Africanized Honeybee American Dog Tick
Bald-faced Hornet Bed Bugs
Bird Lice Bird Mite
Black-legged Tick (a.k.a. Deer Tick) Brown Dog Tick
Bumblebee Carpenter Bee
Cat Flea European Hornet
Fire Ant Honeybee
Human Head Lice Kissing Bug
Lone Star Tick Paper Wasp
Pubic (Crab) Lice Scorpion
Soft Tick Thrips
Yellow Jacket  

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Bumblebee Subfamily Bombinae

Size:

Ranges up to 1 inch in length.

Color:

Usually black with yellow stripes on the thorax and abdomen.

Behavior:

As social insects, bumblebees live in colonies. Each spring a queen that has survived overwintering will find a suitable nesting site and establish her colony. Her first brood of eggs mature into workers that forage on pollen and nectar for food. The workers do produce honey, but it is not edible to humans. The colony grows larger over the summer and is usually discovered by a homeowner while gardening or mowing the lawn. The bees will attack to defend their nest, so they are considered a health concern. During the fall, the colony produces a number of queens that fly out to find protected sites to spend the winter and thus repeat the cycle next year.