Sunday, May 5, 2024

Bug Banter by bugeyed Bernie - Macropis nuda


Ask the Inverter, 

Inverter counsel on insect's lives.

An open discussion about invertebrate life.



A bee is a bee, right? Aren't they all the same?
Dear bugeyed Bernie, 

"You have mentioned that there are over 350 bee species in Vermont. Are they all the same? If not what is a species example of what is unique and interesting about them?

                                                                    Tobi Bee Inspired. 

Dear Tobi Bee Inspired, 

First I congratulate you for thinking there might be differences among bee species. Amongst those in Vermont, there are differences in phenology, population status & nativity, body size, mating behavior and other behaviors, sociality (diversity in social organization), nesting, foraging, cell provisioning, egg, and larva development, life cycle, reproduction, parasites (they are host to or parasites themselves), and plant associations.

Let's cover a few of those characteristics by looking at one Vermont bee species, Macropis nuda (data from VCE - credit given below.) This bee species is commonly called the Dark-legged Yellow Loosestrife Bee. 

Loosestrife Bees (Genus Macropis) are among the rarest bees in the Northeast. They are unique in collecting oils from our native Loosestrifes (Genus Lysimachia) and are thus dependent on these yellow flowers. There is some evidence that these bees were once more common and widespread than they are today.

All species of the genus Macropis are oligolectic, as females forage [exclusively] for loosestrife plant oil to line their nests and provision to their eggs. Macropis bees are commonly referred to as oil bees, as they are the main pollinators of oil plants such as plants of the genus Lysimachia.

Genus level ID: these bees are unlikely to be found away from blooming loosestrifes (June – August), however, most bees encountered on loosestrifes will not be Macropis. Look for a larger bee (slightly smaller than a honey bee) that is moderately hairy.   Females look like they are wearing bell bottoms, while males have yellow marks on their faces.

Macropis nuda was documented in the state before 1960, and subsequently found in 2020 and 2021. Look for Fringed Loosestrife and Spreading Dogbane in wet areas along meandering rivers, which may provide the nesting substrate for these ground-nesting bees. This species cocoons as pupae and hibernates over the winter. 

This species is likely the main host for the cleptoparasitic bee, Epeoloides pilosulus.

Both males and females of M. nuda are roughly 7-7.5mm in length.
The head, thorax, and abdomen of M. nuda females are dark black. Females have dense white scopa on their posterior tibiae that are foraging adaptations used for collecting and carrying floral oils and pollen. These scopae are distinct from other bees as they use capillary action to hold floral oils.

Similar to females, the head, thorax, and abdomen of M. nuda males are dark black. Males are differentiated by having much less scopa, or hair, on their posterior tibiae. Males are characterized by yellow markings on their heads, the broad plate on the front of the head being completely yellow.

As it is an oligolectic* bee, it is found only where plants of the species Lysimachia ciliata grow. *Oligolectic: specializing in only one or a few species of plants.

M. nuda females are particular about their nest sites as their nests are in the ground. Females will make their nests in shady areas of drier, sandy-loam textured soil. Nests are typically near the loosestrife flowers from which females collect oil and pollen. Though females are solitary and build their own nests, nests will be found in aggregates due to the criteria of the nest site.

M. nuda is a solitary* bee species. Females make their own nests in the ground, and are univoltine, having only one brood during a mating season as offspring hibernate in the nest until they mature the next season. Males and females spend the winter in cocoons as mature pupae and recommence development in the spring as the temperature increases. Once emerged, young females will either find a new nesting site or commandeer an old nest. *Solitary: A female performs every step of the child-rearing process by herself - nest construction, brood cell provisioning, and egg-laying.

Larvae rapidly develop into pupae within 10 days, feeding on a provision that is a mixture of floral oil and pollen.

A female M. nuda digs a cell and then lines it with oils from Lysimachia flowers. The female then provisions the cell with a mixture of floral oil and pollen. She then lays a single, white-colored egg in the cell before closing it with soil. The larval feeding period lasts approximately 10–14 days, after which they are pupae and begin to spin cocoons.

After the larval feeding period, pupae spin the cocoons which they will hibernate until the next spring. Cocoons completely occupy the cells and strongly adhere to the sides of the cell, but not the closure. There is a small hole near the apex of the cocoon, opening to the soil closure of the cell. This allows the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide as the waxy oil coating the cell and the silk of the cocoon does not allow for gas movement. Not only does the cocoon allow safety from the cold of the winter, it may also serve as a barricade to protect against parasites and predators.

Macropis species are protandrous, as male bees emerge from their cocoons 1–2 weeks before females emerge. Because M. nuda males emerge before females, they also reach sexual maturity earlier. Females reach sexual maturity shortly after they emerge when they begin constructing their nests.

