Field Guide to the Common Bees of California: Including Bees of the Western United States

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This engaging and easy-to-use natural history guidebook provides a thorough overview of native and honey bee biology and offers tools for identifying the most common bees of California and the Western United States. Full-color illustrations introduce readers to more than 30 genera of native bees, noting each one's needs and habits and placing them in their wider context. The author highlights bees’ ties to our own lives, the food we eat, and the habitat we provide, and suggests ways to support bees in our own backyards.

In addition to helping readers understand and distinguish among major groups of bees, this guide reveals how bees are an essential part of healthy ecosystem and how many plants, including important crop plants, depend on the pollination they provide. As growing evidence points to declining bee populations, this book offers critical information about the bond between plants and pollinators, and between humans and nature. Thoroughly researched and full of new insights into the ancient process of pollination, Field Guide to the Common Bees of California; Including Bees of the Western United States is invaluable for the window it opens onto the biodiversity, adaptive range, and complexity of invertebrate communities.
Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780520272842

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: University of California Press

Publication Date: 09-17-2013

Pages: 192

Product Dimensions: 4.72(w) x 7.10(h) x 0.44(d)

Series: California Natural History Guides #107

About the Author

Gretchen LeBuhn is Professor of Biology at San Francisco State University and the Director of the Great Sunflower Project, a national citizen science program designed to gather information about bee diversity and activity and pollinators more generally. Noel Pugh is a scientific illustrator.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

AN INTRODUCTION TO BEES
What Are Bees?
Importance of Bees
Bee Diversity
Bee Morphology
Bee Life Cycles
Evolution of Social Behavior: Social versus Solitary Bees
Parasites and Robbers
Other Parasites and Predators
Nesting
Pollination Basics
Ecosystem Services and Bees
Conservation of Bees and Other Pollinators
Studying Bees
Identifying Bees

BEE FAMILY AND GENUS ACCOUNTS
Plasterer or Polyester Bees (Family Colletidae)
Yellow-faced Bees or Masked Bees (Genus Hylaeus)
Polyester Bees or Digger Bees (Genus Colletes)
Sweat Bees (Family Halictidae)
Sweat Bees (Genus Halictus)
Green Sweat Bees (Genus Agapostemon)
Sweat Bees (Genus Lasioglossum)
Sweat Bees (Genus Dufourea)
Cuckoo Bees (Genus Sphecodes)
Mining Bees (Family Andrenidae)
Digger Bees or Miner Bees (Genus Andrena)
Panurgine Bees (Genus Panurginus)
Miner Bees (Genus Perdita)
Leaf-cutter Bees or Mason Bees (Family Megachilidae)
Resin Bees or Mason Bees (Genus Dianthidium)
Carder Bees (Genus Anthidium) 93
Large Leaf-cutter Bees (Genus Megachile)
Small Leaf-cutter Bees or Mason Bees (Genus Osmia)
Leaf-cutter Bees (Genus Ashmeadiella)
Mason Bees (Genus Hoplitis)
Mason Bees (Genus Heriades)
Cuckoo, Carpenter, Digger, Bumble,and Honey Bees (Family Apidae)
Honey Bees (Genus Apis)
Squash Bees (Genus Peponapis)
Habropoda Bees (Genus Habropoda)
Cuckoo Bees (Genus Nomada)
Mining Bees (Genus Anthophora)
Bumble Bees (Genus Bombus)
Long-horned Bees or Sunflower Bees (Genus Diadasia)
Long-horned Bees (Genus Melissodes)
Large Carpenter Bees (Genus Xylocopa)
Small Carpenter Bees (Genus Ceratina)
Long-horned Bees (Genus Eucera)
Long-horned Bees (Genus Tetraloniella)
Cuckoo Bees (Genus Triepeolus)

Appendix 1: Bee Families and Genera Found in California
Appendix 2: Key to Females of Genera Included in This Book
Glossary
Resources
Index

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