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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Carpenter Bee Family Anthophoridae

Size:

The species of most importance are about 1-inch long and have a robust, bee-like shape.

Color:

Like bumblebees, carpenter bees are black with some yellow. One carpenter bee species in the southwest, the valley carpenter bee, has a metallic-black colored female and a tan colored male.

Behavior:

Carpenter bees chew out tunnels in wood in which to lay their eggs and provide a protected site for their larvae to develop. The female bee selects a suitable log or piece of wood and chews a round, 1/2-inch diameter tunnel into the wood. About one-inch deep, she turns at a right angle and chews a tunnel (nest gallery) about 12 inches in length. The bits of wood she chews off are deposited outside the nest and end up on the ground below. These bits of wood, called frass, often are streaked yellow from pollen on the female s legs. An egg will be deposited at the end of the nest gallery; the female will then pack the gallery about an inch deep with pollen. This process is repeated until the entire gallery has been filled. The male carpenter bee guards the outside of the nest and tries to chase away potential predators. He does not have a stinger, but still causes concern with his aggressive buzzing if people venture near the nest site.