Researchers record first-ever Canadian sighting of bee species in Windsor park - Action News
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Windsor

Researchers record first-ever Canadian sighting of bee species in Windsor park

Master's student Janean Sharkey was stumped when she couldn't identifysix of the bees she collected fromWindsor's Ojibway little did she know it was because these bees had never before been spotted in Canada.

'If you take the time and effort to look, it's amazing what you can find,' says researcher

Six female hibiscus bees were collected in Ojibway Park by Janean Sharkey in 2018. (Submitted by Janean Sharkey)

Master's student Janean Sharkey was stumped when she couldn't identifysix of the bees she collected from a park in Windsor.Little did she know, it was because these bees had never before been spotted in Canada.

"When I was trying to identify this group ... it wasn't making much sense to me," said Sharkey, who attends the University of Guelph's School of Environmental Sciences.

Eventually, she realized that the insect she was looking at under her microscope was thehibiscus or chimney beeformally known as Ptilothrix bombiformis. The bee species is an American migrant and its arrival in Canadamaybe another example of howspecies are expandingtheir habitats due to climate change.

Now, Sharkey's published her first scientific paper in the Journal of the Entomological Society of Ontario outlining her discovery,which she madein late 2019.

Sharkey had collected 2,000 bees from her traps in Ojibway Prairie Provincial Nature Reserve in 2018,six of which were female hibiscus bees.

It was when she started comparing the species to known ones across North America, rather than just Ontario, that she realized the bees had never before been seen in the country.

Janean Sharkey is a master's student at the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of Guelph. (Submitted by Janean Sharkey)

"I was pretty confident that my [identification]was correct ... but I had to confirm with a few people and once that [identification] was verified, then I was quite happy," she said.

"You never know what you're going to find until you look for it and I was looking for it, so I'm glad I found something."

Just by their appearance, Sharkeysaid she knew these bees were different. The bees have short and feathery yellow hairs on their thorax and long black hair on their hind legs.

The bees nestle into hard-packed soil near wetlands and the population isone of few able to land on water, collecting it to build "distinctive turrets at its nest opening," according to a news release from the University of Guelph. This trait is whatgives the beeits other common name, chimney.

According to the university, its insect collection curator, Steve Paiero,confirmed the insects were a new find for thepark. Meanwhile,a curator at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, Cory Sheffield, confirmed that this was a new sighting for Canada bringing the number of bee species in the country up to 927.

"If you take the time and effort to look, it's amazing what you can find in the natural world and this bee is just really interesting. It has this close relationship with the hibiscus plant," Sharkey said.

"Itjust sort of gives us a window into the world of how complex bee communities, relationshipswith bees and plants are, and how importantthey are to different habitats."

The researchers claim that this is the first time the hibiscus bee has been spotted in Canada. (Submitted by Janean Sharkey)

She added that the bee populations have likely been in Windsor-Essex gardens, adding that they enjoy the hibiscus shrub Rose of Sharon.

The spotting of the bee, Sharkey said, has sparked some concern for its well-being and the hardships it may be facing.

"Just like all the other species of native bees, we're concerned aboutimpacts of climate change, habitat degradation, invasive species and pesticides," she said.

Corrections

  • This story has been updated to correct the location of Ojibway Prairie Provincial Nature Reserve.
    Feb 09, 2021 8:45 AM ET