Top 12 Bees in Tennessee

Small Carpenter Bees:The Ceratina genus of little carpenter bees has black bodies with blue, bluish-green, or white accents. On the forehead, thorax, and legs, they may have markings that are light yellow. 

Polyester Bees:Polyester bees are crepuscular, which means they are most active at dusk and dawn. Throughout the summer, watch for them fluttering between flowers and collecting pollen after dusk. 

Miner Bees:Miner bees, commonly referred to as chimney bees, have robust, hairy bodies and are smaller than honey bees. They are frequently misidentified as bumble bees. 

Mason Bees:Mason bees, often referred to as masonry bees, are native bees, which means they develop natively in a particular area. 

Masked Bees:The moniker “masked bee” refers to these bees’ striking facial yellow or white markings. This species resides in cities, woodlands, heaths, and forests. 

Long-Horned Bees:These bees drill holes in the ground, where they build individual nests with wax-like brood cells that can hold a single egg and one pollen ball. 

Leafcutter Bees:Leafcutter bees use tiny leaf cutouts to fill the nest cells in their hives. It is believed that this keeps the pollen and nectar from drying up before the eggs can hatch. 

Large Carpenter Bees:These are probably carpenter bees, so named because they like to drill holes in wood to raise their young. 

European Honey Bees:The western honey bee currently lives on all continents but Antarctica thanks to human intervention. A slight to moderate risk from honey bees exists for people. 

Digger Bees:Digger bees, often called earth bees, are solitary bees that build their nests underground. About 70 different species of digger bees live throughout the United States, including Tennessee.

Cuckoo Bees:Cuckoo bees don’t resemble “classic” bees because they have little body hair, and because of this, they could be mistaken for wasps. 

 Bumble Bees:Bumble bees are valuable pollinators of both agricultural and wild-blooming plants. They are omnivorous foragers and do not specialize in any particular bloom.

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