Farm Progress

10 amazing bees native to US

Native U.S. bees contribute to pollinating a host of delicious American crops.

June 25, 2013

1 Min Read

Honeybees aren't native to U.S., but these other amazing bees are. And they contribute to pollinating delicious American crops such as pumpkins, blueberries and tomatoes.

The Augochloropsis anonyma looks like a weird bee. It's got that familiar bee shape—tilted abdomen, oblong eyes—but its body fuzz is white, instead of yellow; its eyes are white; and its skin is iridescent jade-aqua-blue-purple. It has all the colors of an oil puddle in the sun.

Yet the real weirdos are our familiar yellow-and-black honeybees, says U.S. Geological Survey biologist Sam Droege. The Augochloropsis is one of 4,000 bee species native to the U.S. Honeybees, on the other hand, are more recent settlers that European farmers brought to America in the 1600s. Surveys done in the past few years have found that both types of bees contribute to pollinating U.S. crops, with native bees playing an especially important role for American plants such as pumpkins, blueberries and tomatoes.

For more, see 10 Spectacular Bees Native To The U.S.

 

 

More from Western Farm Press

Oregon GMO mystery wheat is a whodunit

What a grocery store without honey bees looks like

EPA’s Pinocchio nose grows with farmer privacy scandal

5 lessons from the Honeygate scandal

Buyers out in force for 2013 coastal varieties

Wine grape drone flying over California vineyards

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like