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The two-spotted bumble bee (''Bombus bimaculatus'') is a species of social bumble bee found in the eastern half of the United States and the adjacent south-eastern part of Canada. In older literature this bee is often referred to as ''Bremus bimaculatus'', ''Bremus'' being a synonym for ''Bombus''. The bee's common name comes from the two yellow spots on its abdomen. Unlike many of the other species of bee in the genus ''Bombus,'' ''B. bimaculatus'' is not on the decline, but instead is very stable. They are abundant pollinators that forage at a variety of plants.


Taxonomy and phylogeny

''Bombus bimaculatus'' is in the subgenus ''
Pyrobombus ''Pyrobombus'' (also known as Fiery-tailed bees) is a subgenus of bumblebees, with its center of diversity, centres of diversity in Central Asia and north-western North America. Nearly a fifth of all ''Bombus'' species fall within ''Pyrobombus'' an ...
'', which is closely related to the subgenera ''
Alpinobombus The list presented here is a checklist of world bumblebees (Tribe Bombini) based on the ''Bombus'' phylogeny presented by Cameron ''et al'' (2007) and grouped by subgenus following the revision of Williams ''et al'' (2008). The bumblebee fossil rec ...
'' and '' Bombus'' out of the 15 total. Within ''
Pyrobombus ''Pyrobombus'' (also known as Fiery-tailed bees) is a subgenus of bumblebees, with its center of diversity, centres of diversity in Central Asia and north-western North America. Nearly a fifth of all ''Bombus'' species fall within ''Pyrobombus'' an ...
'', ''B. bimaculatus'' is most closely related to '' B. monticola, B. sylvicola, and B. lapponicus.'' Additionally, ''B. bimaculatus'' can oftentimes be confused with '' B. impatiens'' and '' B. griseocollis'', as their colorations are very similar.


Identification

''Bombus bimaculatus'' was first described by Ezra Townsend Cresson, an American entomologist, in 1863. Workers look very similar to queens, with the two mainly distinguished by size. Sometimes large workers can be mistaken for small queens, especially toward the end of the season when workers have grown larger and new queens emerge. Queens have a black face with a triangular patch of yellow hairs on the vertex. Their thorax is yellow except for a shining area on the disc that is bordered by black hairs. Their venter is black with some yellow hairs on the legs. Male faces have intermixed black and yellow hairs. They resemble females in most markings, except their tergite 2 has more yellow lateral hairs than the female whose tergite 2 has black edges and few yellow lateral hairs. The size of the radial cell in the wing differs for each. Workers have the smallest, ranging from 2.5 to 3.6 mm. Males are slightly bigger at 2.6–3.6 mm. Queens have the largest at 3.4–4.1 mm.


Distribution and habitat

''B. bimaculatus'' is mainly found in eastern temperate forest regions throughout the United States and the southeastern part of Canada. It can also live in the coastal plains of the southeastern United States, the eastern Boreal forest, and the eastern
Great Plains The Great Plains (french: Grandes Plaines), sometimes simply "the Plains", is a broad expanse of flatland in North America. It is located west of the Mississippi River and east of the Rocky Mountains, much of it covered in prairie, steppe, an ...
. This bee lives in underground nests, preferably in or around wooden areas and gardens. Nests can be anywhere from 6 inches to a foot below the surface. Tunnels traveling to the nest range from 9 inches to 4 feet long. ''B. bimaculatus'' can also nest above ground or in cavities. Bees do not build nests and instead rely on finding abandoned rodent dens, hollow logs, suitable man-made structures, or tussocks. Queens will hibernate in loose dirt or rotting logs. This bumble bee is very common and has been experiencing steady growth unlike many other bumble bees that are in decline.


