Here is a carpenter bee species from Australia that has a very different look and feel from our North American species. Very likely in a different subfamily but taxonomically and morphologically there must be great similarities to keep them within the same genus.
Images
Explore our planet through photography and imagery, including climate change and water all the way back to the 1800s when the USGS was surveying the country by horse and buggy.
Here is a carpenter bee species from Australia that has a very different look and feel from our North American species. Very likely in a different subfamily but taxonomically and morphologically there must be great similarities to keep them within the same genus.
Xylocopa viginica, f, back, Prince George's Co, MD
Xylocopa viginica, f, back, Prince George's Co, MDThe Virginia Carpenter bee. The bane of those who build with Cedar Siding, have redwood picnic tables, or who have barns made with softwoods. Other than the recently invaded Lithurgus chrysurus (we certainly will hear more about this wood eater in coming years), this is our only bee int he East that regularly makes holes in wooden structures.
Xylocopa viginica, f, back, Prince George's Co, MD
Xylocopa viginica, f, back, Prince George's Co, MDThe Virginia Carpenter bee. The bane of those who build with Cedar Siding, have redwood picnic tables, or who have barns made with softwoods. Other than the recently invaded Lithurgus chrysurus (we certainly will hear more about this wood eater in coming years), this is our only bee int he East that regularly makes holes in wooden structures.
Xylocopa viginica, f, face, Prince George's Co, MD
Xylocopa viginica, f, face, Prince George's Co, MDThe Virginia Carpenter bee. The bane of those who build with Cedar Siding, have redwood picnic tables, or who have barns made with softwoods. Other than the recently invaded Lithurgus chrysurus (we certainly will hear more about this wood eater in coming years), this is our only bee int he East that regularly makes holes in wooden structures.
Xylocopa viginica, f, face, Prince George's Co, MD
Xylocopa viginica, f, face, Prince George's Co, MDThe Virginia Carpenter bee. The bane of those who build with Cedar Siding, have redwood picnic tables, or who have barns made with softwoods. Other than the recently invaded Lithurgus chrysurus (we certainly will hear more about this wood eater in coming years), this is our only bee int he East that regularly makes holes in wooden structures.
Xylocopa viginica, f, side, Prince George's Co, MD
Xylocopa viginica, f, side, Prince George's Co, MDThe Virginia Carpenter bee. The bane of those who build with Cedar Siding, have redwood picnic tables, or who have barns made with softwoods. Other than the recently invaded Lithurgus chrysurus (we certainly will hear more about this wood eater in coming years), this is our only bee int he East that regularly makes holes in wooden structures.
Xylocopa viginica, f, side, Prince George's Co, MD
Xylocopa viginica, f, side, Prince George's Co, MDThe Virginia Carpenter bee. The bane of those who build with Cedar Siding, have redwood picnic tables, or who have barns made with softwoods. Other than the recently invaded Lithurgus chrysurus (we certainly will hear more about this wood eater in coming years), this is our only bee int he East that regularly makes holes in wooden structures.
Giant Flying Eye - The male of Xylocopa virginica or Virginia Carpenter Bee. Any bee with this much "eye" is clearly doing something different visually. In this case the males are guarding nesting territories and the associated females and their young and defending them from other males.
Giant Flying Eye - The male of Xylocopa virginica or Virginia Carpenter Bee. Any bee with this much "eye" is clearly doing something different visually. In this case the males are guarding nesting territories and the associated females and their young and defending them from other males.
Xylocopa sonorina, Female, March 2012, Hawaii, Oahu
Xylocopa sonorina, Female, March 2012, Hawaii, Oahu
Xylocopa sonorina, Hawaii, OahuMarch 2012
Xylocopa sonorina, Hawaii, OahuMarch 2012
Yellow wasp, m, back, Kruger National Park, South Africa Mpumalanga
Yellow wasp, m, back, Kruger National Park, South Africa MpumalangaVespid wasp from Kruger National Park in South Africa. This is one that we see periodically taking nips of nectar from some of the trees we study. No time to look up the species group, but likely it a social species of some kind. Large too, about the size of a bumblebee in length..,Photo by Erick Hernandez.
Yellow wasp, m, back, Kruger National Park, South Africa Mpumalanga
Yellow wasp, m, back, Kruger National Park, South Africa MpumalangaVespid wasp from Kruger National Park in South Africa. This is one that we see periodically taking nips of nectar from some of the trees we study. No time to look up the species group, but likely it a social species of some kind. Large too, about the size of a bumblebee in length..,Photo by Erick Hernandez.
Yellow wasp, m, face, Kruger National Park, South Africa Mpumalanga
Yellow wasp, m, face, Kruger National Park, South Africa MpumalangaVespid wasp from Kruger National Park in South Africa. This is one that we see periodically taking nips of nectar from some of the trees we study. No time to look up the species group, but likely it a social species of some kind. Large too, about the size of a bumblebee in length..,Photo by Erick Hernandez.
Yellow wasp, m, face, Kruger National Park, South Africa Mpumalanga
Yellow wasp, m, face, Kruger National Park, South Africa MpumalangaVespid wasp from Kruger National Park in South Africa. This is one that we see periodically taking nips of nectar from some of the trees we study. No time to look up the species group, but likely it a social species of some kind. Large too, about the size of a bumblebee in length..,Photo by Erick Hernandez.
