Ground-Nesting Bees Should Be Appreciated, Not Feared
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Collapse ▲Usually in early spring I start getting calls from people nervous about seeing hundreds of bees hovering over their lawn. Actually they aren’t sure if they are bees or wasps but their primary concern is that someone will get stung. Several folks over the years have told me about the environmentally toxic methods they have used to destroy the bee nests which is unfortunate because not only are they poisoning their soil and potentially their groundwater but they are also needlessly killing off a beneficial early season pollinator that poses no threat to humans.
We have approximately 560 species of native bees in North Carolina, and about 70% of them, close to 400 species, nest in the ground. The vast majority of bees are solitary, meaning they work alone to provision their nest with food (pollen) to raise their young, unlike social bees (e.g., honey bees and bumble bees) which work together as a colony to raise their brood.
Ground-nesting bees can be found in different types of soil from sandy to clay in sparsely vegetated areas like lawns with patchy grass. Slopes can be attractive to ground-nesting bees because they are well-drained and dry out quickly.
Examples of ground-nesting bees include mining bees (genus Andrena), cellophane bees (genus Colletes), sweat bees (genus Halictus and Lasioglossum), metallic green sweat bees (genus Agapostemon), digger bees (genus Anthophora and Habropoda), long-horned bees (genus Svastra, Melissodes, and Peponapis), and mallow bees (genus Melitoma and Ptilothrix).
Most native bees are not picky about where they collect their pollen but about 25% of our native bees are pollen specialists. On one end of the continuum there are the polylectic bees that will collect pollen from unrelated plants; the more specialized oligolectic bees will collect pollen from plants in the same family or related genera; and the most specialized bees are the monolectic bees which only collect pollen from a single genus or species of plant.
Here’s a little video clip of some chimney bees (Anthophora abrupta) that I shot a while back. So much activity…I love watching the females enter and exit the nests. I recommend you expand this to full screen mode to see all the comings and goings.
As a group ground-nesting bees are active from February through November in North Carolina, although each species usually has a fairly short time period that it provisions its nest.
For example, some of the earliest and most visible bees are the mining bees (genus Andrena) that start nesting in late February/early March. There are close to 100 species of mining bees in North Carolina! These are the bees I get the most phone calls about because they often nest in large aggregations and folks sometimes get concerned when they see so many tiny mounds of excavated soil in their lawn with hundreds of bees flying back and forth and hovering over the nest entrances. They worry their kids will get stung. This is not a concern with the mining bees for several reasons. Most of the bees seen hovering over the nests are males waiting to mate with the female bees and males don’t have stingers. Mining bees are solitary bees and their ovipositor is needed for laying eggs so is not adapted for stinging. For social bees like bumble bees and honey bees where only the queen bee lays eggs, the ovipositor of the female worker bees has evolved into a stinger to defend the nest from intruders. I have personally spent many hours on multiple occasions over the years observing ground-nesting bees and have never been stung.
These mining bees are actively nesting from about early March to around mid-April. They are important pollinators and provision their nests with pollen from early blooming plants. The female bee digs a branching tunnel underground and prepares a brood cell, collects pollen, mixes it with nectar, forms it into a ball and lays an egg. She then seals off the brood cell and starts another one. After several weeks of active pollen foraging the female bee dies. When the larva hatches it consumes the pollen/nectar mixture and develops throughout the year and then the next generation emerges the following spring. The bees often reuse the same nesting sites year after year.
I was excited in 2023 to spot an uncommon mining bee species in my pollinator garden, the passionflower bee (Anthemurgus passiflorae). This solitary ground-nesting native andrenid bee is monolectic, meaning it only collects pollen from a single species, in this case the yellow passionflower (Passiflora lutea). The female carries the pollen on scopa (branched hairs) on her hind legs, then packs the pollen into a flattened mass in underground tunnels and lays an egg on it for the larva to feed on. Read more about the passionflower bee.
Protecting and/or Creating Ground Nesting Bee Habitat
If you find ground nesting bees in your yard hopefully you can take efforts to protect them during the crucial nest provisioning stage. If the female bees are allowed to complete their provisioning duties uninterrupted without any disturbance to the nests, then the bees stand an excellent chance of raising the next generation. You want to avoid walking or driving over the nesting site during the active provisioning period when you can see bees flying around (the months vary by species) and at no point during the year would you want to dig up the soil because that would destroy the underground tunnels where the bees are developing.
If you would like to encourage or create habitat for ground nesting bees in your yard, look for sunny, well-drained spots that have sparse vegetation. If you have a gentle south facing slope that would be ideal. It’s good to have some low-growing grasses or other vegetation to prevent erosion but you need some open spots with bare soil. Rocks are good too as some research has suggested that bees prefer nesting among rocks.