In celebration of World Bee Day, May 20, 2026.
The world of bees is amazingly diverse, with more than 20,000 species recognized to date. Work being done by one of our partner organizations, the Native Bee Society of BC, has identified 10 species not previously recorded for BC and brought the total known for our province to about 500. Most of those species can only be identified by experts using microscopes, and their work is being used to build a BC Bee Atlas. Our area has lower bee diversity than Vancouver Island or the BC Interior but nevertheless we have much to see and learn close to home. Community scientists around Squamish have been using iNaturalist to report and provide preliminary identifications, working from photographs. Experts have confirmed at least 26 identifications to species based on these photographs.
Scientists have organized bees into six families, and we have members of five in Squamish. Here are some details.
The Apidae family includes our bumblebees, the honey bees (non-native!), and some species of cuckoo bees. (Cuckoo bees steal food or prey from another bee: for more information.) The Apidae family represents over 60% of the 900 bees reported to iNaturalist for Squamish, in 11 confirmed species.


The Megachilidae, at about 130 observations (14%) is our next most-represented family, and includes mason bees, leafcutters, woolcarders and resin bees. The only mason bee we’ve identified to species is our appealing little western blue orchard bee. We’ve confirmed nine other species, mostly leafcutters.


The Halictidae are the sweat bees, a family with considerable variation in size, shape, and colour. They represent 12% of our observations, but we’ve confirmed just three species. Here are the two most commonly seen: the orange-legged furrow bee and the fine-striped sweat bee.


The Andrenidae are commonly known as mining bees. We’ve observed fewer than 100 individuals in Squamish, about 11% of our total. This family also varies widely in size and colour. Most of these ground nesters emerge early in the season: an exception is our British Columbia miner bee which we’ve seen a few times in August. We’ve confirmed one other species, the prunus miner bee.


The Colletidae, the plasterer bees, are our least-represented family. We have just 14 observations. Most of those reported belong to the cellophane bee genus Colletes. We have just one confirmed species, the punctate masked bee, which was introduced to North America from Europe in about 1980.


If you’d like to learn more, you might consider “The Bees in Your Backyard: a Guide to North America’s Bees“.
Thanks for caring.
Gwen, an interested amateur.
Banner photo: Two female bees from the Megachilidae family. At top left there’s a western leafcutter (our biggest and most commonly-identified leafcutter) with at lower right a much smaller leafcutter who can’t be identified to species from this photo.
