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Bee

45 Special

Oulu

Oct 31 Fri • 2025 • 9:00pm

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45 Special, Oulu

Bee at the 45 Special, Oulu

Presale Passwords & On Sale Times

Bee

Public Onsale   Jun 3 Tue 2025 9:00am to Oct 31 Fri 2025 9:00pm

Tour Schedule

Bee

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Wikipedia Bio

Bees
Temporal range: 70–0 Ma Late Cretaceous – Present
The sugarbag bee, Tetragonula carbonaria
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Suborder: Apocrita
Infraorder: Aculeata
Superfamily: Apoidea
Clade: Anthophila
Families
Synonyms

Apiformes (from Latin 'apis')

Bees are winged insects that form a monophyletic clade Anthophila within the superfamily Apoidea of the order Hymenoptera,[1] with over 20,000 known species in seven recognized families.[2][3][4] Some species – including honey bees, bumblebees, and stingless bees – are social insects living in highly hierarchical colonies, while most species (>90%) – including mason bees, carpenter bees, leafcutter bees, and sweat bees – are solitary. Members of the most well-known bee genus, Apis (i.e. honey bees), are known to construct hexagonally celled waxy nests called hives.

Unlike the closely related wasps and ants, who are carnivorous/omnivorous, bees are herbivores that specifically feed on nectar (nectarivory) and pollen (palynivory), the former primarily as a carbohydrate source for metabolic energy, and the latter primarily for protein and other nutrients for their larvae. They are found on every continent except Antarctica, and in every habitat on the planet that contains insect-pollinated flowering plants. The most common bees in the Northern Hemisphere are the Halictidae, or sweat bees, but they are small and often mistaken for wasps or flies. Bees range in size from tiny stingless bee species, whose workers are less than 2 millimeters (0.08 in) long,[5] to the leafcutter bee Megachile pluto, the largest species of bee, whose females can attain a length of 39 millimeters (1.54 in). Vertebrate predators of bees include primates and birds such as bee-eaters; insect predators include beewolves and dragonflies.

Bees are best known to humans for their ecological roles as pollinators and, in the case of the best-known species, the western honey bee, for producing honey, a regurgitated and dehydrated viscous mixture of partially digested monosaccharides kept as food storage of the bee colony. Pollination management via bees is important both ecologically and agriculturally, and the decline in wild bee populations has increased the demand and value of domesticated pollination by commercially managed hives of honey bees. The analysis of 353 wild bee and hoverfly species across Britain from 1980 to 2013 found the insects have been lost from a quarter of the places they inhabited in 1980.[6] Human beekeeping or apiculture (meliponiculture for stingless bees) has been practiced as a discipline of animal husbandry for millennia, since at least the times of Ancient Egypt and Ancient Greece. Bees have appeared in mythology and folklore, through all phases of art and literature from ancient times to the present day, although primarily focused in the Northern Hemisphere where beekeeping is far more common. In Mesoamerica, the Maya have practiced large-scale intensive meliponiculture since pre-Columbian times.[5]

  1. ^ Engel, M. S. (2005) Family-group names for bees (Hymenoptera, Apoidea). American Museum Novitates 3476.
  2. ^ Danforth, B. N.; Sipes, S.; Fang, J.; Brady, S. G. (October 2006). "The history of early bee diversification based on five genes plus morphology". PNAS. 103 (41): 15118–15123. Bibcode:2006PNAS..10315118D. doi:10.1073/pnas.0604033103. PMC 1586180. PMID 17015826.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference Michener2000 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Almeida, Eduardo A.B.; Bossert, Silas; Danforth, Bryan N.; Porto, Diego S.; Freitas, Felipe V.; et al. (2023). "The evolutionary history of bees in time and space". Current Biology. 33 (16): 3409–3422.e6. Bibcode:2023CBio...33E3409A. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2023.07.005. PMID 37506702.
  5. ^ a b Grüter, Christoph (2020). Stingless Bees: Their Behaviour, Ecology and Evolution. Fascinating Life Sciences. Springer New York. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-60090-7. ISBN 978-3-030-60089-1. S2CID 227250633.
  6. ^ "Widespread losses of pollinating insects revealed across Britain". The Guardian. 26 March 2019.

Source: Wikipedia