The article presents the results of an experimental study of the behavior of the resin bee Megachile sculpturalis Smith, 1853 inhabiting Fabre hives. The hives provided to the bees for colonization were made of segments of reed stalks (Phragmites australis) in the form of tubes, open on one side and closed on the other. The tubes were tied into bundles and inserted into the front wall of the hive or fixed to its sides. In addition, separate tubes were inserted into the front wall of the hive at different distances from each other. Female bees preferred to colonize tubes located on the front wall of the hive separately at a distance of 2.5 and 4.5 cm from each other (49.5 % and 40.7 % of colonized tubes, respectively). Tubes tied into bundles were colonized less willingly. Bundles located on the front wall of the hive were colonized more readily (32.0 % of the colonized tubes in bundles) than bundles located on the sides of the hive (12.8 % of the colonized tubes in bundles). Bunches assembled from tubes with a straight cut of the front edge were populated 2.3 times more often than bundles assembled from tubes with an oblique cut of the front edge. Tubes of the outermost row of a bundle of tubes were populated more often than tubes located in the second row or in the center of the bundle of tubes. The percentage of colonization of tubes in the first row was 16.5 %, in the second row – 13.5 %, and of tubes located in the center of the bundle – 7.7 %. The lower density of tube colonization in certain variants of the experiment is explained by the fact that in these variants the female bees had difficulties remembering the location of the tube they had chosen for colonization. The female bees populated tubes of different diameters in the range from 7 to 16 mm, without a preference for tubes of any diameter. The length of the populated tubes varied from 7 to 35 cm. A preference for tubes in any range of length was also not revealed. The lack of skills in assessing the linear parameters of the cavity for the nest in females of M. sculpturalis is explained by their loss due to the transition to a tenantry – a settlement of nests of other bee species. This assumption is confirmed by the known tendency of M. sculpturalis to populate holes of abandoned nests of Xylocopa bees, including in the Crimea. Tubes with a smooth concave bottom were populated 2.7 times more often than tubes with an uneven and convex bottom. This feature of nesting of M. sculpturalis is also interpreted as a consequence of the transition to a tenantry.