Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Apinae

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Phylum
  
Rank
  
Subfamily

Scientific name
  
Apinae

Higher classification
  
Order
  
Hymenopterans

Apinae apinae Galeras Fotonaturaorg

Lifespan
  
Western honey bee: 122 – 152 days, Early bumblebee: 28 days

Lower classifications
  
Honey bee, Bumblebee, Stingless bee, Anthophorini, Euglossini

The Apinae are the subfamily that includes the majority of bees in the family Apidae. It includes the familiar "corbiculate" (pollen basket) bees — bumblebees, honey bees, orchid bees, stingless bees, and the extinct genus Euglossopteryx. It also includes all but two of the groups (excluding Nomadinae and Xylocopinae) that were previously classified in the family Anthophoridae.

Apinae Beetle And Bee Phalacridae and Apinae Olibrus BugGuideNet

Most species in the subfamily (other than honey bees, bumblebees, and stingless bees) are solitary, though several of the tribes are entirely cleptoparasitic, such as the Ericrocidini, Isepeolini, Melectini, Osirini, Protepeolini, and Rhathymini.

Apinae bugguidenetimagesrawJLVLIZJLVLIZOLLZ9LFLNL3L

Behaviors

Apinae Apinae Wikipedia

Certain behaviors are known from members of the Apinae that are rarely seen in other bees, including the habit of males forming "sleeping aggregations" on vegetation - several males gathering on a single plant in the evening, grasping a plant with their jaws and resting there through the night (sometimes held in place only by the jaws, with the legs dangling free in space).

Apinae Apinae Anthophora walshii BugGuideNet

Also known from Apinae is the habit of gathering floral oils instead of pollen for use as a larval food; this behavior is otherwise known only from a few lineages in the family Melittidae.

Apinae Apinae Melecta BugGuideNet

Apinae Apinae Wikipedia

References

Apinae Wikipedia