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Carpenter Bee
Carpenter bees are large and have a blue-black, green or purple
metallic sheen. They often burrow into exposed dry wood of buildings.
Infestations are often detected by finding large amounts of sawdust on
the ground below the area being drilled. The galleries are made by the
female and usually average 4 to 6 inches in length. She then furnishes
the nest with "bee bread" (a mixture of pollen and
regurgitated nectar) and lays an egg on top of it. The female then
closes the cell with chewed wood pulp. There may be a number such sealed
cells in a linear row in one gallery (see figure below).
- Carpenter bees resemble bumblebees (see figure below), but they
are not social insects, and most of the top part of their abdomen is
without hairs. The males are at times quite annoying because they
fly around the heads of human but are quite harmless because they
lack a sting. The females possess a potent sting but they use it
rarely. While the damage to wood from the drilling activity of a
pair of carpenter bees is slight, the activities of numerous bees
during a period of years can cause considerable damage.

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