Unlike females, male Macropis nuda do not rely on Lysimachia plants. The daily activity of patrolling males begins near nest aggregates and then progresses to nearby flowers where both males and females feed themselves on a variety of nectars. Males only collect nectar, but will travel to Lysimachia plants for mating opportunities where females collect floral oils. Males attempt to mate by directly pouncing on females, regardless of whether the female is carrying pollen or oil. Males are not allowed into a female's nest and rest on flowers while females will sleep in their nests.

Macropis nuda does not have any clear mating rituals. There has been no observed scent marking, and males and females do not produce any kind of sound to attract one another like other solitary bees such as Meganomia. Mating appears to be quick and random, where males patrol Lysimachia plants and pounce on females. Females reject males that pounce for mating by swiftly kicking with their hind legs. If receptive, a pair will hold together and fall from a flower, dislodging in the air or landing on the ground. The act is quick and takes around 1–2 seconds to complete. Copulation has only been observed near the Lysimachia plants, never near nest sites.

M. nuda is parasitized by Epeoloides pilosulus, commonly referred to as a "Macropis cuckoo bee". The common name of this cleptoparasite refers to how this species of bee invades a host nest and lays its eggs in a host cell. Macropis cuckoo bee larvae make cocoons and hibernate similarly to M. nuda. The parasitic bee larvae will consume provisions stored for the M. nuda larva. The parasitic bee is most active during the hottest hours of the day. On warm days, M. nuda females will guard the entrances to their nests, impeding the cuckoo bees' mode of parasitism.


Rare/Endangered; declining in the Northeast. S3 in Vermont (uncommon). US Native. Short tongue. Collects pollen via body rubbing and incidental contact.

Males and females not yet having created nests sleep on flowers.

Though females are solitary and build their own nests, nests will be found in aggregates due to the criteria of the nest site.  Duration of continuously occupied nesting aggregations: [up to] 40 years

More on nesting: Nests are compact and rather shallow, as the deepest cells are only up to 6.5mm below the surface. Entrances of nests are usually concealed by dried leaves, twigs, rocks, or low-growing plants. Burrows are approximately 3.0-3.5mm in diameter and are coated with a waterproof lining created from the floral oils collected by the female. The lining maintains homeostatic humidity conditions for offspring. Cells are also coated with this waterproof lining to keep them dry while offspring are in their cocoons during the winter.  Genus Macropis nest in well-drained soil often on sloped banks. The same shallow nests were used for consecutive years by successive generations. - The Solitary Bees: The Solitary Bees. Biology, Evolution, Conservation.  Nesting biology and DNA barcode analysis of Ceratina dupla and C. mikmaqi, and comparisons with C. calcarata (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Xylocopinae), "J.L. Vickruck, S.M. Rehan, C.S. Sheffield, M.H. Richards".

More on nest provisioning
The provisions were mealy-pasty moist throughout. Food is a mixture of oil and pollen [assumed]. Provision was formed into elongate, ovoid loaves which were basically consistent in shape from one cell to the next. However, the entire surface, but particularly the bottom part of each loaf, was remarkably irregular, and the degree of unevenness varied from loaf to loaf. Loaf: 5.0 to 5.5 mm long, 3.4 to 4.0 mm wide. 
More on Eggs: All eggs 2.3 to 2.9 mm long and 0.50 to 0.55 mm in maximum diameter were on the anterior top of the pollen-masses. Each was curved, translucent white, and possessed a thin, shiny chorion. 
Life Cycle: The entire period of adult activity presumably extended for about a month. 
-Biology and Immature Stages of Macropis nuda, Including Comparisons to Related Bees (Apoidea, Melittidae), Jerome G. Rozen, Jr. and Ned Robert Jacobson. 

More on matingWe confirm Lieftinck's (1957) supposition that the occasional peculiar postures of female Macropis while foraging for pollen or nectar, with their hind legs held outstretched above their abdomens, is in direct response to a male's copulatory pounce. Not only does this effectively dislodge the male but it can then communicate unwillingness to mate thereafter. [Cane, James H., et al. "Foraging, grooming and mate-seeking behaviors of Macropis nuda (Hymenoptera, Melittidae) and use of Lysimachia ciliata (Primulaceae) oils in larval provisions and cell linings." American Midland Naturalist (1983): 257-264]

Other than the highly polyandrous honey bees (Apis), most female bees are thought to be monandrous, though genetic data with which to support this view are generally lacking. There is support from chemoecological studies of bees for this view. [Though more study is needed].  In the solitary bee Andrena nigroaenea, males are attracted by the cuticular hydrocarbon profile of virgin females, and a change in odor profile following mating is associated with a lack of attraction to mate-seeking males (Schiestl and Ayasse, 2000). In the solitary bee O. rufa, the male himself adds odor to a female with whom he has mated that leads to her loss of receptivity and loss of attraction to other males (reviewed in Ayasse et al., 2001). - Male mating behavior and mating systems of bees: an overview, Robert John Paxton, (2020). 

Females will feed themselves with nectar of a variety of flowers, but will only use oil and pollen from Lysimachia ciliata plants for provisioning.

