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Osmia lignaria (Blue Orchard Bee), a native megachilid bee that nests in holes and reeds |
Something strange happened in college. To meet my minimum science requirements, sure that I would be suffering through more tedious memorization of numbers, rules, and formulas, I looked for the least boring, most "liberal artsy" of the science classes in the course catalog. I signed up for Evolutionary Ecology and Cosmology and fell in love with both.
Suddenly, science was fascinating, relevant, and useful. It was tinged with mysticism and magic, and full of beauty and wonder. My two science professors, passionate about their fields of expertise, brought to life for me the science of life and of the cosmos. Evolution and ecology and the mysteries of the origins of the universe fascinated me.
But it was too late - I was already deep into my major and committed to thinking of science as something arcane, confusing, and dry -- something that belonged to science and math people, not to English majors like me. Those classes, I thought, were just odd diversions, strange aberrations, lucky breaks in my quest to knock out the core courses required for a liberal arts major to graduate.
But it was too late - I was already deep into my major and committed to thinking of science as something arcane, confusing, and dry -- something that belonged to science and math people, not to English majors like me. Those classes, I thought, were just odd diversions, strange aberrations, lucky breaks in my quest to knock out the core courses required for a liberal arts major to graduate.
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Rachel Carson paying attention |
I especially regret not studying botany earlier in life, along with all of the life sciences - the studies of the amazing community of life on the planet--entymology, ornithology, zoology, microbiology, and so on.
So in small ways I've been trying to remedy my ignorance of science for years, and I've made more headway with plants than with other living things, but still feel woefully un-learned. Carl Sagan and Rachel Carson have helped, and field guides, and smart friends, and just spending a lot of time outside in the natural world paying attention.
So when I get to look at a sweat bee under a microscope and see her back glittering iridescent green, a tiny, magical, shimmering, bejeweled surface invisible to the naked eye, it's an exciting day for me.
At the Organic Growers School last weekend I had a chance to do just that - at a class called "Meet the Bees," taught by Dr. Jill Sidebottom. I sat next to my new blogger friend Rachel in Dr. Sidebottom's bee class, and we totally nerded out.
At the Organic Growers School last weekend I had a chance to do just that - at a class called "Meet the Bees," taught by Dr. Jill Sidebottom. I sat next to my new blogger friend Rachel in Dr. Sidebottom's bee class, and we totally nerded out.
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Inspecting bees under the microscope |
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Agapostemon sericeus (Sweat Bee), courtesy of Bee Tribes of the World (bugsrus, York University) -- similar to the emerald green sweat bee I studied under the microscope in "Meet the Bees." |
Dr. Jill has been studying bees and insects sometimes mistaken for bees in Christmas tree fields, thanks to NC Extension (yay, my tax dollars at work!). She showed us a lot of specimens and put us through the paces with bee, wasp, and fly identification (I have a lot to learn, suffice to say).
The class deepened my love of the bumbling Bombus genus (Bumblebees!). Bombus species, I learned from Dr. Jill, are excellent pollinators because they are big, hairy, clumsy, and loud. The volume of their buzzing as they perch on the edge or hang out inside of a flower actually helps shake loose pollen, which then collects on their hairy bodies.
The class deepened my love of the bumbling Bombus genus (Bumblebees!). Bombus species, I learned from Dr. Jill, are excellent pollinators because they are big, hairy, clumsy, and loud. The volume of their buzzing as they perch on the edge or hang out inside of a flower actually helps shake loose pollen, which then collects on their hairy bodies.
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Bombus terrestris (a Bumblebee species) courtesy of Wikipedia Commons |
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Rachel inspecting bees with a hand lens |
Thanks to Dr. Jill Sidebottom for a great introduction to all of the different kinds of bees in this part of the world, and thanks to the Organic Growers School for the chance to play at science!
PS/update 3/13: Thanks to Christina for sending me another amazing wild bee photo collection: the USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab's Flickr stream which includes hundreds of beautiful photos of bees.