The closeup of their little buttocks certainly make it look like they're 
stingerless. I guess we could ask Jim.
 
Louise
 

> Date: Mon, 2 Apr 2012 19:14:58 -0500
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> CC: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Texascavers] leafcutter bees
> 
> So, are these bees stingerless?
> --Ediger
> 
> On Mon, Apr 2, 2012 at 2:32 PM, Mixon Bill <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Many of us have enjoyed watching parades of leafcutter ants, such as can be
> > seen in Bustamante Canyon in northern Mexico. Don't think they get very far
> > into Texas. Here's a curious things from Jim Conrad's Naturalist Newsletter
> > about leafcutter bees, which I'd never heard of before.
> >
> > You can sign up to get his e-mail weekly newsletter at
> > www.backyardnature.net/news/natnat.php
> >
> > Very rarely anything about caves, but lots of interesting nature stuff,
> > especially about plants and birds. -- Mixon
> >
> > JIM CONRAD’S NATURALIST NEWSLETTER
> > Issued from the woods not far from Natchez, in
> > southwestern Mississippi, USA
> >
> > April 1, 2012
> >
> > *****
> >
> > LEAFCUTTER BEES
> > On my last day in the Yucatán I untied the rope that
> > for so long had been suspending my backpack from the
> > hut's ceiling, hopefully out of mind for nest-seeking
> > rats and mice, and took my old backpack in hand. Ashes
> > from daily campfires had settled all over it so I
> > stepped outside and gave it a good whack. The
> > resulting cloud was half ash and half green tatters of
> > dried, coiled-up leaf-parts stuck together into tube-
> > like affairs. The leaf tatters surprised me.
> >
> > But, I knew what they were, for back in 2006 during my
> > stay at Genesis Retreat in Ek Balam, Yucatán, the Maya
> > staff there had showed me the same thing. You can read
> > about that encounter and see the leafy, tube-like item
> > at http://www.backyardnature.net/yucatan/jo_olon.htm
> >
> > A young Maya woman had told me that the green leaf-
> > tube was a collection of nests stuck end-to-end, and
> > that the tube construction itself was known by a
> > special Maya name, which was pa'ak. The creature
> > inside the cocoon was Jo'olon. I was told that a bee
> > made the nest, but I hardly believed it.
> >
> > But, now I believe her, for once I had disturbed all
> > those nests in my roof-suspended backpack, hoards of
> > bees came complaining, thumping against me and
> > entangling themselves in my hair but never stinging.
> > And they were surely the most unusual bees I've ever
> > seen, for instead of carrying clumps of pollen on
> > their back-leg "baskets," they transported it on hairs
> > covering the entire bottoms of their abdomens. With
> > their golden-yellow abdomen bottoms they look like
> > dimly lit fireflies. You can the pollen-dusted lower
> > abdomen on a bee entering its pa'ak cocoon, one
> > stuffed into one of my backpack's looped belt-tips, in
> > the hut's dim light, so it's a grainy picture, at
> > http://www.backyardnature.net/n/12/120401be.jpg
> >
> > A rear view of the same bee showing golden pollen
> > stuffed inside a green pa'ak tube is shown at
> > http://www.backyardnature.net/n/12/120401bf.jpg
> >
> > So, this was my last Yucatán identification challenge
> > for volunteer IDer Bea in Ontario. Here's what she
> > came up with: It's a Leafcutter Bee. Many times we've
> > spoken of leafcutter ants, but this was something new.
> >
> > Leafcutter Bees, I find, are members of the genus
> > MEGACHILE, and despite my ignorance of its existence
> > that genus is one of the largest among bees, home to
> > well over 500 species and over 50 subgenera. A list of
> > insects of Río Lagartos, Yucatán includes eight
> > species of Megachile leafcutter bees, but I can't say
> > which species is shown here.
> >
> > Of leafcutter bees I read that, exactly as we see with
> > our pa'ak tubes, Megachile nests typically are
> > composed of single long columns of cells constructed
> > from cut-out leaf sections. Females place pollen or a
> > pollen/nectar mix in each cell as food for the egg
> > laid there, then the cell is capped so that a wall
> > separates that cell from the next one. The larva
> > hatching from the egg eats the food supply and after a
> > few molts and maybe a period of hibernation spins a
> > cocoon and pupates, emerging from the nest as an adult
> > bee. Males are typically smaller than females and
> > emerge before them. Males die shortly after mating but
> > females survive for several weeks, building new nests.
> >
> > What a fine last discovery to end my Yucatán days!
> > ----------------------------------------
> > The winner of the rat race is still a rat.
> > ----------------------------------------
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> > came from, but for long-term use, save:
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> >
> >
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