- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
Published on: April 7, 2021
So here you are, a honey bee seeking nectar from an unopened citrus blossom.
And then your tongue (proboscis) becomes all sticky with pollen, nectar and other particles.
What to do: you, the worker bee, take a brief break and clean your tongue.
Problem solved.
This "B" gets an "A" for good grooming and multi-tasking on "C" (citrus).
The players:
- The non-native honey bee, Apis mellifera, which European colonists brought to the Jamestown colony (now Virginia) in 1622
- The non-native Satsuma mandarin, Citrus unshiu, is of Chinese origin and named after Unsyu (Wenzhou), China, but introduced to the West via Japan.
What to do:
- Thank the honey bee for pollinating the citrus blossoms! Note that National Pollinator Week is June 21-27.
Tags: Apis mellifera (34), citrus (2), Citrus unshiu (1), cleaning tongue (2), honey bee (234), mandarin blossom (1), proboscis (3)
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