Home

Aussie Bee Online
Welcome
New Articles


About Native Bees
What are Native Bees?
Bee Photo Gallery
Bees in Your Area
Common Questions
Rescuing Native Bees
Bees in Houses - Advice
Exotic Bumblebees

Stingless Native Bees
What are Stingless Bees?
Buying Stingless Bees
Keeping Stingless Bees
Honey Production
Crop Pollination

Study Native Bees
Field Guide
Information Booklets
Tim Heard's Book
John Klumpp's Book
Aussie Bee Back Issues
Seminars
Links

Support Native Bees
Aussie Bee Shop
Order Form
Who We Are
Donations
Privacy Policy
Free Newsletter
Website Survey
xx

New Australian Stingless Bee Photos
by Anna Simpson

Aussie Bee Homepage > New Native Bee Photos > Stingless Bees

In many houses in far north Queensland, miniature stingless bees build tiny nests inside the wall cavities. Anna Simpson of Cairns has kindly contributed the following two fabulous photographs of bees in the entrance of one of these nests. These bees are either Tetragonula clypearis or Tetragonula sapiens (previously known as Trigona clypearis or Trigona sapiens Why has their name been changed?):

Australian stingless bee nest

Above: these stingless bees build a tiny resin tunnel as their nest entrance. These three bees are guarding their nest entrance.

Tetragonula-Trigona bees

Above: another superb photograph by Anna Simpson of these miniature stingless bees in their nest entrance -- these bees are just 4mm long! They peer out at the world with their large compound eyes and pick up scents from the breeze with their little antennae

Search Aussie Bee Website:


© 1997-2018 Australian Native Bee Research Centre
PO Box 74, North Richmond NSW 2754, Australia