Gloria Nagler: Slackers need not apply
Monday, October 1, 2018
Oughta be plenty of pollen in this one, she figures... |
Photos (copyrighted) by Gloria Zmuda Nagler
Scanning these photos on my desktop, the things I first noticed were the swollen orange-yellow balls on the rear legs of the bees: pollen baskets (corbiculae), I learned. And these ladies had surely maximized their storage space (no slackers here)!
Good-sized basket already, but she’s determined to pack a little more in |
The corbicula, according to Wikipedia, is “a polished cavity surrounded by a fringe of hairs” which the bees use for storage of pollen. Not all bees have pollen baskets, but honey bees and bumblebees do. A 1771 encyclopedia, says Wikipedia, described the structure but gave it no name. In 1802 the name corbicula was introduced into English.
I often spot bees entangled in the stamens, rubbing off pollen for all they’re worth |
Bees, of course, do not pollinate flowers out of the goodness of their tiny hearts — pollination is incidental to the bees’ collection of pollen as food for the hive. When a bee crawls around in flowers (see the photo here of a bee wrapped around a stamen) and rubs pollen off anthers, the pollen adheres to the bee’s hair and body. The bee then licks and moistens her forelegs, then pushing the pollen into the baskets in a grooming manner. The bee then transports her load to the hive.
Bumblebees have pollen baskets, too — and formidable proboscises (hers in this pic is fully extended and ready for nectar |
Now for the pollination part: What doesn’t make its way into the corbicula is likely to pollinate the stigma of another flower of identical species. Indeed, according to Wilson-Rich’s excellent book on bees (see below), they tend to gather the pollen from one kind of flower at a time — which has certainly seemed to be the situation when I watch the bees. They appear to work most of the flowers of one species before moving on to a different kind of blossom.
And here’s an example of a beige pollen basket… not a color I often see. |
I’ve seen yellow pollen baskets, orange, and even beige (yellow/orange and beige are pictured here). Wikipedia says the color of the pollen indicates the source, which makes sense.
Sources used for this article:
The Bee, A Natural History, by Noah Wilson-Rich, 2014
Wikipedia on Pollen Baskets
2 comments:
Beautiful series of photos. And, thanks for education us about the corbiculae!
Gloria, thank you so much for your amazing close-up photographs and your entertaining and informative narrative! This was a real treat.
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