Perhaps, Tobi Bee Inspired,  this report gives you an idea of the complexity of any given bee species' life and insight into the areas or characteristics that evolution has provided each species with diversity making each species unique. And then there are even differences in individuals within a species - considerable diversity within and between individuals. The more you observe and learn about bees the more you will be Bee Inspired. 

  Bugeyed Bernie

                                                         What's your inverting question?
                                                  Write it in the comment section of VT Bug Eyed or contact Bernie directly.
                                       
View all of my latest LIFE observations on iNaturalist.

Photos complements of USGS

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Biodiversity Observations April 2024 Report: Jericho, Underhill, Richmond, Bolton, Vermont


Enjoy the benefits of connection with nature. 
Jericho, Underhill, Richmond, Bolton, (VT) Inverting Club Biodiversity monthly report.

JURBIC BIODIVERSITY REPORT

JURBIC  iNaturalist Numbers







 Will you report your observations on iNaturalist?
Links below are short videos on how to upload observations to iNaturalist. Tutorial from North Branch Nature Center. 
iNaturalist: uploading observations using desktops and laptops
iNaturalist: uploading observations with mobile devices
View the latest observations posted on iNaturalist at JerichoUnderhillRichmondBolton

Observing the behavior and the life cycle of insects is like getting to know someone as an individual vs. knowing them by name and infrequent contact only.

 - Bernie

View the 2023 iNaturalist observation numbers at Discovering Life in Jericho - 2023 by the Numbers

The Eight Major Orders of Insects

There are 26 orders of insects, but the vast majority belong to only these eight. Below is a short guide to the identification of the eight major orders.

        Beetles Coleoptera (“sheath wings”)

  • largest order of living things with over 290,000 species known worldwide
  • two pairs of wings, but the outer pair is hardened covering the top of the body and meeting in a straight line down the back.
  • have “chewing jaws”
  • metamorphosis is complete

    Moths, Butterflies Lepidoptera (“scaly wings”)
  • second largest order of insects (beetles are #1) - mostly moths
  • two pairs of wings covered with small scales that rub off easily
  • only insects with sucking mouth parts in the form of a coiled tube.
  • in the larval stage, most butterfly and moth species feed on leaves, often of a particular plant or related group of plants
  • metamorphosis is complete

    Bees, Wasps, Ants Hymenoptera (“membrane-winged”)
  • third largest order.
  • have 2 pairs of thin, clear, membraneous wings.
  • females have a well-developed egg-laying organ and/or stinger at the end of their abdomen
  • ants have wings only at certain stages of life, some have stingers, too
  • considered the most highly evolved order of insects.
  • Most wasps are parasites; their young hatch and develop inside the bodies of other insects or spiders. These parasites are our chief ally in the control of many pest insects.
  • Bees and wasps are important pollinators of food crops and other plants.
  • metamorphosis is complete

    Flies, Mosquitoes, Gnats Diptera (“two wings”)
  • fourth largest order (third in North America)
  • if an insect has just one pair of wings, it is a fly of some kind.
  • all adult flies have sucking mouth parts
  • metamorphosis is complete

    Crickets, Grasshoppers, Locusts Orthoptera (“straight wings”)
  • thin, leathery forewings that cover larger hind wings that are folded like a fan when at rest.
  • important food for birds and other insect eaters.
  • metamorphosis is gradual

Dragonflies, Damselflies Odonata (“tooth”)

  • 2 pairs of long, narrow, membranous wings that are roughly equal in size.
  • they also have large eyes and extremely long, narrow abdomens.
  • at rest, dragonflies hold wings out flat, while damselflies hold wings together above
    their bodies.
  • adults feed on other insects (gnats, mosquitoes)
  • metamorphosis is gradual

    Aphids, Cicadas, Leafhoppers Homoptera (“same wings”)
  • 2 pairs of membranous wings held in a tent-like or rooftop position over the body when at rest.
  • adults (except Cicadas) feed on plant sap
  • metamorphosis is gradual

    Bugs, Backswimmers, Water Striders Hemiptera (“half-wings”)
  • identified by a triangle on the back just behind the head. This is formed by the way the insects fold their forewings when at rest.
  • 2 pairs of wings; hind wings are membranous, while the basal half of the forewings is hardened.
  • metamorphosis is gradual

    OTHER INSECTS OF IMPORTANCE 

Termites: small, soft-bodied, pale with short, straight antennae. Flying forms have 2 pairs of wings. Do not have constricted waist like ants. Have sophisticated societies - the queen may live 10 years. Most of the 41 species live in the SE. Eat cellulose of the wood fibers making them bad for buildings but valuable for breaking down dead wood in the forests.


Springtails: tiny, wingless with prominent antennae. The forked structure allows them to “spring” into the air. Among the most abundant creatures on earth, are millions per acre. Immensely beneficial in breaking down leaf litter and fungi into soil components. Include “snow fleas.”


