<h2 id="chapter-7"><ANTIMG src="images/i_085.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class="chapter-title">THE COTTON-BEES AND RESIN-BEES</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">There</span> are many Bees who, like the Leaf-cutters,
do not make their own dwellings,
but use shelters made by the work of others. Many
of the Osmia-bees seize the old homes of the Masons;
other honey-gatherers use earthworm galleries,
snail-shells, dry brambles which have been
made into hollow tubes by the mining Bees, and even
the homes of the Digger Wasps burrowed in
the sand. Among these borrowers are the Cotton-bees,
who fill the reeds with cottony satchels,
and the Resin-bees, who plug up snail-shells with
gum and resin.</p>
<p>There is a reason for such arrangement. The
Bees who work hard to make their homes, such as
the Mason-bee, who scrapes hard clay and makes a
large cement mansion, the Carpenter-bee, who bores
dead wood to a depth of nine inches, and the Anthophora,
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who digs corridors and cells in the banks
hardened by the sun, have no time left to spend in
furnishing their cells elaborately. On the other
hand, the Bees who take possession of ready-made
homes, are artists in interior decorations. There is
the Leaf-cutting Bee, who makes her leafy baskets
with such skill; the Upholsterer-bee, who hangs her
cells with poppy-petals, and the Cotton-bee, who
makes the most beautiful purses of cotton.</p>
<p>We have only to look at the Cotton-bee’s nests,
to realize that the insect who makes these could not
be a digger, too. When newly-felted, and not yet
sticky with honey, the wadded purse is very elegant,
of a dazzling white. No bird’s-nest can compare
with it in fineness of material or in gracefulness of
form. How, with the little bales of cotton brought
up one by one in her mouth, can the Bee manage to
mat all together into one material and then to work
this into a thimble-shaped wallet? She has no other
tools to work with than those owned by the Mason-bees
and the Leaf-cutting Bees; namely, her jaws
and her feet. Yet what very different results are
obtained!</p>
<p>It is hard to see the Cotton-bees in action, since
they work inside the reeds when making the nests.
However, I will describe the little that I saw. The
Bee procures her cotton from many different kinds
of plants, such as thistles, mulleins, the woolly sage
and everlastings. She uses only the plants that are
dead and dry, however, never fresh ones.<!--TN: added period--> In
this way she avoids mildew, which would make its
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appearance in her nests in the mass of hairs still
filled with sap.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_087.jpg" alt="they work inside the reeds when making the nests" /></div>
<p>She alights on the plant she wishes to use, scrapes
it with her mouth, and then passes the tiny flake to
her hind-legs, which hold it pressed against the chest,
mixes with it still more down, and makes the whole
into a little ball. When this is the size of a pea, it
goes back to the mouth, and the insect flies off, with
her bale of cotton in her mouth. If we have the patience
to wait, we shall see her coming back again and
again to the same plant, until her bags are all made.</p>
<p>The Cotton-bee uses different grades of cotton for
the different parts of her work. She is like the bird,
who furnishes the inside of her nest with wool to
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make it soft for the little birds, and strengthens the
outside with sticks. The Bee makes her cells, the
grubs’ nurseries, of the very finest down, the cotton
gathered from a thistle; she makes the barrier plug
at the entrance of stiff, prickly hairs, such as the
coarse bristles scraped from a mullein-leaf.</p>
<p>I do not see her making the cells inside the bramble,
but I catch her preparing the plug for the top.
With her fore-legs she tears the cotton apart and
spreads it out; with her jaws she loosens the hard
lumps; with her forehead she presses each new layer
of the plug upon the one below. This is a rough
task; but probably her general way of working is
the same for the finer cells.</p>
<p>Some Cotton-bees after making the plug go even
further and fill up the empty space at the end of the
bramble with any kind of rubbish that they can
find: little pieces of gravel, bits of earth, grains of
sawdust, mortar, cypress-catkins, or broken leaves.
