Diario del proyecto Bees of San Diego County

Archivos de Diario para octubre 2020

02 de octubre de 2020

Beautiful Bee Photo(s)

As Cabrillo closed the Park for Pollinators bioblitz on September 30th, they did a great write up on their FB page, highlighting a gorgeous photo of one of our top Bees of San Diego County contributors @tom_barnes_ Tom Barnes.
You can see the post here:
https://www.facebook.com/CabrilloNPS/photos/a.130037470341909/3616324098379878/
Tom has photographed 47 identifiable species of bees for our project and his photography is outstanding. Thank you Tom!!
See the list here:

https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?project_id=5581&place_id=any&verifiable=any&captive=any&user_id=tom_barnes_&hrank=species&view=species
The month-long was a great success and the bee watching this late in the season at Cabrillo was pristine! Looking forward to the next one.

Publicado el 02 de octubre de 2020 a las 11:37 PM por patsimpson2000 patsimpson2000 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

10 de octubre de 2020

Effects of Habitat Fragmentation, Climate Change and Introduced Species...

Hello everyone,

If you missed it this afternoon, our own Dr. Keng-Lou James Hung @kjhung presented a fascinating lecture live on FB for the San Diego Natural History Museum. Follow the link below to watch.

"Effects of habitat fragmentation, climate change, and introduced species on native pollinators in a biodiversity hotspot Presented By Dr. Keng-Lou James Hung"

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=328700495087616

Publicado el 10 de octubre de 2020 a las 02:49 AM por patsimpson2000 patsimpson2000 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

24 de octubre de 2020

Please help! Bombus impatiens search.

Hi Everyone,

A recent record from October 14th indicates the presence of Bombus impatiens, a non-native bumble bee used for greenhouse pollination. See observation here: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/63274417

If you have some time and are willing to go to University Heights to check if you can find more of them, this would help in knowing if there is an established population there.

Managing invasive species is an important aspect of preserving the safety of our native bees. A lot of bee scientists and advocates for our native bees rely on records from us citizen scientists to gather field data. Your help would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks you :)

Patricia

Publicado el 24 de octubre de 2020 a las 03:47 AM por patsimpson2000 patsimpson2000 | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario