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Home :: Florida Insects : Bees : Carpenter Bees
FLORIDA BEES
Your source for information on bees
Carpenter Bees
Xylocopa spp
Carpenter Bees
 
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Appearance:
Carpenter bees are black with a metallic sheen. The thorax is covered with bright yellow, orange, or white hairs, and the top of the abdomen is black, glossy and bare. They also have a dense growth of hairs on their hind legs.

Size:
Approximately ¾ to 1 inch long.

Behavior:
Carpenter bees are solitary insects that differ from other bees as they do not form colonies. Adults emerge in spring to mate. Carpenter bees are so named because they nest in excavated galleries in wood; however, they do not eat it, preferring to feed on pollen and nectar. They are actually important pollinators of flowers and trees. They are generally cause cosmetic rather than structural harm to wood, but numerous generations can cause considerable damage to existing galleries over time.

Using her strong jaws, the female carpenter bee will bore a clean cut, round entrance hole on the lateral surface of wood that will evolve into a sort of gallery over time. It is a time and energy consuming process and they prefer to enlarge an old nest rather than excavate a new one. The female will work into wood perpendicular to the grain for 1-2 inches and then make a ninety-degree turn and excavate along the wood grain for 4-6 inches to create a gallery or tunnel.

Carpenter bees are solitary insects that differ from other bees as they do not form colonies. The male does not live long, so after mating in the spring, the female alone forms 6-10 “brood cells” inside. They consist of a formed ball of pollen and regurgitated pollen at the far end of the gallery. She lays an egg on this mass, which is walled off with a plug of chewed wood pulp, and dies soon after this labor. The larvae feed on the mass until adulthood, which usually takes around seven weeks.

The new adults stay in the gallery for several weeks and then chew through the cell walls and venture out in late August. They collect and store more pollen and travel back and stay in the gallery through winter, emerging the following spring to repeat the cycle. Male Carpenter bees are considered a nuisance pest but are harmless to humans as they lack a stinger. Females do have a stinger, but are typically docile and tend to sting only when handled.

Habitat:
Carpenter bees nest in a wide range of softwoods and hardwoods, particularly if it they are weathered. It is easier for them to tunnel through woods that are soft and have a straight grain. They typically prefer softwoods such as pine, fir, cedar, cypress, oak, and redwood.

Carpenter bees also attack structural woods and other wood products, such as fence posts, utility poles, arbors, firewood, and wooden lawn furniture. In buildings, they nest in bare wood near roof eaves and gables, fascia boards, porch ceilings, decks, railings, siding, shingles, shutters, and other weathered wood. They tend to avoid wood that is well-painted or covered with bark.

Carpenter bees usually do not make their entrance hole in an exposed area. The inner lip of fascia boards is a common site of attack, as well as nail holes, exposed saw cuts, or other weakened areas.

Economic/Health Concerns:
Though carpenter bees seldom cause significant structural harm, their repeated colonization of the same wood and the use of the same colony over many generations can eventually cause considerable wood damage.

Carpenter bees sometimes build new tunnels near old ones, which they continuously labor to enlarge and refurbish. A gallery can extend for 10 feet or more over time. Replacement is necessary when the strength of structural beams, posts, poles, and other wood products is reduced from bee damage.

They also leave unsightly damage by depositing yellowish to brownish streaks of excrement and pollen on surfaces below entry holes.

Control:
keep all exposed wood surfaces well painted with polyurethane or oil-base paint to discourage Carpenter bees from excavating since they can easily attack exposed wood. Seal existing holes with caulking, wood putty, or a wooden dowel affixed with wood glue. If possible, fill the entire gallery with sealant. Carpenter bees will not chew their way out of a sealed gallery due to behavioral constraints.

In new nests, larvae and pupae can be killed by inserting a long wire into the entrance hole and probing into the gallery as far as possible. Wood stains will not prevent damage, so consider using aluminum, asphalt, vinyl siding and similar non-wood materials that Carpenter bees avoid.

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