “normal” spring here, May was dry. Bumblebee queens have been fairly common here since early May, primarily Bombus impatiens which was apparently absent up here ~20 years ago. The first queen bumblebee was in early May - B. ternarius checking out some marigolds we just planted and willows near house. This was followed by a huge B. impatiens queen flying around yard. Bombus vagans showed up the following week, it and B. impatiens are frequent on our lilacs, which are just past peak. We saw a lot of B. impatiens queens in May, along with a few B. vagans in the mix.
A queen B. vagans was working periwinkles last week and I moved a queen B. borealis out of the shed last Friday, she was annoyed by the amount of cobwebs she had accumulated. First Bombus worker appeared last week – B. impatiens, which is by far our most abundant bumblebee now, followed by B. ternarius and B. borealis. Bombus rufocinctus is less common and B. terricola, which apparently used be the dominant bumblebee around here, is now rare and I have not seen it yet this year. Only saw one queen late last year, on Tithonia in L’Anse (Baraga Co.).
Other bees – Andrena, Nomada, Osmia have been common and Osmia are making nest in our bee houses, along with a few Heriades. Crataegus are in full bloom, Prunus spp. Mostly just passed except near Lake, apples just starting to bloom, along with Vaccinums/blueberries…
Cheers,
Jim Bess
Hancock, MI
Sent from Mail for Windows
From: Elliott Gordon
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2022 11:42 AM
To: beemon...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [EXTERNAL] [Beemonitoring] queen bee fatalities
It's not all bad news for pollinators. Early Bombus queen sightings were few in New Mexico (I saw 1 B huntii and 2 B pensylvanicus through the end of April and iNaturalist shows 15 for the whole state in the same time frame), but urban diversity and abundance is anecdotally steady compared to previous years. In my garden, the first round of Bombus pensylvanicus workers have been active in June and the high count is 5 at one time. So far in 2022, I've observed about 45 species of native bees in central New Mexico, up from 30 at this time last year. The caveat is that 90% of my state is in severe or exceptional drought conditions and the last precipitation at my house was a snowstorm in March, so weather conditions appear to be concentrating pollinators in irrigated gardens as opposed to wild spaces.
One example: Lithurgopsis apicalis is absurdly abundant this year. I can't go on a walk without seeing as many as a dozen bees on every blooming cactus and thistle patch in the neighborhood. The females are visiting Opuntia, Cylindropuntia, Grusonia, Agave, and Cirsium like usual, but the males are forced to be more creative. I'm seeing them on Nepeta (catmint/catnip), Helianthus, Chilopsis (desert willow), Penstemon, and Rosa (hybrid garden roses).
Elliott Gordon
Albuquerque, NM
On Mon, Jun 13, 2022 at 7:36 AM 'Dalliance, Erika' via beemonitoring <beemon...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Here in TN we saw early Andrena and Colletes activity, but the Anthophora is really lagging behind now. Doesn't really help with the bumblebee death but it's interesting to hear that other people are seeing less bees around across so many areas.
Cheers,
Erika Dalliance
PhD Candidate in Dr. Russo's Lab
University of Tennessee
They/Them
On Mon, Jun 13, 2022 at 9:33 AM 'Spencer, Sandy' via beemonitoring <beemon...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
At my farm in WV I have about 12 acres of pasture which I leave unmowed till fall for pollinators. It was full of flowers first week of June, but no bees. The location of the farm however is in one of the most high elevations of WV, surrounded by forest and open fields in that area are mostly used for pasture not crops, so I doubt neonicitinoids are used much there. It was chilly however.
From: 'Larson, Diane L' via beemonitoring <beemon...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2022 9:26 AM
To: beemon...@googlegroups.com <beemon...@googlegroups.com>; Ai Wen <ai....@uni.edu>
Subject: Re: [EXTERNAL] [Beemonitoring] queen bee fatalities
My long-established garden is nearly devoid of bees this year. On any given day in June in past years I would find hundreds of bees, yet this year I work hard to find a handful. Oddly, we also have no ducklings on the lake by our house this year, either - maybe the very cold spring is a factor.
Diane
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Diane L. Larson, PhD
Research Wildlife Biologist
U.S. Geological Survey
Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center
1561 Lindig St.
St. Paul, MN 55108
voice: 651-649-5041 (not presently functioning; please use email)
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