Yellow wasp, m, left, Kruger National Park, South Africa Mpumalanga
Yellow wasp, m, left, Kruger National Park, South Africa MpumalangaVespid wasp from Kruger National Park in South Africa. This is one that we see periodically taking nips of nectar from some of the trees we study. No time to look up the species group, but likely it a social species of some kind. Large too, about the size of a bumblebee in length..,Photo by Erick Hernandez.
Yellow wasp, m, left, Kruger National Park, South Africa Mpumalanga
Yellow wasp, m, left, Kruger National Park, South Africa MpumalangaVespid wasp from Kruger National Park in South Africa. This is one that we see periodically taking nips of nectar from some of the trees we study. No time to look up the species group, but likely it a social species of some kind. Large too, about the size of a bumblebee in length..,Photo by Erick Hernandez.
Setaria glauca, Yellow Foxtail, Beltsville, Maryland with dew, August 2012
Setaria glauca, Yellow Foxtail, Beltsville, Maryland with dew, August 2012
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, black and white DC
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, black and white DCA black and white version of the previous picture...can't decide if I should have left that straying barb on the left in there or not...it adds a lot of tension to the picture...perhaps too much.
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, black and white DC
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, black and white DCA black and white version of the previous picture...can't decide if I should have left that straying barb on the left in there or not...it adds a lot of tension to the picture...perhaps too much.
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, Washington DC
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, Washington DCYellow-shafted Flicker, Breast Feather, in original colors with hints of brown/tan in some of the basal barbs, From a specimen picked up on the streets, by the group "Lights out DC" of Washington DC in 2012 after striking a building
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, Washington DC
Yellow-shafted Flicker 1, U, Breast feather, Washington DCYellow-shafted Flicker, Breast Feather, in original colors with hints of brown/tan in some of the basal barbs, From a specimen picked up on the streets, by the group "Lights out DC" of Washington DC in 2012 after striking a building
Sonchus species, Beltsville, Maryland, August 2012
Sonchus species, Beltsville, Maryland, August 2012
Membracid from Dominican Republic floating in hand sanitizer in a quartz cuvette
Membracid from Dominican Republic floating in hand sanitizer in a quartz cuvette
Vespula squamosa - The Southern Yellow Jacket....the two yellow racing stripes on the top of the thorax (scutum) are diagnostic in the SE U.S. Collected by Tim McMahon from Talbot County, Maryland
Vespula squamosa - The Southern Yellow Jacket....the two yellow racing stripes on the top of the thorax (scutum) are diagnostic in the SE U.S. Collected by Tim McMahon from Talbot County, Maryland
Vespula squamosa - The Southern Yellow Jacket....the two yellow racing stripes on the top of the thorax (scutum) are diagnostic in the SE U.S. Collected by Tim McMahon from Talbot County, Maryland, Notice the notched compound eyes characteristic of most vespids.
Vespula squamosa - The Southern Yellow Jacket....the two yellow racing stripes on the top of the thorax (scutum) are diagnostic in the SE U.S. Collected by Tim McMahon from Talbot County, Maryland, Notice the notched compound eyes characteristic of most vespids.
Vespula squamosa - The Southern Yellow Jacket....the two yellow racing stripes on the top of the thorax (scutum) are diagnostic in the SE U.S. Collected by Tim McMahon from Talbot County, Maryland
Vespula squamosa - The Southern Yellow Jacket....the two yellow racing stripes on the top of the thorax (scutum) are diagnostic in the SE U.S. Collected by Tim McMahon from Talbot County, Maryland
Yucca filamentosa 2, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe Metzman
Yucca filamentosa 2, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe MetzmanYucca filamentosa. A wild eastern Yucca. I always thought the odd Yucca in some beatup corner of the East was an escapee. But this is not the case as you can see here. Pollinated by moths, not bees. Specimen and picture by Helen Lowe Metzman.
Yucca filamentosa 2, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe Metzman
Yucca filamentosa 2, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe MetzmanYucca filamentosa. A wild eastern Yucca. I always thought the odd Yucca in some beatup corner of the East was an escapee. But this is not the case as you can see here. Pollinated by moths, not bees. Specimen and picture by Helen Lowe Metzman.
Yucca filamentosa, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe Metzman
Yucca filamentosa, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe MetzmanYucca filamentosa. A wild eastern Yucca. I always thought the odd Yucca in some beatup corner of the East was an escapee. But this is not the case as you can see here. Pollinated by moths, not bees. Specimen and picture by Helen Lowe Metzman.
Yucca filamentosa, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe Metzman
Yucca filamentosa, Adam's Needle, GFG, Howard County, Md, Helen Lowe MetzmanYucca filamentosa. A wild eastern Yucca. I always thought the odd Yucca in some beatup corner of the East was an escapee. But this is not the case as you can see here. Pollinated by moths, not bees. Specimen and picture by Helen Lowe Metzman.
Zanthoxylum americanum , Prickly Ash, Howard County, MD, Helen Lowe Metzman
Zanthoxylum americanum , Prickly Ash, Howard County, MD, Helen Lowe MetzmanCommon Pricklyash. Zanthoxylum americanum. Very rare now in Maryland. Specimen and photograph by Helen Lowe Metzman.
Zanthoxylum americanum , Prickly Ash, Howard County, MD, Helen Lowe Metzman
Zanthoxylum americanum , Prickly Ash, Howard County, MD, Helen Lowe MetzmanCommon Pricklyash. Zanthoxylum americanum. Very rare now in Maryland. Specimen and photograph by Helen Lowe Metzman.