Colony cycle

Bumble bee colonies are annual and a new colony is founded when a mated queen, the foundress, emerges from hibernation in the spring. Habitats for hibernation and colonies are different so she must find a suitable location to start her nest and she must do this on her own. She will provision it with pollen and nectar and then lay her eggs. This first brood will become non-reproducing female workers. At this time the queen must alternate between incubating the larvae and foraging for more provisions. Thus, this is the most vulnerable time for a fledgling colony. Alternatively, some queens will not have mated the previous year and her offspring will all be male. Eggs typically hatch after four days and spend two weeks feeding on stored provisions before pupating. After another two weeks the pupae will have developed into adults. Once the workers emerge, queens will forage less and spend more time laying eggs. For ''B. bimaculatus,'' workers typically emerge in May and peak in July. Workers are responsible for brood care, foraging, regulating nest temperature and defending the nest. Males emerge last in June and peak in July. Unlike workers who stay and care for the brood, males will soon leave the nest after maturation to seek mates. New queens are produced at about the same time as males, and will forage extensively to build reserves for their overwintering. Unlike males that leave the nest and do not return, new queens will return to the nest at night. ''B. bimaculatus'' is one of the earliest bumble bee species to emerge, with queens being sighted as early as February. By the time fall arrives, newly mated queens will all be hibernating to repeat the cycle the following spring. Workers, males, and foundresses will have died. ''B. bimaculatus'''s colonies emerge quickly and die quickly in comparison with other bumble bee species.


Behavior


Male incubation

Male ''B. bimaculatus'' can help care for larvae during the first days, or even weeks, of their life. Though female workers are mainly responsible for brood care, males cannot fly for the first 24 hours of their life so they cannot leave the nest. Incubating larvae is a potential opportunity for males to exercise their flight muscles. They assume the same position on the cocoon as females would and pump their abdomen to facilitate heat flow from their thorax to their abdomen to the brood. Male incubation may be more significant towards the end of the season when there are fewer workers to incubate larvae.


Mating

''B. bimaculatus'' mate outside the nest with males patrolling in circuits, searching for a queen to mate with. Most queens only mate once; however, there are some queens who mate multiple times and have offspring of multiple paternity.


Foraging

''B. bimaculatus'' queens forage on '' Aquilegia'' flowers. The queens hang upside down on stamens, clutch the filament with their forelegs, and scrape off pollen using their middle and hind legs. Workers enter the ''Aquilegia'' spurs by pushing their head and part of their thorax into the spur's mouth. They then extend the maxillae and tongue into the spur to drink nectar, repeating this process on multiple spurs of the same plant before visiting the next one. ''B. bimaculatus'' queens' probosces range from 10.53 to 12.19 mm in length, which has little overlap with other ''Bombus'' species. This may potentially be the reason why ''B. bimaculatus'' are such abundant pollinators. Research comparing ''B. bimaculatus'' to '' Xylocopa virginica'', a carpenter bee, found that the former learned faster and had more flexible foraging patterns. It was hypothesized that ''B. bimaculatus'' being a social bee could have individuals specialize in either foraging for nectar or pollen, instead of having to worry about both in overall food collection as the nonsocial carpenter bees needed to do.


Mimicry and camouflage

Several fly species are
Batesian mimics Batesian mimicry is a form of mimicry where a harmless species has evolved to imitate the warning signals of a harmful species directed at a predator of them both. It is named after the English naturalist Henry Walter Bates, after his work on Bu ...
of bumble bees, including
robber flies The Asilidae are the robber fly family, also called assassin flies. They are powerfully built, bristly flies with a short, stout proboscis enclosing the sharp, sucking hypopharynx. The name "robber flies" reflects their notoriously aggressive pre ...
, flower flies, deer bot flies, and bee flies. Some species of beetles, moths, sawflies and even other bees will mimic bumble bees. Additionally, the bumble flower beetle does not mimic the bumble bee's coloration but its buzzing flight sound. Bumble bees are not only mimicked by other insects, but also take on similar color patterns to each other in a form of Müllerian mimicry when multiple bumble bee species are found in the same region. ''B. bimaculatus'' is in the same group as '' B. impatiens, B. griseocollis, B. affinis, B. vagans, B. sandersoni, B. perplexus'' and '' B. fraternus.'' They all have a predominantly yellow thorax with a darker central spot. Nests typically do not need camouflage as they are hidden underground or in cavities.


