Specimen of rare bee found in Saskatchewan
There’s a buzz in Saskatchewan after a specimen of a rare bee – last seen in the province nearly 70 years ago – was found near Wood Mountain.
A team from the Royal Saskatchewan Museum (RSM) collected a specimen of the Macropis Cuckoo Bee near Grasslands National Park in 2013, but only recently discovered the magnitude of their find.
According to a release from the Ministry of Parks, Culture and Sport, the bee “is a nest parasite, or cuckoo, of oil-collecting bees of the Macropis group that is entirely dependent on the oil from a wildflower known as Fringed Loosestrife.”
“This cuckoo is one of only two species in the Epeoloides genus in the world, and the only one occurring in the Western Hemisphere,” Dr. Cory Sheffield, the RSM’s curator of invertebrate zoology, said in the release.


