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Carpenter bee
Carpenter bee





carpenter bee

Residential, Industrial and Institutional Pest Control. After the adults are killed, repair and fill holes with steel wool and caulking, then repaint or varnish the repaired surfaces. Many of these products are available only to licensed pest control professionals.

carpenter bee

Avoid inhaling these materials, because they can cause serious lung irritation. Dusts containing pyrethrin (Drione Dust), borate or disodium octaborate tetrahydrate (Tim-bor), and pyrethroids including deltamethrin (Bonide Termite and Carpenter Ant Dust) and cyfluthrin (Tempo Dust) are currently labeled for use against carpenter bees. Wait a day or two after the treatment before sealing the tunnel to make sure all adults have been exposed to the insecticide.Īpply dust formulations of insecticides or desiccant dusts into nest holes with a bulb applicator. It is best to treat at night when the adults have returned to the tunnel. These developing bees can chew their way out after the pesticide is no longer viable. It does little good to treat active nests (those containing eggs, larvae, or pupae) in late spring to summer as indicated by females bringing in loads of pollen, since each brood chamber is sealed with partitions of wood particles at each end which prohibits pesticides from penetrating to the brood. To do this, treat tunnels with adult bees in early spring before nesting activity has begun, or in fall after all adult bees have emerged and are settling in to hibernate through the winter. If infestation is high or risk of damage to structural integrity is great, insecticides may be used to augment other methods of control. Under most conditions their damage can be successfully managed using the preventive measures described above and insecticide use is not recommended. Protect rough areas, such as ends of timbers, with wire screening or metal flashing.Ĭarpenter bees are generally considered beneficial insects because they help pollinate various crop and noncrop plants. Once filled, paint or varnish the repaired surfaces.

carpenter bee

Wait until after bees have emerged before filling the tunnels. Fill unoccupied holes with steel wool and caulk to prevent their reuse. Paint or varnish exposed surfaces regularly to reduce weathering and attack by bees. On all buildings, fill depressions and cracks in wood surfaces so they are less attractive. If possible, susceptible exterior parts of a building should be constructed out of hardwoods, which are not normally attacked by the bees for nest building. Prevention is the main approach to managing carpenter bees. The presence of carpenter bees around buildings and wooden structures can be annoying or even frightening however, males cannot sting and females sting only when provoked or handled roughly. Carpenter bees also frequently attack dead wood on trees or lumber from southern yellow pine, white pine, California redwood, cedar, Douglas fir, cypress, mimosa, mulberry, ash, and pecan trees. Sound, undecayed wood without paint or bark is usually selected for nests. The nests weaken structural wood and leave unsightly holes and stains on building surfaces. There is only one generation a year.Ĭarpenter bees cause damage to wooden structures by boring into timbers and siding to construct nests. They emerge in spring to mate, create and provision nests, and lay eggs. New adults emerge in late summer, feed on nectar and pollen and overwinter, often in old tunnels they have provisioned with pollen. Development from egg to adult may take about 3 months. Tunnels are vacated after the brood’s larval and pupal stages complete their development. Over a period of time, tunnels may extend as far as 10 feet into wood timbers. Carpenter bees may use old tunnels for their nests, which they occasionally enlarge several bees may use a common entry hole connecting to different tunnels. Nests usually consist of tunnels 1/2 inch in diameter and 6 to 10 inches deep that are partitioned into several chambers, each containing an egg and a supply of food (pollen). Males usually have pale hair on the thorax and the male valley carpenter bee is golden brown.įemale carpenter bees bore into sound wood, and sometimes decaying wood, to make nests. Their abdomens are shinier than those of bumblebees with fringes of hairs on some segments. Females range from about 5/8 to 1 inch long and are shiny black or with metallic blue reflections. Most carpenter bees, Xylocopa spp., are large and robust insects resembling bumblebees. People may be frightened by carpenter bees because of their large size, their similarity to bumble bees, and their annoying noise. Carpenter bee nest in redwood beam showing immature stages.Ĭarpenter bees build nests in wood, creating galleries that can weaken structures however, they rarely cause severe damage.







Carpenter bee