- Apidae
Taxobox
name = Apidae
image_width = 200px
image_caption =Carpenter bee "Xylocopa micans " on "Vitex " sp.
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Arthropoda
classis =Insecta
ordo =Hymenoptera
subordo =Apocrita
superfamilia =Apoidea
familia = Apidae
subdivision_ranks = Subfamilies
subdivision =
*Apinae Honey bee s,bumblebee s,stingless bee s,orchid bee s and others
*Nomadinae Cuckoo bees
*Xylocopinae Carpenter beesThe Apidae are a large family of
bee s, comprising the commonhoney bee s,stingless bee s (which are also cultured for honey),carpenter bee s, orchid bees, cuckoo bees,bumblebee s, and various other less well-known groups. The family Apidae presently includes all the genera that were previously classified in the families Anthophoridae andCtenoplectridae , and most of these are solitary species, though a few are alsocleptoparasite s. The four groups that were subfamilies in the old family Apidae are presently ranked as tribes within the subfamilyApinae . This trend has been taken to its extreme in a few recent classifications that place all the existing bee families together under the name "Apidae" (or, alternatively, the non-Linnaean clade "Anthophila "), but this is not a widely-accepted practice.The subfamily Apinae contains a diversity of lineages, the majority of which are solitary, and whose nests are simple burrows in the soil. However, honey bees, stingless bees, and bumblebees are colonial (
eusocial ), though they are sometimes believed to have each developed this independently, and show notable differences in such things as communication between workers and methods of nest construction. Xylocopines (the subfamily which includes carpenter bees) are mostly solitary, though they tend to be gregarious, and some lineages such as theAllodapini contain eusocial species; most members of this subfamily make nests in plant stems or wood. The nomadines are allcleptoparasite s in the nests of other bees.
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