Bristletails: wingless, crawling, terrestrial with long segmented antennae and 3 long “tails”. Include silverfish and firebrats. Eat decaying plants outdoors and starchy substances including books, wallpaper, and clothing indoors. Among the most primitive of insects.


Reference: Peterson First Guides / Insects by Christopher Leahy Observing Insect Lives by Donald Stokes, 1983

Traditional research on pollinators has focussed on specific bee groups, such as honeybees and bumblebees (Kremen et al., 2002; Klatt et al., 2014; Lemanski et al., 2022). However, recent studies have demonstrated the equally critical roles played by other insect groups, including ants, beetles, bugs, butterflies, flies, and wasps (Rader et al., 2016; Rader et al., 2020; Requier et al., 2023).  - Masari Date, Yuya Fukano, Sayed Ibrahim Farkhary, Kei Uchida, Masashi Soga, (April 2024).



Bee on the Lookout for VT Bees in May

Here are photos of a few of the many bee species that you might see in Vermont in May.

Photos courtesy of USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab.


View Bernie's photos at iNaturalist






Go to the woods in the Eastern United States, and find a blooming Rhododendron, look for this bee, it specializes in Rhodos and Azalea pollen for its babies. - USGS Bee Lab


Andrena dunningi, Female

A large dark Andrena. This lovely female, in fresh plumage, is relatively easy to identify simply by the orange-brown color of its body hairs along with the nearly black hairs located on its hind legs which it uses to carry pollen to its nest. However, after it's been out in the sun for several weeks it can also turn the same off-white coloration that most of the other Andrena bees have in this group. This is a bee of tree flowers. In particular, it favors Willows but can be found on a wide variety of spring-blooming woody plants, though seemingly avoiding the heath family, which has its own specialists. - USGS Bee Lab



Andrena melanochroa, Female

This small Andrena is around fairly late in the season (May-June) compared to other Andrena and hangs on on woody low shrubs and brambles. Not common an prone to being misidentified as A. brevipalpis. USGS Bee Lab




Nomada denticulata, male

A moderate sized Nomada, a bee that lays its eggs in the nests of bees in the genus Andrena. This species, at least in the male, has a distinctive antennae. You can see it in at least the picture taken of the bee's side that the underside of the antenna is partially eroded away leaving a hollow on each segment. In general, the genus is difficult to identify and there are many taxonomic issues to putting correct and new names on the group. -USGS Bee Lab

View Bernie's photos at iNaturalist




 Here is a male Lasioglossum acuminatum (from Wisconsin, thanks Nolan Amon!). L. a. is part of the Big Lasioglossum group. They are all black (no metallic glitterings here) much bigger than the other groups. For technical reasons, they are called the Lasioglossum sensu strictu subgenus, which someone else will explain to you as to why it is Lasioglossum in the "strict sense", but not me. Now, look at those long mandibles. A not uncommon length for L. sensu strictu group males. The females have the usual "I have to do all the work digging the kids home" mandibles that most sensible females in the bee world have, but, really, what use are those long mandibles for you males? They certainly don't dig, in fact, they are really just sex machines donating their sperm to progenitzise themselves into future generations. Do they fight with them?...seems both unwieldy and unlikely since I think the females don't have time to watch Lasioglossum gladiator rounds. Perhaps it is a "look at me" sort of thing, where large mandibles (maybe all oiled up?) increase mating opportunities. Interestingly, the pattern is absent in most of the other Lasioglossum groups, the males mostly have tiny little mandibles, smaller than the females (very reasonable since they don't have to go around digging with them). The exception is a few males in the Hemihalictus subgenus. Why? Why? Why? I have no answer, but am listening to your theories. - USGS Bee Lab



Lasioglossum imitatum, female

The Lawn Bee. Lasioglossum imitatum. If you are looking for bees in any urban/suburban/highly disturbed habitat in the East, you will find this bee. Small even for a Lasioglossum, it loves whatever conditions it loves about lawns and beat up habitats. A survivor, a crow and sparrow bee that surely is not on the list of declining bees species. To save this bee you should put in a ball diamond. Would it be so easy for the rest of the species. Probably fond of small invasive fast food pollen, I am not sure how much quantification there has been of its diet. Id wise, it has wide cheeks and tiny thick bright white prostrate hairs on its abdomen that occur in nice parallel lines (not too obvious in this series of shots). - USGS Bee Lab

View Bernie's photos at iNaturalist




Here is a bee that clearly loves woodlands: Lasioglossum versans. In the obscure morphological vernacular of tiny sweat bees, I identify it by its tiny bulging purple "nose" (supraclypeus) and its complete lack of a hair fan on the base of T1. - USGS Bee Lab






A big species (for a Sphecodes) about 2/3rds the size of a honey bee. - USGS Bee Lab

View Bernie's photos at iNaturalist



Remember there are over 350 native bee species in Vermont. Which ones will you see?

