Mining bees create a theatre of enchantments
by Paul Evans from Environment | The Guardian on (#2SX16)
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire There is in them a curious combination of industry and decadence, fun and devotion
There's something Elizabethan about the ashy mining bees. The females are 10mm long, black with a bluish reflection, a ruff of grey hair, a further grey ring around the thorax and a furry white facial mask. The males are smaller, squatter and less strikingly marked.
Andrena cineraria is one of 67 species in Britain and Ireland belonging to the mining bee genus. They are hairy little sprites with pollen baskets on their back legs, short tongues and pointed antennae, and the most effective of pollinators. They excavate nests underground in all kinds of soils.
Continue reading...