Ancient bees used mammal tooth sockets as nests 20,000 years ago

A fossil discovery on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola shows that solitary bees nested inside the empty tooth sockets of mammal bones left by owls in a cave around 20,000 years ago. The finding, published in 2025, marks the first known evidence of bees using animal bones for reproduction.

Researchers identified the nests while studying bones from a limestone cave in the Dominican Republic. Lead author Lazaro Viñola López of the Field Museum noticed smooth, concave deposits inside jawbone sockets that resembled mud chambers made by modern solitary bees.

CT scans confirmed the structures matched bee nests and preserved ancient pollen grains. The bees likely mixed dirt with saliva to build the tiny chambers, each smaller than a pencil eraser, possibly to protect eggs from predators.

The nests received the name Osnidum almontei, honoring paleontologist Juan Almonte Milan. No bee bodies survived in the warm cave conditions, leaving the exact species unknown.

Viñola López noted the limestone landscape offered few soil nesting sites, making the owl-deposited bones a rare opportunity for the insects.

Связанные статьи

A 59,000-year-old tooth from a Siberian cave reveals that Neanderthals drilled into cavities to treat decay. The discovery pushes back the origins of dentistry by tens of thousands of years. Researchers identified clear marks from stone tools on the molar.

Сообщено ИИ

Archaeologists have uncovered evidence that teeth from elite Maya individuals were deposited in a cave in Belize during the Classic period. The remains, found far from their original burial sites, suggest a ritual practice linked to ancestor veneration and the underworld.

A cave on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast shows signs that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens may have shared tools and cultural practices. The findings come from Üçağızlı II cave, where both species occupied the site at different times but left behind remarkably similar artefacts.

Сообщено ИИ

Researchers have analyzed mitochondrial DNA from eight Neanderthal teeth found in Stajnia Cave in Poland, reconstructing the genetic profile of a small group that lived there around 100,000 years ago. The study, published in Current Biology, marks the first such multi-individual genetic picture from a single site north of the Carpathians. The findings show genetic links to Neanderthals across Europe and the Caucasus.

Этот сайт использует куки

Мы используем куки для анализа, чтобы улучшить наш сайт. Прочитайте нашу политику конфиденциальности для дополнительной информации.
Отклонить