I put out a open feeder and it attracted these. This bee is a bit dried up so is smaller than it was last night. It is slightly smaller than the italians.
JoeMcc
I put out a open feeder and it attracted these. This bee is a bit dried up so is smaller than it was last night. It is slightly smaller than the italians.
JoeMcc
"Slow Down and Taste the Vanilla" - My Grandma
A,.............."black bee"!
Black they are! Is there a strain called "black bee"?
"Slow Down and Taste the Vanilla" - My Grandma
"German black bee" is all I have heard of; sure looks like a honey bee of some kind.
Could be an old, wore out, dried out, dead, worker bee from any strain/race of Apis mellifera. I've seen many that look like that, especially after they drown in syrup, then have their body hair fall off and their bodies dry out. It might also be an entirely different genus of bee, perhaps even one of the leaf-cutter species.
Your bee certainly looks like it could be one of these: http://www.greatsunflower.org/en/osmia-leaf-cutter-bees
Joseph Clemens -- Website
Here is a photo of it next to what is supposed to be an italian but almost looks buckfast. Im still thinking its some kind of honeybee...maybe a feral which is prob from the german black bee????
JoeMcc
"Slow Down and Taste the Vanilla" - My Grandma
looks like a leaf cutter bee. Cant say for sure leafecutters are smaller. I would do some bee lining to see where there hive is. There could be a posiblity of them being german black bees
"Slow Down and Taste the Vanilla" - My Grandma
Old robber bees are known to be blackish and hairless. Feeding from an open station will attract these type bees.
There is also a bee virus, not sure which, that shows a symptom such as this with bees with no hair. If you see shiny black bees inside a hive, I would say that you are dealing with a sick colony with viral issues.
Yes the first pic to me does look like: Osmia lignaria (mason bee)
but in my experience around here you will be able to tell the difference between mason bee and honey bee based upon: mason bee is significantly larger, body shape seems a bit different, wings have a blue or greenish tint to them..
second pic looks more like all black honeybee to me., no experience with "german black bees", but that would probably be my guess
if you want to waste some time, try beelining them ?
I agree with BjornBee. They are could be any variety of black bee (German, Carni, or Cacasian) with their hair missing. With robbers their hair gets pulled out by the bees they have been robbing in an attempt to fight them off.
\"The man who sets out to carry a cat by its tail learns something that will always be useful and which never will grow dim or doubtful.\" - Mark Twain
I think I found the hive that these are coming from. I will inspect it tomorrow and see If it is. If it is from this particular hive the queen is a cross between a Min Hygenic hybrid and an Italian Hybrid...which = who knows what. It's also not the only color of bee in this hive. I will tell you one thing... they are busting at the seems and are EXTREMELY gentle. The brood is all the way into the corners of the frames.
JoeMcc
"Slow Down and Taste the Vanilla" - My Grandma
It's just a honeybee IMO. My bees are all africanized (their color varies a lot) and I find black bees all the time.
They are from one of my hives. You know... im not 100% sure what the queen is now. I will have to find her and see if I can tell. There is quite a mix in there though...so prob multiple drone lines.
I finally numbered my hives so i can start keeping a log!!!
JoeMcc
"Slow Down and Taste the Vanilla" - My Grandma
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