Stem-nesting
Guides
Ceratina calcarata
Spurred Ceratina
Ceratina calcarata is a small carpenter bee native to eastern North America, ranging from Georgia to Ontario and east to Nova Scotia. It exhibits facultative subsocial behavior, with mothers providing extended care to offspring and producing a distinctive worker-like "dwarf eldest daughter" that forages for siblings. This species has become an important model organism for studying the evolutionary origins of social behavior, being the first subsocial bee species to have its genome published.
Ceratina nanula
Tiny Small carpenter, dwarf ceratina
Ceratina nanula is a species of small carpenter bee in the family Apidae, described by Cockerell in 1897. It is one of the smallest members of the genus Ceratina, commonly known as the "dwarf ceratina" or "tiny small carpenter." The species has been documented in Central America and North America. Like other Ceratina species, it is a solitary bee that nests in pithy or hollow plant stems.
Pemphredon
Typical Aphid Wasps, Aphid Wasps
Pemphredon is a genus of small to medium-sized solitary wasps in the family Crabronidae, commonly known as aphid wasps. The genus contains approximately 37 recognized species distributed across the Holarctic and northern Oriental regions. Females are specialized predators of aphids, which they hunt to provision nest cells for their larvae. These wasps are considered beneficial insects in agricultural and garden settings due to their role in aphid population control.
Pemphredon inornata
aphid wasp
Pemphredon inornata is a small solitary wasp in the family Crabronidae, commonly known as an aphid wasp. The species hunts aphids as prey for its larvae, paralyzing them and transporting them to nest cavities in hollow stems, twig pith, or pre-existing holes in wood. It is one of approximately 20 recognized Pemphredon species in North America north of Mexico. The wasp has been documented exhibiting rapid, evasive flight that allows it to bypass ant guards at aphid colonies.
Pemphredoninae
Aphid Wasps
Pemphredoninae is a large subfamily of solitary, parasitoidal wasps in the family Crabronidae, containing over 1,000 species. Members are commonly known as aphid wasps due to the prevalence of aphid predation in many genera, though prey preferences vary consistently by genus. The subfamily has historically been treated as a separate family. Most species nest in pre-existing cavities including hollow stems, twigs, beetle borings, or excavated tunnels in soil or plant material. Several genera exhibit social or communal nesting behaviors, including Microstigmus and Spilomena.
Pseudomyrmex pallidus
Pallidus-group Twig Ants
Pseudomyrmex pallidus is a small, slender ant species native to the Nearctic and Neotropical realms, with an extensive range from the southern United States through Central America and into South America. Workers are monomorphic and exhibit variable coloration from yellow to orange or brown. The species nests exclusively in hollow stems of dead grasses and woody twigs, typically at the interface of grassy and wooded habitats. Colonies are facultatively polygynous and polydomous, containing 1–15 queens and 20–200 workers.