Fair   45.0F  |  Forecast »
Bookmark and Share Email this page Email Print this page Print Feed Feed

Hornfaced bees

What they are, how they’re different.

Hornfaced bee (Osmia cornifrons). Photo by Dr. Suzanne Batra

Hornfaced bee (Osmia cornifrons). Photo by Dr. Suzanne Batra

Hornfaced bees are solitary, which means that instead of having queens and workers, each female mates, makes her own nest cells of mud, collects food (nectar and pollen), and lays eggs. Male hornfaced bees, unlike honeybee drones, visit and pollinate flowers.

Adult bees are active for four to six weeks each spring before they die. The nests of hornfaced bees can be removed from the orchard after pollination and stored in a shed for the ten months when they aren’t needed. Inside the nests, the dormant brood and young bees will spend much of the year developing into adults, and be dormant until taken out from storage the following spring. If spring temperatures warm up to about 40° F before bloom begins, the hives will need to be kept in cold storage until pollination to delay the bees’ life cycle and coincide it with bloom.

In the wild, they make their nests in hollow reeds, bamboo sections, and beetle holes in wood.

For more information about management of hornfaced bees for orchard pollination, visit: www.pollinatorparadise.com/Solitary_Bees/Hornface.htm.

To encourage an open exchange of useful information, we welcome comments from readers. We reserve the right to remove all or any language deemed potentially libelous. Comments do not represent the views of goodfruit.com and are not an endorsement or guarantee of accuracy.

Add your comment: