As the name implies carpenter bees love wood.
Carpeter bees nest eggs.
If the wood is badly maintained carpenter bees will take advantage of it.
Holes cracks and splinters are inviting to these bees.
Bumblebees genus bombus nest in the ground usually in abandoned rodent nests and live in social communities carpenter bees genus xylocopa are solitary bees that burrow into wood you can differentiate the two by examining the dorsal upper side of the abdomen.
Bumble bees typically nest within the ground while carpenter bees burrow into wood to lay their eggs.
If it s shiny and hairless it s a carpenter bee.
The most common solitary bees and wasps include.
Carpenter bees can be attracted to wood that is either new or decayed.
Where are carpenter bee nests commonly found.
Carpenter bee with shiny abdomen left bumblebee right.
Aside from trees carpenter bees make nests in buildings and other man made constructions.
The bees also have different nesting habits bumblebees nest in an existing cavity often underground e g in abandoned rodent burrows whereas carpenter bees tunnel into wood to lay their eggs.
Once their nest is complete they lay their eggs inside it and then tend to the larvae that hatch.
By comparison solitary wasps or bees are not associated with a large nest.
Instead they burrow into soft woods such as the siding of a house to live in and lay larvae.
Carpenter bees have a rather unusual reproduction process.
Carpenter bees live in individual nests in softwood which is why you can find these bees in porches old trees or any other structure with soft wood.
In fact only one individual normally occupies each nest or burrow.
The female carpenter bee is the one who makes the hole by chewing through the wood.
Carpenter bees cicada killers and mud daubers.
Where the eggs lie.
Carpenter bees don t make either of these types of nests.
The carpenter bee is a large robust nearly black bee that bores tunnels into untreated.
Instead they build their nests within the holes they create in wood.
Examples of this type of social nesting can be seen in the species xylocopa sulcatipes 10 and xylocopa nasalis 11.
That means it s quite typical to see multiple queens using any one hole.
Like most insects carpenter bees lay eggs however the location of these eggs is rather peculiar.
They are solitary bees and are not part of a larger hive community.
The carpenter bee is so called because of where it chooses to make it s home.