Interactions with other species


Diet

Bumble bees eat nectar and pollen from plants. ''B. bimaculatus'' is known to pollinate a wide variety of plants, but they seem to have favorites. Queens can be found on willow and plum. Workers are found on red clover and mint. Males are found on mint and sweet clover. As a species they have been found foraging at the following plants: * '' Zenobia pulverulenta'' * '' Gelsemium sempervirens'' * '' Lyonia lucida'' * ''
Solanum dulcamara ''Solanum dulcamara'' is a species of vine in the genus ''Solanum'' (which also includes the potato and the tomato) of the family Solanaceae. Common names include bittersweet, bittersweet nightshade, bitter nightshade, blue bindweed, Amara Dulci ...
'' * '' Aquilegia'' species * '' Dicentra'' species * ''
Mertensia ''Mertensia'' is a genus of flowering plants in the family Boraginaceae. They are perennial herbaceous plants with blue or sometimes white flowers that open from pink-tinged buds. Such a change in flower color is common in Boraginaceae and ...
'' species'''' * '' Pedicularis'' species'''' * '' Aesculus glabra'' * ''
Camassia scilloides ''Camassia scilloides'' is a perennial herb known commonly as Atlantic camas, wild hyacinth,
'' * ''
Delphinium tricorne ''Delphinium tricorne'', known by the common names dwarf larkspur or spring larkspur, is a species of flowering plant in the Ranunculaceae (buttercup) family. It is native to the central and eastern United States, where it is the most common ''De ...
'' * ''
Hydrophyllum appendiculatum ''Hydrophyllum appendiculatum'', commonly known as great waterleaf, appendage waterleaf, or woolen breeches, is a species of plant in the Boraginaceae (borage) family. It is native to central and eastern North America where it is found primarily ...
''


Predators

Predators of bumble bees include
crab spiders The Thomisidae are a family of spiders, including about 170 genera and over 2,100 species. The common name crab spider is often linked to species in this family, but is also applied loosely to many other families of spiders. Many members of th ...
, Florida black bears,
ambush bugs The Reduviidae are a large cosmopolitan family of the order Hemiptera (true bugs). Among the Hemiptera and together with the Nabidae almost all species are terrestrial ambush predators: most other predatory Hemiptera are aquatic. The main examp ...
,
robber flies The Asilidae are the robber fly family, also called assassin flies. They are powerfully built, bristly flies with a short, stout proboscis enclosing the sharp, sucking hypopharynx. The name "robber flies" reflects their notoriously aggressive pre ...
, dragonflies, assassin bugs, and some wasp species.
Crab spiders The Thomisidae are a family of spiders, including about 170 genera and over 2,100 species. The common name crab spider is often linked to species in this family, but is also applied loosely to many other families of spiders. Many members of th ...
ambush ''B. bimaculatus'' at flowers, paralyze them, and then eat them. Florida black bears eat ''B. bimaculatus'' most abundantly in the spring, and continue to eat them to a lesser extent in the summer.


Defense

''B. bimaculatus'' will defend its nests against intruders, such as '' Psithyrus variabilis'', a cuckoo bumble bee. In an experiment, a female ''P. variabilis'' was placed in a ''B. bimaculatus'' nest. Workers quickly recognized her as an intruder, halted their work and attacked her when she entered the inner part of the nest. Oftentimes though, ''B. bimaculatus'' are content to ignore intruders, such as ''
Psithyrus labrosius ''Bombus citrinus'' is a species of bumblebee known commonly as the lemon cuckoo bumblebee due to its lemon-yellow color. It is native to eastern North America.Hatfield, R., et al. 2014''Bombus citrinus''.The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species ...
''. Like ''P. variabilis,'' ''P. labrosius'' also is a cuckoo bumble bee. It will attack ''Bombus vagans'', but not ''B. bimaculatus'' though they are in the same subgenus, ''Pyrobombus''. ''B. bimaculatus'' queens can kill each other when dueling. Queens can also be hostile to unrelated workers of their own species by squirting feces in their faces.


