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Beverley Beekeepers' Association

The local Beekeeping Association for East Yorkshire

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Bees and Wasps


The group of insects called the hymenoptera include, among others, bees and wasps. Many species visit our gardens causing some difficulties in their recognition.


Bumble bees (bombus) tend to be larger than honeybees. They are generally hairy with combinations of white / black / yellow / orange striped bodies. They can sting but hardly ever do.
There are six species readily seen in this area at various times from very early spring onwards. They can withstand colder conditions than honeybees and so are seen earlier in the season and earlier and later in the day. The queen bee hibernates in dry cool places over winter (garden sheds etc.). In spring she starts a colony in a dry bank of soil, bird box, inside an air brick or in a compost heap. The queen raises the first batch of young. These become workers and tend subsequent young. Colonies are much small numbering in tens rather than hundreds and thousands. Males and fertile females are raised towards the end of summer. The colony dies off in autumn with only the newly mated queens surviving.
Bumblebees are protected by law and their nests should not be disturbed.


Solitary bees are much more common than imagined and incorporate a huge number of species, including miners, masons, and leaf-cutter bees. They are similar in size, or smaller than honeybees. As their name suggests they are not colonial, although they can nest close together in condominiums. In the spring the female lays her eggs singly with individual stores of food in burrows in soil or crevices. The young develop without assistance, mate and the females over-winter to repeat the cycle. It is said they can not sting.


Wasps
come in all shapes and sizes. All are mainly carnivorous and generally feed on aphids and other 'garden pests'. Wasps are therefore a good thing to have in your garden - except in late summer when our common wasps (vespula) go out in search of all things sweet. Wasps often try to rob honeybee colonies at this time.
They are colonial with a life cycle very similar to bumblebees. Their nests are made of papier mâché and situated in shrubs, compost heaps or roof cavities. Colony populations are numbered in the hundreds. They can sting and defend their nests vigorously. The related hornet (
vespa crabro) is rarely a problem although they are known to take honeybees as prey. It is slightly larger than vespula with a brown rather than black head.


Honeybees in this area are usually hybrids. The DNA of our native dark European honeybee (apis mellifera mellifera) has been mixed with introduced subspecies (races) from other parts of Europe by beekeepers trying to improve some characteristics or other. The native bee was large and dark, adapted for our climate but not a prolific honey gatherer and with an aggressive temperament.
A. m. carnica, the Carniolan honeybee originated in Austria/Slovenia. It is small grey/brown and is said to be hardy and gentle but swarms readily.
A. m. caucasica, the Caucasian honeybee originated in south Russia. Similar in appearance to a. m. carnica, it is also gentle but produces prodigious quantities of propolis.
A. m. lingusica, the Italian honeybee is small with distinct yellow stripes. They are very gentle and prolific honey gatherers but they need a huge quantity of winter stores to see them through to spring.