European Wool Carder Bee - the new kid on the block – Colony

European Wool Carder Bee - the new kid on the block – Colony

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My mother sent me a photo of this bee from a petunia flower in her garden not long after moving to Papamoa this past summer.  I initially thought it was a hoverfly as I couldn’t see two pairs of wings (flies only have one pair).  Some hover flies protect themselves from predators by mimicking wasps by having yellow and
Wool carders aren’t hive dwellers, but solitary bees that live in holes or cracks they find in wood or stems or in the ground.  Who knows how it arrived here, but just like the exotic European honey bee, it has plenty of exotic flowers to feed on so it is likely to stay. It was first identified in New Zealand in Napier and Nelson in 2006 as the European wool carder bee or Anthidium manicatum, and now widespread throughout New Zealand, including Papamoa!

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