-Bugeyed Bernie


The phenology chart below highlights the months each bee species was observed in Vermont as recorded by the Vermont Atlas of Life (VT Center for Ecostudies) as of March 31, 2024. 

 
The bold 'X' indicates the month with the highest number of recorded observations for the species. 
Each species is linked to the VAL  page (see the last column on the right.) 
Each species' name (first column) is linked to its iNaturalist information page. 

TAXON 

V

A

L

 

V

T

 

O

B

S

E

R

VATIONS


BINOMIAL Name

J1

F2

M3

A4

M5

J6

J7

A8

S9

O10

N11

D12

VT VAL Records as of Mar 2023

                VT ATLAS OF LIFE           Species Profile 

Agapostemon sericeus





X

X

X

X

X

X



365

VAL

Agapostemon splendens








X

X

X



5

VAL

Agapostemon texanus





X

X

X

X

X

X



72

VAL

Agapostemon virescens





X

X

X

X

X

X

X


1,236

VAL

Andrena alleghaniensis





X

X

X






90

VAL

Andrena arabis 




X

X

X







10

VAL

Andrena asteris








X

X

X



91

VAL

Andrena barbilabris




X

X

X







50

VAL

Andrena bisalicis



 

 

X

 

 






15

VAL

Andrena braccata








X

X




20

VAL

Andrena bradleyi




X

X

X







50

VAL

Andrena brevipalpis





X

X

X






15

VAL

Andrena canadensis







X

X

X

X



37

VAL

Andrena carlini




X

X

X

 






774

VAL

Andrena carolina 





X

X

X






226

VAL

Andrena ceanothi





X

X







11

VAL

Andrena clarkella 




X

X

X







87

VAL

Andrena commoda





X

X







27

VAL

Andrena cornelli





X

X







12

VAL

Andrena crataegi





X

X

X

X

X




377

VAL

Andrena cressonii




X

X

X







142

VAL

Andrena distans





X

X







7

VAL

Andrena dunningi




X

X

X







113

VAL

Andrena erigeniae




X

X

X







148

VAL

Andrena erythrogaster




X

X

X







94

VAL

Andrena erythronii




X

X

X







98

VAL

Andrena forbesii




X

X

X







48

VAL

Andrena fragilis





X

X

X






53

VAL

Andrena frigida



X

X

X

X







151

VAL

Andrena geranii





X

X

X






114

VAL

Andrena helianthi







X

X

X




181

VAL

Andrena hippotes




X

X

X

X






117

VAL

Andrena hirticincta







X

X

X

X



195

VAL

Andrena imitatrix 




X

X

X







94

VAL

Andrena integra 





X

X

X






55

VAL

Andrena krigiana





X

X







11

VAL

Andrena mandibularis




X

X

X

 

 





