Bombus perplexus Cresson, 1863 is a animal in the Apidae family, order Hymenoptera, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Bombus perplexus Cresson, 1863 (Bombus perplexus Cresson, 1863)
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Bombus perplexus Cresson, 1863

Bombus perplexus Cresson, 1863

Bombus perplexus, the confusing bumblebee, is a northern North American bumblebee species that can host Fernald's cuckoo bumblebee.

Family
Genus
Bombus
Order
Hymenoptera
Class
Insecta

About Bombus perplexus Cresson, 1863

Bombus perplexus, commonly called the confusing bumblebee, is a species of bumblebee native to northern North America. Its range spans across Canada and extends into the eastern United States. Queens of this species measure 1.7 to 2.1 centimeters in body length, with an abdominal width of just under one centimeter. Their bodies are mostly black, with patches of pale hairs. Worker females are 1.2 to 1.4 centimeters long, with a width of half a centimeter. Workers are hairier than queens and have more yellow hairs, and their abdomens are patterned black and yellow. Males are the same size as worker females. This bumblebee species occurs across multiple regions and habitats: Canada's maritime regions, the Canadian Prairies, taiga, tundra, and temperate forests, and it can also be found in wetlands, wooded areas, and urban gardens. Males have reddish tips on their mandibles, white hairs on their head and legs, and a mix of yellow and white hairs on their thorax. Bombus perplexus feeds on a wide variety of plant genera, including bellflowers, thistles, honeysuckles, penstemons, pickerel weeds, and lindens. It may act as a host for Fernald's cuckoo bumblebee (B. fernaldae).

Photo: (c) Denis Doucet, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Denis Doucet · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera Apidae Bombus

More from Apidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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