About Those Non-Social Bees...

Feb 4, 2013

About Those Non-Social Bees...

Feb 4, 2013

About those non-social bees...

A good place to learn about them is at the UC Davis Department of Entomology seminar on Wednesday, Feb. 6.

James “Jim” Cane, a research entomologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service’s Biology and Systematics Lab, Utah State University, will speak on “The Spectrum of Managed Nesting for Pollination by Non-Social Bees”  from 12:10 to 1 p.m. in Room 1022 of the Life Sciences Addition, corner of Hutchison and Kleiber Hall drives, UC Davis campus.

Host is graduate student  Leslie Saul-Gershanz of the Neal Williams lab.

“Most bees nest underground; the remainder largely nesting above-ground, either in beetle holes in deadwood or in pity stems,” Cane says. “The vast majority of bees are non-social, yet only a very few of these species of each nesting habitats are managed for crop pollination.  They will be used to illustrate realized and sustained population growth under management, as well as the factors that allow or impede broader use of non-social bees for agriculture.”

“I will then summarize ongoing experience with methods and materials to multiply other native cavity-nesting bees, notably species of Osmia, desired to pollinate tree fruits, bramble fruits and native seed crops, highlighting the costs and challenges that emerge  at larger scales of management.”

 Cane has spent many of the past 25 years studying the nesting and pollination ecologies of native non-social bees of North America and elsewhere.  He has worked with pollination and pollinators of alfalfa, cranberries, blueberries, squashes, almonds, raspberries and a host of native seed crops used for restoration seed.  He is currently multiplying three species of Osmia bees for these applications. 

For the past 13 years, Cane has worked for the USDA at the Pollinating Insect Research Unit at Utah State University in Logan, Utah.  Prior to that, he was on the faculty of Auburn University in Alabama and was a post-doctoral fellow at UC Berkeley. He received his doctorate from the University of Kansas. 

The seminar will be videotaped for later posting on UCTV.