Parasites

'' Brachycoma sarcophagina'' is an
ectoparasitoid In evolutionary ecology, a parasitoid is an organism that lives in close association with its host at the host's expense, eventually resulting in the death of the host. Parasitoidism is one of six major evolutionary strategies within parasi ...
that will consume ''B. bimaculatus'' bees from the outside. Female ''B. sarcophagina'' deposit young larvae on ''B. bimaculatus'' larvae. ''B. sarcophagina'' larvae will not begin consuming their host until the host has begun spinning its cocoon. Tracheal mites, will parasitize multiple '' Bombus'' species, but strongly prefer ''B. bimaculatus''. Mites were recovered from the autosomal air sacs of bumble bees. These mites can affect behavior and reduce longevity, which may cause further stress to colonies already facing difficulties. Conopid flies also parasitize ''B. bimaculatus''. Male bees were less likely to be parasitized than workers, and larger bees were more likely to be parasitized than smaller bees. ''B. bimaculatus'' is also parasitized by a bumble bee of the subgenus '' Psithyrus'', ''
Bombus citrinus ''Bombus citrinus'' is a species of bumblebee known commonly as the lemon cuckoo bumblebee due to its lemon-yellow color. It is native to eastern North America.Hatfield, R., et al. 2014''Bombus citrinus''.The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. ...
'', a brood parasite.


Phoresy

Kuzinia ''Kuzinia'' is a genus of mites in the family Acaridae. Species * '' Kuzinia evae'' Putatunda, Aggarwal & Kapil, 1984 * '' Kuzinia morsei'' (El-Banhawy & Abou-Awad, 1990) * '' Kuzinia sciurina'' Volgin, 1978 * '' Kuzinia woykei'' Putatunda, Agg ...
, Scutacarid, and Parasitid mites were found on ''B. bimaculatus'' bees. Scutacarid and Parasitid mites were found in the propodia, the first abdominal segment in bees. These mites, being phoretic, likely just use the bee as a means of transport. It is unknown what effect, either detrimental or beneficial, these mites may have on the bee.


Diseases

''B. bimaculatus'' can be infected with '' Nosema bombi'', a microsporidian. This bee can also be infected by other fungal species. It is unknown how detrimental such an infection is to the bee's health. Compared to other bumble bees that are in decline, ''B. bimaculatus'' has a lighter infection, which may be the reason why it is experiencing stable growth compared to the decline in other ''Bombus'' species. However, the reason for the difference in infection is unknown. ''B. bimaculatus'' can also be infected by ''
Crithidia bombi ''Crithidia'' is a genus of trypanosomatid Euglenozoa. They are parasites that exclusively parasitise arthropods, mainly insects. They pass from host to host as cysts in infective faeces and typically, the parasites develop in the digestive trac ...
'' and '' Apicystis bombi.'' Both are protozoans, but ''C. bombi'' is known to hinder colony creation, decrease host lifespan and colony fitness, and have a negative effect on workers' behavior. This can cause undue stress on colonies, leading to a species' decline.


Microbiome

The gut bacteria of ''B. bimaculatus'' was isolated and include ''
Snodgrassella alvi ''Snodgrassella alvi'' is a species of Gram-negative bacteria, Gram-negative bacteria within the Neisseriaceae and was previously the only known species of the genus ''Snodgrassella''. It was isolated and scientifically described in 2012 by Walda ...
'' and '' Gilliamella apicola'' strains. ''B. bimaculatus'' had more gut bacteria from environmental sources, and less core bacteria compared to other bumble bee species. ''B. bimaculatus'' had more core bacteria when collected from farms as opposed to collection from semi-natural habitats.


Human importance


Pollinator

''B. bimaculatus'' is an important pollinator in temperate forest regions as it is still abundant, unlike many other species of honey and bumble bees. They also pollinate a wide variety of plants. In addition, bumble bees can continue foraging even under sub-optimal conditions such as rain or clouds. ''B. bimaculatus'' is capable of flying even at 7 °C. This makes the continued growth and stability of ''B. bimaculatus'' particularly valuable.


Sting

Only female bees have a sting, males do not. Bumble bees typically only sting when defending their nest or when captured. Allergies to bumble bee stings are much less common than allergies to honey bee stings though the venom composition is similar. ''B. bimaculatus'' venom contains additional proteins, including acrosin and a tryptic amidase related to clotting enzymes.


References


External links



A color key pattern by Dr. Paul Williams to help identify different bumble bee species

Discover Life's online tool to identify bumble bees

High quality images of ''Pyrobombus'' bees, including ''B. bimaculatus''

Video of a ''B. bimaculatus'' queen creating an egg cup, laying an egg and sealing it * {{DEFAULTSORT:Two-spotted bumble bee Bumblebees Hymenoptera of North America Insects described in 1863 Taxa named by Ezra Townsend Cresson