INTRODUCTION. Carpenter bees get their common name from their
habit of boring into wood to make galleries for the rearing of young.
These are worldwide in distribution with 7 species occurring in the
United States.
RECOGNITION. Adult body length about
1/2-1" (12.5-25 mm); robust in form, resembling bumble
bees, but with top surface of abdomen largely bare and shining.
Hind tibiae with apical spurs. Front wing 2nd submarginal
cell triangular; hind wing with a small jugal lobe (lobe on rear margin
near body).
SIMILAR GROUPS. (1) Bumble bees (Apidae) have hairy abdomen
with yellow markings, 2nd submarginal cell somewhat
rectangular to pentagonal, and hind wings lack a jugal lobe. (2) Some
robber flies (Diptera: Asilidae) which resemble bumble bees, with only 1
pair of wings. (3) Some hawk moths (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) which
resemble bumble bees, with siphoning mouthparts.
REPRESENTATIVE SPECIES.
- The carpenter bee, X. virginica (Linnaeus), is the most
common eastern species and its range extends westward to Kansas and
Texas. It is about 1" (25 mm) long and closely resembles the bumble
bee except that the abdomen is black and shiny instead of at least
partially covered with yellow hairs. The male has a yellow face,
whereas, the female's is black.
- The California carpenter bee, X. californica Cresson, is
found in the north Coast Ranges and the Sierra Nevada of California
and in Oregon's Cascade Mountains. This bee is 3/4-1" (20-25 mm) long
and both sexes can be mostly metallic green or blue with grayish/dusky
wings. The male's pronotum has orange, yellow, or white hairs and its
1st abdominal segment has whitish hairs.
- The valley carpenter bee, X. varipuncta Patton, is found
primarily in the valleys and lower foothills of California and
Arizona. This species is about 3/4" (18-20 mm) long. The female is
shiny black with brilliant metallic purple, brassy, or bronzy
reflections, in stark contrast to the golden brown or buff color of
the male. The female's wings are somewhat smoky.
- The mountain carpenter bee, X. tabaniformis Smith, is found
mostly in the foothills and mountains of Arizona, California, Nevada,
and Oregon. This bee is about 1/2-5/8" (12-17 mm) long and both sexes
are black. The male's head has yellow and white hairs mixed with black
hairs.
BIOLOGY. Carpenter bees are not social insects and do not live
in nests or colonies. The adults overwinter, typically in abandoned nest
tunnels. In the spring, the survivors emerge and feed on nectar. Then
mating begins and extends into nest-construction time. The mated female
may either reuse an old gallery, construct a new one by lengthening an
old gallery, bore an entirely new one, or extend a gallery from a common
entrance hole. The female typically bores a circular hole (same diameter
as her body) straight into the wood across the wood grain for a distance
equal to her body length. Then the gallery takes a right-angle turn,
usually with the grain of the wood and parallel to the outer
longitudinal surfaces. New galleries average 4-6" (10-15 cm) long but
galleries developed/used by several bees may extend up to 10 feet (3 m).
The female provisions each gallery cell starting at the closed end of
the gallery with a mass of pollen and regurgitated nectar upon which she
lays a single egg. This portion of the gallery is then sealed off with a
chewed wood-pulp plug, making a chamber or cell. This process is
repeated until a linear series of 5-6 cells is completed, about 1 cell
per day. Developmental time (egg to adult) for the carpenter bee (X.
virginica) is about 36 days and for the mountain carpenter bee (X.
tabaniformis), it is about 84-99 days.
HABITS. Females of the carpenter bee (X. virginica)
will nest in a wide range of woods, but prefer weathered and unpainted
wood. Valley carpenter bees prefer partially decayed live oak, deciduous
oak, eucalyptus, and other hardwoods. The California carpenter bee nests
in incense cedar and redwoods. The Mountain carpenter bee is recorded as
nesting in structural timbers.
Male carpenter bees tend to be territorial and often become
aggressive when humans approach, sometimes hovering a short distance in
front of the face or buzzing one's head. Since males have no stinger,
these actions are merely show. However, the female does have a potent
sting which is rarely used.
CONTROL. Carpenter bee control consists of treating each
individual gallery with an appropriately labeled pesticide. Dusts,
wettable powders, microencapsulated, and aerosol residual formulations
work best. Aerosol injection systems are probably the most efficient and
safest way to treat galleries, especially when on a ladder. Do not seal
the treated gallery for 24-48 hours so that the female has time to be
exposed to a lethal dose. Newly matured bees should contact a lethal
dose before they can emerge.
Carpenter bees rarely attack painted wood. They can be discouraged
from using wood by applying an appropriately labeled repellent material
such as one of the pyrethroids, and microencapsulated or wettable powder
formulations are best.