User:Gene-va/In Progress/Willow Mining Bee

The Willow Mining Bee (Andrena salicifloris) is a bee in the Andrena genus. The bee ranges from Colorado to California and north to British Columbia, and often inhabits arid and alpine lands. The bee is often black or dark brown, and is sparsely coated with grayish hair on the thorax, legs and on the abdomen. The pollen basket is on most of the hind leg. The wings of the Willow Mining Bee are smokey, and their veins are black.

As in the case of most bees, adult Willow Mining Bees drink nectar, whereas Willow Mining Bee larva feed both on nectar and pollen. The nests of the Willow Mining Bees are created when a mated female bee excavates a small tunnell that branch off into small branches. These branches each contain a brood cell, and once each cell has pollen and nectar for the larva to feed on - a small doorway to the brood cell is closed. The larva grows rapidly, but the bees do not emerge until spring.