🐝 Meet the Protandrena bee — the speedy ground-dwelling sprinter!
If bees had an Olympics, Protandrena would be sprinting the 100-meter dash. 🏃♀️💨 These small, slender solitary bees are famous for their rapid, darting flight patterns — zipping between flowers so quickly that even seasoned bee watchers have trouble keeping up. Blink and you've missed them.
Their name literally means "before Andrena," referring to a quirky anatomical feature scientists once thought made them evolutionary predecessors to the more familiar Andrena mining bees. Turns out they're more like distant cousins than ancestors, but the name stuck. 🧬
Like many native bees, Protandrenas are ground-nesters, digging tidy burrows in sandy or bare soil. Some species are surprisingly social for solitary bees — dozens of females will nest near each other in dense "villages," each minding her own tunnel but enjoying the neighborhood vibe. 🏘️ Bee suburbia!
Many Protandrena species are also pollen specialists, with strong loyalties to plants like sunflowers, asters, and evening primroses. 🌻 Without them, those wildflower meadows you love wouldn't bloom nearly as well.
So next time you spot a tiny blur of motion over a sunflower — slow down. You may have just witnessed a Protandrena at full throttle. ⚡
#Pollinators #NativeBees #Wildflowers