HYiMENOPTERA -183 



is black, spotted, and banded with yellow, from which we are all glad to 

 take " warning," for the sting of a hornet is painful and the nest contains 

 thousands of individuals. The queens are larger than the workers. It 

 may be interesting to know that the males have no sting. They may 

 be further distinguished from the other forms by having seven segments 

 in the abdomen instead of six. 



The social wasps do not store up food, but continually feed the young 

 throughout the larval stage, which lasts from eight to fifteen days, with 

 partially masticated insects. The adults " feed upon insects or decompos- 

 ing animal substances (fish especially attracts them) and upon exposed 

 swe(-t substances, such as syrups and preserved fruits." 



Bees may be distinguished from all other Hymenoptera by their en- 

 larged and flattened tarsal segments, which, except in the In'quilines, are 

 provided with an arrangement for carrying pollen. It is said that the 

 hairs (at least on the head and thorax) are branched or plumose, as revealed 

 by the microscope, while those of all other Hymenoptera are simple. 



The nests of bees are always provided with pollen or honey, or both. 

 The larvae when quite young are fed by a substance called " bee-jelly," 

 regurgitated by the nurse workers; for the bee colony, like those of other 

 Hymenoptera, consists of three forms: the workers, the males or drones, 

 and the female (queen). 



The short-tongued bees (Andren'idce) are all either solitary or grega- 

 rious, none social. Some of the mining bees, genus Andrena, are almost as 

 large as the honey-bee workers. In grassy fields they sink a perpendicular 

 shaft into the ground sometimes to the depth of a foot or more, which 

 branches off sidewise to the cells. Though each nest is, solitary, the females 

 often build close together. 



The smallest of our bees (Halic'tus) burrows in sand-banks or cliffs. 

 Several females unite to " make a burrow into the bank, after which each 

 female makes passages extending sidewise from this main burrow or 

 public corridor to her own cells. While Andre'na builds villages composed 

 of individual homes, Halictus makes cities composed of apartment houses."' 



The long-tongued bees (A'pidoe) have the lower lip highly specialized 

 for obtaining nectar from flowers. The basal segment of the labial palpus 

 is also elongated. Some of this family are solitary; others, guest-bees; 

 a few, social. 



Among the solitary long-tongued bees is Megachi'le acu'ta, a carpenter 

 and leaf-cutter, which, if it does not find a convenient crevice or cavity 

 ready made, tunnels out a tubular cavity in wood and builds a thimble- 

 shaped nest at the bottom out of oblong pieces of leaves which it cuts out 

 for itself, and fills it with a paste of pollen and nectar. The egg is then 

 placed upon this food and the opening tightly plugged up with circular 

 pieces of leaves. 



The little blue carpenter bee (Ceral'ina du'pla) builds its nest in dead twigs 

 of sumach or in the hollows of other plants. The female fills the bottom of 

 the nest with pollen, lays an egg upon it, and makes a partition above the 

 egg out of pith chips made in forming the tunnel. She continues making 

 these cells until the tunnel is nearly full, then she rests in the space above the 

 last cell and waits until the young are grown. When the first one is 

 ready to emerge, it tears down the partition above it and waits till each one 

 has performed the same process, when they are led by the mother into the 

 open air. Comstock says it is the only instance he knows of a solitary 



' Comstock, p. 666. 