9

VAL

Andrena melanochroa





X

X







51

VAL

Andrena milwaukeensis




X

X

X

X






267

VAL

Andrena miranda






X

X






28

VAL

Andrena miserabilis




X

X

X







182

VAL

Andrena nasonii




X

X

X







441

VAL

Andrena nigrae





X








11

VAL

Andrena nigrihirta




X

X

X

X






55

VAL

Andrena nivalis




X

X

X

X






235

VAL

Andrena nubecula 







X

X

X




87

VAL

Andrena nuda





X

X

X






18

VAL

Andrena parnassiae








X

X




37

VAL

Andrena perplexa





X

X







35

VAL

Andrena persimulata





X

X







6

VAL

Andrena placata








X

X




84

VAL

Andrena platyparia





X

X

X






33

VAL

Andrena pruni




X

X

X







20

VAL

Andrena regularis





X

X







61

VAL

Andrena robertsonii





X

X

X






27

VAL

Andrena rufosignata




X

X

X







265

VAL

Andrena rugosa




X

X

X

X






217

VAL

Andrena salictaria




X

X

X







23

VAL

Andrena sigmundi




X

X








26

VAL

Andrena spiraeana 





X

X

X

X





41

VAL

Andrena thaspii





X

X

X

X





86

VAL

Andrena vicina




X

X

X







665

VAL

Andrena violae





X

X







2

VAL

Andrena virginiana







X






9

VAL

Andrena w-scripta





X

X

X






20

VAL

Andrena wheeleri





X

X

X






10

VAL

Andrena wilkella





X

X

X

X

X




757

VAL

Andrena ziziae





X

X







591

VAL

Andrena ziziaeformis





X








7

VAL

Anthidiellum notatum






X

X

X

X




17

VAL

Anthidium manicatum






X

X

X

X

X



219

VAL

Anthidium oblongatum





X

X

X

X

X

X



240

VAL

Anthophora bomboides






X

X

X





63

VAL

Anthophora terminalis






X

X

X

X

X



408

VAL

Apis mellifera

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

2,450

VAL

Augochlora pura




X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


1,358

VAL

Augochlorella aurata




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



2,765

VAL

Augochloropsis metallica





X

X

X

X

X

X



63

VAL

Bombus affinis





X

X

X

X

X

X

X


255

VAL

Bombus ashtoni





X

X

X

X

X

X



39

VAL

Bombus auricomus 





X

X







4

VAL

Bombus bimaculatus




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



3,947

VAL

Bombus borealis




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



1,209

VAL

Bombus fervidus




X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


545

VAL

Bombus griseocollis



X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X



1,631

VAL

Bombus impatiens




X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


12,327

VAL

Bombus pensylvanicus




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



86

VAL

Bombus perplexus 




X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


939

VAL

Bombus rufocinctus





X

X

X

X

X

X



273

VAL

Bombus sandersoni





X

X

X

X

X

X



110

VAL

Bombus ternarius



X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


5,482

VAL

Bombus terricola



X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X



1,404

VAL

Bombus vagans




X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


4,598

VAL

Calliopsis andreniformis






X

X

X





306

VAL

Ceratina calcarata

X


X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X



2,046

VAL

Ceratina dupla




X

X

X

X

X

X




561

VAL

Ceratina mikmaq

X



X

X

X

X

X

X




1,030

VAL

Ceratina strenua




X

X








8

VAL

Chelostoma philadelphi






X

X






125

VAL

Chelostoma rapunculi






X

X






35

VAL

Coelioxys alternatus







X






5

VAL

Coelioxys modestus







X

X





15

VAL

Coelioxys moestus






X

X

X





5

VAL

Coelioxys octodentatus







X






8

VAL

Coelioxys porterae 






X

X

X





10

VAL

Coelioxys rufitarsis






X

X

X





62

VAL

Coelioxys sodalis






X

X






19

VAL

Colletes americanus








X

X




26

VAL

Colletes compactus 








X

X

X



51

VAL

Colletes impunctatus







X






1

VAL

Colletes inaequalis



X

X

X

X







607

VAL

Colletes simulans







X

X

X

X



180

VAL

Colletes solidaginis







X

X





4

VAL

Colletes willistoni







X






4

VAL

Dianthidium simile








X





1

VAL

Dufourea novaeangliae







X

X

X




85

VAL

Epeolus autumnalis








X

X




3

VAL

Epeolus bifasciatus







X

X

X




21

VAL

Epeolus canadensis






X

X






9

VAL

Epeolus scutellaris







X

X

X

X



108

VAL

Halictus confusus




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



795

VAL

Halictus ligatus 




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



1,611

VAL

Halictus parallelus







X


X

X



9

VAL

Halictus rubicundus



X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X



444

VAL

Heriades carinata






X

X

X





68

VAL

Heriades leavitti







X

X





6

VAL

Heriades variolosa







X


X




2

VAL

Holcopasites calliopsidis






X

X






24

VAL

Hoplitis albifrons






X

X






12

VAL

Hoplitis pilosifrons





X

X

X

X





129

VAL

Hoplitis producta





X

X

X

X





245

VAL

Hoplitis spoliata






X

X






37

VAL

Hoplitis truncata







X






4

VAL

Hylaeus affinis






X

X

X

X




183

VAL

Hylaeus annulatus






X

X

X

X




123

VAL

Hylaeus basalis






X

X






6

VAL

Hylaeus illinoisensis






X

X






8

VAL

Hylaeus leptocephalus






X

X

X

X




14

VAL

Hylaeus mesillae





X

X

X

X

X




182

VAL

Hylaeus modestus





X

X

X

X

X


X


277

VAL

Hylaeus nelumbonis






X


X





7

VAL

Hylaeus sparsus







X






3

VAL

Hylaeus verticalis






X

X


X




15

VAL

Lasioglossum abanci




X



X

X





10

VAL

Lasioglossum acuminatum





X

X



X

X



42

VAL

Lasioglossum admirandum





X

X

X

X





77

VAL

Lasioglossum albipenne





X

X

X

X

X




24

VAL

Lasioglossum anomalum





X

X

X


X




26

VAL

Lasioglossum athabascense





X

X

X






10

VAL

Lasioglossum atwoodi






X

X

X





17

VAL

Lasioglossum birkmanni





X

X

X

X





34

VAL

Lasioglossum bruneri





X

X

X






11

VAL

Lasioglossum cinctipes




X

X

X

X

X





59

VAL

Lasioglossum coeruleum




X

X

X

X

X

X




64

VAL

Lasioglossum coriaceum





X

X

X

X

X

X



368

VAL

Lasioglossum cressonii




X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


830

VAL

Lasioglossum divergens





X

X







1

VAL

Lasioglossum ellisiae




 

X

 

X

 





21

VAL

Lasioglossum ephialtum




X

X

X

X

X

X




261

VAL

Lasioglossum fattigi






X

X

 