The pile is a real barricade, and will keep any foe
from breaking in.</p>
<p>The honey with which the Cotton-bee whose nest
I examined filled the cells was pale-yellow, all of
the same kind and only partly liquefied, so that it
would not trickle through the cotton bag. On this
honey the egg is laid. After a while the grub is
hatched and finds its food all ready. It plunges its
head in the honey, drinks long draughts, and grows
fat. We will leave it there, knowing that after a
while it will build a cocoon and turn into a Cotton-bee.</p>
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<p>Another interesting Bee who uses a ready-made
home is the Resin-bee. In the stone-heaps which
have been left from the quarries, we often find the
Field-mouse sitting on a grass mattress, nibbling
acorns, almonds, olive-stones, apricot-stones, and
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snail-shells. When he is gone, he has left behind
him, under the overhanging stones, a heap of empty
shells. Among these, there is always a hope of finding
a few plugged up with resin, the nests of this
sort of Bee. The Osmia-bees also use snail-shells,
but they plug them up with clay.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_089.jpg" alt=" we often find the Field-mouse sitting on a grass mattress" /></div>
<p>It is hard to tell the Resin-bees’ nests, because the
insect often makes its home at the very inside of the
spiral, a long way from the mouth. I hold up a
shell to the light. If it is quite transparent, I know
that it is empty and I put it back to be used for future
nests. If the second whorl is opaque, does not
let the light through, the spiral contains something.
What? Earth washed in by the rain? Remnants
of the dead Snail? That remains to be seen. With
a little pocket-trowel I make a wide window in the
middle of the final whorl. If I see a gleaming resin
floor, with incrustations of gravel, the thing is
settled: I have a Resin-bee’s nest.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_090.jpg" alt="a Resin-bee’s nest" /></div>
<p>The Bee picks out the particular whorl of the
shell which is the right size for her nest. In large
shells, the nest is near the back; in smaller shells, at
the very front, where the passage is widest. She
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always makes a partition of a mosaic formed of bits
of gravel set in gum. I did not know at first what
this gum was. It is amber-colored, semi-transparent,
brittle, soluble in spirits of wine, and burns
with a sooty flame and a strong smell of resin. These
characteristics told me that the Bee uses the
resinous drops that ooze from the trunks of various
cone-bearing trees. There are plenty of junipers
in the neighborhood, and I think that these form
the main part of this Bee’s materials. If there
were pines, cypresses, and other cone-bearing trees
near, she would probably use those.</p>
<p>After the lid of resin and gravel, the Bee stops
up the shell still further with bits of gravel, catkins
and needles of the juniper, and other odds
and ends, including a few rare little land-shells.
This is the secondary barrier, to make the shell still
safer for her nest. The Cotton-bee uses the
same sort of barrier in the bramble. The Resin-bee
uses it only in the larger shells, where there is
much vacant space; in the smaller ones, where her
nest reaches nearly to the entrance, she does without
it.</p>
<p>The cells come next, farther back in the spiral.
There are usually only two. The front room, which
is the larger, contains a male, which in this kind of
Bee is larger than the female; the smaller back
room houses a female. It is extraordinary how the
mother Bee knows the sex of the egg she is laying.
This matter has never been explained to the satisfaction
of scientists.</p>
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The Resin-bee makes a mistake in choosing large
shells and not filling them up to the very entrance.
The Osmia-bee also makes her nest in snail-shells;
she often seizes upon the empty rooms in the Resin-bee’s
house and fills them with her mass of cells.
She then stops up the entrance with a thick clay
stopper. When July comes, this house with the two
families of tenants becomes the scene of a tragic conflict.
The Resin-bees, in the back rooms, on
attaining the adult state, burst their swaddling bands,
bore their way through the resin partitions, pass
through the gravel barricade and try to release themselves.
Alas, the strange family ahead blocks
the way! The Osmia inmates are still in the grub
stage; they mean to stay in their cells till the next
spring. The Resin-bees cannot get out through this
second row of clay-stoppered cells; they give up all
hope and perish behind the wall of earth. If their
mother had only foreseen this danger, the disaster
would never have happened; but instinct has failed
her for once. Misfortune has not taught the Resin-bees
anything through all the generations; and this
contradicts the theory of those scientists who say
that animals learn through experience.</p>
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