Anthophora plumipes female loaded with yellow pollen and feeding on the flowers
Anthophora plumipes male, leaving the flowers with his tongue still extended
A male Red Mason Bee (Osmia rufa) sunbathing on a stone next to a Muscari clump. The first males of the year appeared today and I have watched them feeding and patrolling the plants, making sure they weren't missing any of the females. The males kept checking the Anthophoras.
A Peacock visiting the flowers. Grape hyacinths are also visited by Commas and Small Tortoiseshells (see here for photos)
This scruffy-looking dark bee with white tufts of hair is Melecta albifrons, the cleptoparasite bee (cuckoo bee) of Anthophora plumipes.
I have got no photos but a couple of days ago I saw an Andrena fulva and a queen Bombus pascuorum (both first of the year) visiting Muscari in my garden.
UPDATE 11/04/10
Today a queen Bombus terrestris visited the Muscari patch and I managed to get a shot of the first Osmia rufa of the year feeding on it as well.
2 comments:
Great post on the importance of this little plant! I did not know it was such a favourite. Is it because there is not too much else available? I will definitely include one in my bee flower list!
Thank you sharp green pencil. I cannot say there is not much else flowering at the moment, in my garden now there are primroses, cowslips, cherry blossom, violets pulmonaria and wallflowers in bloom. But maybe a few weeks ago that was the case, when the plant starts flowering, then there is little else!
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