10

VAL

Lasioglossum foxii





X

X

X

X





50

VAL

Lasioglossum gotham




X

X








4

VAL

Lasioglossum heterognathum 





X

X

X

X

X


X


34

VAL

Lasioglossum hitchensi





X

X

X

X

X




355

VAL

Lasioglossum imitatum



 

 

X

X

X

X

X

X

X


485

VAL

Lasioglossum inconditum





X

X

 

X

X

X



21

VAL

Lasioglossum laevissimum




X

 

X

X

X

X

X



50

VAL

Lasioglossum leucocomus





X

X

X

X

X




349

VAL

Lasioglossum leucozonium





X

X

X

X

X

X

X


220

VAL

Lasioglossum lineatulum




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



229

VAL

Lasioglossum lionotum






X

X

X

X




10

VAL

Lasioglossum macoupinense





X

X

X



X



95

VAL

Lasioglossum nigroviride




X

X

X

X

X





110

VAL

Lasioglossum oblongum




X


X

X

X

X




105

VAL

Lasioglossum obscurum










X



3

VAL

Lasioglossum oceanicum





X

X

X

 

 




85

VAL

Lasioglossum oenotherae






X

X

X





25

VAL

Lasioglossum paradmirandum





X

X

X

X





22

VAL

Lasioglossum pectinatum






X

X

X

X

X



28

VAL

Lasioglossum pectorale





X

X

X

X

X




455

VAL

Lasioglossum pilosum





X

X

X

X

X




476

VAL

Lasioglossum planatum





X

X

X

X

X




59

VAL

Lasioglossum platyparium





X



X





7

VAL

Lasioglossum quebecense




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



165

VAL

Lasioglossum smilacinae




X

X

X

X

X


X



88

VAL

Lasioglossum subversans






X



X




14

VAL

Lasioglossum subviridatum




X

X

X

X

X





74

VAL

Lasioglossum tegulare





X

X

X

X

X




388

VAL

Lasioglossum tenax






X







3

VAL

Lasioglossum timothyi




X

X

X

X






6

VAL

Lasioglossum truncatum





X

X

X

X

X

X



59

VAL

Lasioglossum versans





X

X

X

X

X

X

X


269

VAL

Lasioglossum versatum





X

X

X

X

X




1,032

VAL

Lasioglossum vierecki





X

X

X

X





185

VAL

Lasioglossum viridatum





X

X

X

X





111

VAL

Lasioglossum weemsi







X






2

VAL

Lasioglossum zephyrus(Sometimes in literature misspelled as zephyrum). 





X


X

X


X



44

VAL

Lasioglossum zonulum





X

X

X

X

X

X



310

VAL

Macropis nuda






X

X

X





50

VAL

Macropis patellata







X






6

VAL

Megachile brevis






X

X

X

X




18

VAL

Megachile campanulae






X

X

X





40

VAL

Megachile centuncularis






X

X






14

VAL

Megachile frigida






X

X






22

VAL

Megachile gemula





X

X

X

X

X




99

VAL

Megachile inermis





X

X

X

X

X




147

VAL

Megachile latimanus






X

X

X

X

X



185

VAL

Megachile melanophaea





X

X

X






101

VAL

Megachile mendica






X

X

X

X

X



98

VAL

Megachile montivaga







X

X

X




14

VAL

Megachile pugnata






X

X

X

X




68

VAL

Megachile relativa






X

X

X

X

X



212

VAL

Megachile rotundata






X

X

X

X

X



108

VAL

Megachile rugifrons






X

X

X





9

VAL

Megachile sculpturalis






X

X

X





63

VAL

Megachile texana 






X

X

X

X




20

VAL

Melissodes agilis







X

X





9

VAL

Melissodes apicatus






X







16

VAL

Melissodes bimaculatus







X

X





130

VAL

Melissodes desponsus





X

X

X

X

X




193

VAL

Melissodes druriellus







X

X

X

X



103

VAL

Melissodes illatus







X

X





36

VAL

Melissodes subillatus






X

X

X





29

VAL

Melissodes trinodis







X

X

X




27

VAL

Nomada armatella





X

X







5

VAL

Nomada articulata





X

X

X






167

VAL

Nomada australis





X

X

X






25

VAL

Nomada banksi








X

X




12

VAL

Nomada bethunei




 

X

X

 



 



5

VAL

Nomada cressonii




X

X

X

X



X



183

VAL

Nomada cuneata





X

X







28

VAL

Nomada denticulata





X

X







25

VAL

Nomada depressa




X

X

X

X






11

VAL

Nomada electa








X

X




5

VAL

Nomada florilega






X







2

VAL

Nomada gracilis




X

X

X







43

VAL

Nomada imbricata




X

X

X

 

X





77

VAL

Nomada lehighensis





X

X

X






25

VAL

Nomada lepida






X







1

VAL

Nomada luteoloides




X

X

X







92

VAL

Nomada maculata 




X

X

X







68

VAL

Nomada mendica





X

X







4

VAL

Nomada obliterata





X








8

VAL

Nomada ovata






X







3

VAL

Nomada parva (not in GBIF for VT)













