Abeja carpintera del este
Xylocopa virginica
Abeja
Abeja solitaria de gran tamaño que anida en madera muerta (incluidas, en ocasiones, las vigas de las terrazas). Polinizadora importante de flores tubulares; en ocasiones realiza robo de néctar en flores de espolón largo como la aguileña silvestre, cortando el espolón desde el lateral en lugar de entrar a la flor por la vía legítima.
Plants in the catalog
Plantas que esta especie poliniza · 5
The eastern carpenter bee is the primary pollinator of purple passionflower: the flower's anthers and stigmas sit on a raised central column at carpenter-bee height, so the bee transfers pollen as it forages. Other insects visit the nectar but contribute little pollination.
The flower's anthers and stigmas sit on a raised central column at large-carpenter-bee height, the same structure that makes carpenter bees (Xylocopa) the effective pollinators of passionflowers; on this neotropical species the documented carpenter-bee pollinators are large Xylocopa, with the eastern carpenter bee a plausible visitor where their ranges meet.
Large carpenter bees are principal pollinators of pomegranate flowers, working the showy orange-red blooms for nectar and pollen and improving fruit set over self-pollination alone.
Plantas de néctar · 3
Large carpenter bees visit and can rob the deep flowers; like the other bee visitors this is incidental foraging rather than evidence of strong habitat value.
Large carpenter bees are strong enough to work the substantial canna flowers for nectar.
Carpenter bees sometimes nectar-rob the long spurs by slicing the spur tip from the side, bypassing the flower mechanism without effecting pollination.
Plantas de polen · 1
Large carpenter bees are strong enough to work the big open hibiscus flowers and gather pollen from the prominent staminal column; mapped as plausible for this non-native tropical.
Distribución
Este de los Estados Unidos, desde Nueva York y los Grandes Lagos hacia el sur hasta Florida y Texas.