What appears to be an ordinary cemetery in upstate New York has turned out to be home to one of the most remarkable pollinator discoveries in recent years. Researchers from Cornell University have found an estimated 5.5 million mining bees living beneath East Lawn Cemetery in Ithaca, New York. The vast underground aggregation of native bees may have occupied the site for more than a century, surviving thanks to undisturbed soil and favourable nesting conditions. Scientists say the discovery highlights the importance of protecting overlooked habitats and could provide valuable clues for conserving vulnerable pollinator populations facing growing threats from habitat loss, pesticides and climate change.
The hidden bee metropolis beneath a New York cemetery
The discovery centres on the regular mining bee (Andrena regularis), a native North American species that nests underground. Researchers estimate that between 3 million and 8 million bees inhabit the cemetery grounds, with 5.5 million representing the average estimate. The insects occupy roughly 1.5 acres beneath East Lawn Cemetery, creating what scientists believe may be one of the largest known aggregations of ground-nesting bees ever documented.
The finding began when Cornell researchers noticed unusually large numbers of bees emerging from the cemetery each spring. Further investigation revealed an astonishing concentration of underground nests hidden beneath the soil.
Unlike honeybees, mining bees are solitary insects. Each female digs and maintains her own nest, laying eggs and storing pollen underground for her offspring. There is no queen and no hive structure.
What makes the Ithaca site extraordinary is not the presence of a giant colony, but the fact that millions of individual bees have chosen to nest in the same location. Scientists estimate the aggregation contains roughly as many bees as would be found in 140 to 200 honeybee hives.
A century-old sanctuary for pollinators
Researchers believe the nesting aggregation may have existed since the early 1900s. Historical records show that Andrena regularis has been documented at East Lawn Cemetery for more than a century.
The cemetery provides several conditions that make it an ideal habitat. The soil is well-drained and easy to excavate, the grounds experience very little disturbance and pesticide exposure is limited. Unlike farmland or urban developments that are frequently altered, cemeteries often remain largely unchanged for generations.
Scientists believe this stability has allowed countless generations of mining bees to return to the same nesting grounds year after year. The result is a pollinator refuge that may have persisted unnoticed for more than 100 years.
The significance of the discovery extends well beyond a single cemetery. Most people associate pollinators with honeybees, yet the majority of wild bee species are solitary and many nest underground. These native bees play a crucial role in pollinating wildflowers, trees and agricultural crops, but their habitats often receive little protection.
The Ithaca aggregation demonstrates how important undisturbed nesting sites can be for maintaining healthy bee populations. It also suggests that other significant pollinator habitats may exist in overlooked places such as cemeteries, parks, grasslands and abandoned fields.
For conservationists, the site provides a rare opportunity to study what happens when a native bee population is allowed to thrive for generations without major human interference.
An unexpected ally for local agriculture
The cemetery sits close to Cornell Orchards, where apple trees and other fruit crops bloom each spring. Mining bees emerge during the same period, making them particularly effective pollinators.
Researchers believe the enormous underground population may have been contributing to pollination in nearby orchards for decades. Native bees are often highly efficient pollinators because they can remain active in cooler weather and transfer pollen more effectively than some other species.
As concerns grow over declining pollinator populations worldwide, understanding and protecting native bees is becoming increasingly important for food production and ecosystem health.
The growing threats facing ground-nesting bees
Although the cemetery population appears healthy today, scientists warn that ground-nesting bees remain vulnerable across much of North America. Habitat destruction, urban development, intensive agriculture and pesticide use have reduced suitable nesting areas for many species.
Unlike managed honeybees, solitary bees cannot simply be relocated if their habitat disappears. They depend on specific soil conditions and stable nesting sites. If land is paved over, heavily landscaped or otherwise disturbed, entire populations can be wiped out.
Researchers note that the East Lawn Cemetery aggregation might never have survived if the area had undergone significant development during the past century. Its survival highlights the importance of preserving habitats that may appear ordinary but support extraordinary biodiversity.
Nature still has surprises left to reveal
One of the most remarkable aspects of the discovery is where it occurred. The cemetery sits near a major university and has been visited by countless people over the years. Yet one of the largest known populations of native bees remained hidden beneath the surface.
The finding serves as a reminder that scientists still have much to learn about pollinators and the habitats they depend on. It also shows that important ecological discoveries do not always occur in remote rainforests or unexplored wilderness. Sometimes they are found in familiar places that people pass every day without a second thought.
What scientists hope to learn next
Researchers are continuing to study the aggregation to understand how it has remained stable for so long. They hope the site will reveal new insights into nesting behaviour, population dynamics and habitat requirements for native bees.
Those lessons could prove invaluable as conservationists work to reverse pollinator declines across North America. The discovery also raises the possibility that other large bee aggregations may exist unnoticed elsewhere.
For now, East Lawn Cemetery stands as an unexpected conservation success story. Beneath its quiet grounds lies a thriving underground city of millions of bees that has endured for more than a century, offering a rare glimpse of how native pollinators can flourish when given the habitat they need.
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