The
imago lives on
pollen. The larvae are exclusively
parasitic, mainly living in the nests of solitary wild bees. The female lays between 2000 and 10000 eggs, but most of these fail to reach maturity either for lack of food or through predation. In contrast with the adult, the larvae are only about 3 mm long, and their development proceeds through
hypermetamorphosis. The various larval stages are therefore of different forms. Unlike the larvae of beetles of the genus
Meloe, the first stage larva does not cling on to a potential host, but has to actively seek a host out. Once the larva has consumed the egg and stored
nectar and pollen from a bee's nest, they leave it. They then moult again, and emerge with their back legs formed. From this stage they pupate, and emerge from the
chrysalis as adults. If a larva accidentally selects a
honey bee as host, it dies in the hive. ==References==