0

VAL

Nomada pygmaea




X

X

X

X


X




125

VAL

Nomada tiftonensis







X

X

X




15

VAL

Nomada valida 




X

X








13

VAL

Nomada vicina







X

X





16

VAL

Nomada xanthura





X

X







10

VAL

Osmia albiventris





X

X

X






33

VAL

Osmia atriventris




X

X

X

X

X

X




157

VAL

Osmia bucephala




X

X

X

X






204

VAL

Osmia collinsiae







X






6

VAL

Osmia cornifrons



X

X

X

X







173

VAL

Osmia distincta





X


X






17

VAL

Osmia georgica





X

X

X






14

VAL

Osmia lignaria



X

X

X

X

X

X





135

VAL

Osmia pumila




X

X

X

X






358

VAL

Osmia simillima






X

X






7

VAL

Osmia taurus





X








7

VAL

Osmia texana 







X

X





9

VAL

Osmia virga





X

X







9

VAL

Paranthidium jugatorium







X

X





12

VAL

Peponapis pruinosa 







X

X

X




526

VAL

Perdita halictoides






X

X

X

X




25

VAL

Perdita maculigera 






X

X






3

VAL

Perdita octomaculata







X

X

X




155

VAL

Pseudopanurgus aestivalis









X




10

VAL

Pseudopanurgus andrenoides







X

X

X




87

VAL

Sphecodes aroniae









X




3

VAL

Sphecodes atlantis





X

X

X

X

X




34

VAL

Sphecodes clematidis





X

X

X

X





15

VAL

Sphecodes confertus




X

X

X

X

X





25

VAL

Sphecodes coronus





X

X

X

X

X




46

VAL

Sphecodes cressonii





X

X

X

X

X




16

VAL

Sphecodes davisii





X

X

X

X

X

X



125

VAL

Sphecodes dichrous




X

X

X

X

X





39

VAL

Sphecodes galerus








X

X




11

VAL

Sphecodes illinoensis






X

X

X

X




27

VAL

Sphecodes levis






X

X






4

VAL

Sphecodes mandibularis





X

X

X

X

X

X



46

VAL

Sphecodes minor





X


X






11

VAL

Sphecodes prosphorus






X

X






3

VAL

Sphecodes ranunculi





X

X

X






42

VAL

Sphecodes solonis













2

VAL

Stelis coarctatus






X

X






5

VAL

Stelis foederalis





X

X

X






3

VAL

Stelis lateralis






X

X






24

VAL

Stelis permaculata








X





3

VAL

Triepeolus donatus







X

X





11

VAL

Triepeolus michiganensis







X

X





7

VAL

Triepeolus pectoralis







X

X

X




27

VAL

Triepeolus remigatus







X

X





12

VAL

Xylocopa virginica 




X

X

X

X

X

X

X



17

VAL


Programs* for interacting with nature

1. JFiN (Jericho Families in Nature).
2. Backyard Bug Safari program.
3. JULS (Jericho/Underhill Life Search).
4. iNaturalist - how to get started. (to post your photos - observations)
5. Nature-inspired single-panel comics - new comic every Saturday. 
6. Six Word Insect Memoirs
7. NEW THIS YEAR: JURBIC (Jericho, Underhill, Richmond, Bolton Inverting Club).

8. Read the Vermont Entomological Society Newsletter. See Bernie's article in the Winter/Spring 2024 edition. As Fabre said in his book. "Fabre's Book of Insects", "To talk about oneself is hateful, I know, but perhaps I may be allowed to do so for a moment, in order to introduce myself and my studies."


9.  Join Sam Droege and Clare Maffei (USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab):  They have started an online bee identification class. If you are interested in participating it is every Wednesday at 1 PM.  Videos of the class are available on Dan Kjar's site at:http://bio2.elmira.edu/fieldbio/handybeemanual.html

9b. Species lists, Identification Guides, and Maps for ALL GENERA in North America, CARIBBEAN, AND MEXICO are available along with all the species East of the Mississippi, and many of the western species

9c.  Or go here https://www.discoverlife.org/mp/20q?guide=Bee_genera  and check any of the selections you are sure of then select search. Each time you make selections in one of the sections and hit search, view the list of possible IDs on the left.


View a diagram of bee body anatomy here.

Read Fabre's Book of Insects (PDF hot link). 

Hailed by Darwin as "The Homer of Insects," famed French entomologist Jean Henri Fabre (1823–1915) devoted hours of rapt attention to insects while they hunted, built nests, and fed their families. Working in Provence, in barren, sun-scorched fields inhabited by countless wasps and bees, he observed their intricate and fascinating world, recounting their activities in simple, beautifully written essays.
This volume, based on translations of Fabre's Souvenirs Entomologiques, blends folklore and mythology with factual explanation.