Thinking this might be a male Perdita.
Furrow Bee (Halictus) on Snakeroot, Big Bend Preserve, Saratoga County, NY, August 2024
Possible 1st NY State iNat Observation.
Possible Saratoga County record. Only 3 prior GBIF records for NY: two from Westchester County north of NYC with unknown dates of collection, and one from Nassau County on Long Island collected in 1957. The species was only described in Mitchell 1960, underscoring the importance of natural history collections.
Collected from Lespedeza stuevei. While the 2021 state checklist by Veit, Ascher, et al. lists this species for Dukes County, I can't find any Martha's Vineyard records. Note clypeus with lateral lobes and dense apical hair, reddish-brown leg color, pigmented wings, abruptly narrowed T6 with longitudinal ridge, S6 narrowed apically with tiny subapical teeth.
On moist sand near the water's edge along a brackish pond. First report I'm aware of for Martha's Vineyard, and a species that was not even on my radar.
I'm surprised there aren't more CT observations of this species. Caught this individual resting in a lone cultivated Hibiscus moscheutos.
Distinctly green Pompilid (based on prey and tibial spines), about 10 mm long.
Male, 7. 2 mm. Collected from a perch near Lyonia ligustrina and Kalmia angustifolia. Colletes productus was the only Colletes species present.
Fire Recovery Bioblitz GRSM-02083 #0476
Malaise trap
Collected as part of the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (dlia.org)
Collected from Kalmia angustifolia, alongside Colletes bradleyi. Do these match a known Epeolus species? We have not been successful in keying them out.
Collected from Kalmia angustifolia, alongside Colletes bradleyi. Do these match a known Epeolus species? We have not been successful in keying them out.
This is an 11.5 mm female long-horned bee that formed part of an aggregation of about 150 similar females nesting in fine white sand in a Florida sandhill habitat. There are wetlands nearby with large stands of pickerel weed (Pontederia cordata).
The nesting behavior of the female shown here, and of the other females around it, was as follows: The bees’ nests lacked visible entrance holes, because the fine white sand of the nest area immediately filled in any holes dug by the bees. The female bees, laden with yellow pollen, flew around the nest area, low to the ground, in order to sense the location of their underground nests. They then landed and dug down into bare sand until disappearing. The sand closed behind them, leaving no evidence of the nest entrance. Females emerged five to ten minutes later, without pollen loads.
The nesting area of the long-horned bee females was visited throughout the day by Triepeolus cuckoo bees. These brood parasites were observed repeatedly entering individual Melissodes nests, including the nest of the bee shown here.
Some of the notable traits of the Melissodes female shown here include the following. (1) The hair bands on the second, third and fourth segments of the abdomen (T2-T4) are white, broad and situated along the hind rim of each segment (not set back from the rim). (2) The hair on the top of the thorax (on the scutum and scutellum) is dark, with an outline of long white hairs. (3) The hair on the mesepisternum (the side of the thorax) is entirely pale. There are, however, small patches of dark hairs near the pronotal lobes. (4) Hairs on the vertex (the top of the head, behind the eyes) are both light and dark. (5) The bee's clypeus is protuberant and pitted throughout. (The clypeus is the face-part above the mandibles.)
I can't tell the difference between Colletes productus and Colletes inaequalis; does C. inaequalis fly at this time of year? Thank you for any tips.
Bob G.
Collected on Cornus. Has protuberance on mesepisternum between front and mid legs. One wing with two submarginal cells, the other with three.
keyed close to commoda, but I can’t find evidence that commoda has red integument on legs other than tarsi. Bees of this type are common in late spring across Chicago on zizia
rather big, rather blue, dark scopal hairs
on Rubus
Great find here yesterday by @nativeplantaddict and noticed by @dmantack. Northernmost confirmed modern record, although @mpelikan might change that soon...
Many males patrolling Kalmia angustifolia; 1 female present early on, but no more seen after that. Closely matches phenology at other known sites.
Good bee site in general. Trip list:
The Red-shouldered is driving the larger Red-tailed Hawk out of its territory.
bluish sheen
This fuzzy little guy (c. 8 mm) keeps keying out as A. erythrogaster, which would be a new species for Dukes County/Martha's Vineyard. It seems a bit small, with the vertex rather long for that species. But apparently all-black males like this are not uncommon. Cheek shape; long, thin, reddish basitarsi; fairly short clypeus with dense pitting and a magnificent brush of pale hair; F1 slightly longer than F2; terga with no apical fascia and depressed, reddish hyaline margins; sternal subapical fimbriae with sparse long hairs, interrupted medially; and long. slender mandibles with prominent subapical teeth are among the erythrogaster-like traits I was able to capture. Collected from Epigaea repens.
Including photos of females with two of their parasites here - Nomada illinoensis/sayi and Leucophora
a parasite of Andrena, perhaps miserabilis here. They dig to find nests, and only miserabilis has regularly dirt-plugged nests here at this date.
clypeus somewhat taller than miserabilis, and white not yellow; patrolling cardamine douglasii
Female. Found under a pile of loose sand that was probably the start of a nest burrow. I poked at the sand, expecting to find a burrow that had been blocked, and found her instead. After taking photos, I returned her to where I found her.
Collected from Epigaea repens. Female, 9.9 mm. Long malar, narrow vertex and gena, crossing mandibles, dark scopa, coarse punctures on clypeus with broad impunctate center line.
2 individuals, but from within a few feet of each other at a nesting aggregation of Andrena frigida(?). individual on ground was digging at a site that a female was actively provisioning.
Same location as a male from a few weeks ago. Many Nomada, and a few provisioning females.
Breeding pair found on the ground. After picking them up, the male refused to release the female, who wiggled around unsuccessfully. Animals were released after photography.
Ground-dwelling, observed digging in soft ground. At least 4 bees observed in area at the time. Pictured are two separate specimens. Exact species unknown by me, but believed to bee Andrena Clarkella?
@mollymjacobson
On Pityopsis falcata, could it be M. dentiventris? Had a color and general impression unlike any common orange melissodes that I've encountered.
Gynandromorph! Posted with permission from Barr Entomological Museum.