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Aussie Bee Online

  • Blue Banded Bee Pollination Trials at Adelaide Uni. PDF 232 Kb. Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 10, September 2006.

Dr Katja Hogendoorn and her team at the University of Adelaide have shown that blue banded bees could be a great alternative to European bumblebees for the Australian greenhouse tomato industry.

  • Tomato Pollination with Blue Banded Bees: The Results Are In!. PDF 244 Kb. Dr Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 9, April 2006.

Melissa Bell's research at the University of Western Sydney - Hawkesbury has now shown that blue banded bees (Amegilla) can be efficient pollinators of greenhouse

  • How to Make Nest Blocks for Blue Banded Bees. PDF 272 Kb. Les Dollin, ANBRC. Article 8, April 2006.

Australian blue banded bees (Amegilla) can be encouraged to nest in small portable nest blocks. Follow these step by step instructions and make your own nest blocks for your native blue banded bees.

  • Native Bee Hives Viewed in Spectacular 3D!. PDF 303 Kb. Dr Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 7, December 2005.

Mark Greco of the University of Western Sydney - Hawkesbury has developed an amazing new way of safely looking inside the nests of native bees using 'X-ray computerised tomgraphy' or CT scans. See Mark's remarkable three dimensional images of stingless bee hives and blue banded bee nests.

  • Secrets of Stingless Bee Breeding: The Results are In!. PDF 308 Kb. Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 6, August 2002.

How many drones mate with a virgin queen stingless bee when she soars away on her mating flight? Does the queen bee lay all the eggs in the brood comb? Kellie Palmer of the University of Sydney has used innovative DNA techniques to answer these questions -- with some surprising results.

  • Aussie Bee's Gardens Rise from the Ashes. PDF 404 Kb. Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 5, August 2002.

The bushfires of 2001 devastated the bee gardens at Aussie Bee along with many precious bee nests. But just eight months later the gardens are back! What's more, with our new knowledge of plants loved by native bees, we have been able to create even better gardens.

  • The Largest Bee in the World. PDF 332 Kb. Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 4, November 2001.

This 39 mm long bee with enormous pointy jaws, Megachile pluto, was found in 1859 in the jungles of Indonesia, then not seen again for over 100 years. Finally in 1981 the bee was rediscovered. Read the fascinating history of this bee and explore the amazing nests it builds inside the nests of termites.

  • Natural Hive Duplication: An Alternative Method of Propagating Australian Stingless Bees. PDF 275 Kb. Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 3, November 2001.

This simple, non-invasive method is gaining wide popularity. The Natural Hive Duplication technique is described in full detail for the first time. Stingless bee keepers are asked to help the ANBRC by making some observations.

  • Blue Banded Bees: Potential Pollinators of Glasshouse Tomatoes. PDF 221 Kb Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 2, November 2001.

Melissa Bell of the University of Western Sydney -Hawkesbury is conducting Australia’s first glasshouse trials with native blue banded bees. The latest results in this groundbreaking study show the potential of these bees for tomato pollination.

  • Welcome to Aussie Bee Online. PDF 263 Kb. Anne Dollin, ANBRC. Article 1, November 2001.

Meet the authors and explore the variety of topics to be covered in Aussie Bee Online, this exciting FREE resource from the Australian Native Bee Research Centre.

  • Cover Page. Cover Page for your Aussie Bee Online Article Collection. PDF 307 Kb.

We hope you will print out copies of these Aussie Bee Online articles and keep them in a ring-backed binder. They will build up, year by year, into a substantial new addition to your native bee library.

We have provided this splendid, full colour cover page (featuring the vivid colours of Australian native bees) so you can decorate the front of your binder.

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