Sunday, November 16, 2025

Vermont Green Bees Identification Guide

Beginner's guide to Vermont Green Bees. 







The purpose of the colored boxes (in the chart below) is to highlight the shared taxa of these green bees at the Family and subfamily, thus being an easier-to-ID taxa level for the VT green bees. Then, if you are confident enough to go further, and can distinguish between the Halictini and Augochlorini but not the genus, make your ID at that level. If you can get to Agapostemon, choose Subgenus agapostemon as all Agapostemon in VT are subgenus Agapostemon. 

Below the chart are details to help with identification of Vermont Green Bees.

When making an ID on iNaturalist, please leave species ID to the experts unless you are very sure and can recognize the features that make it that specific species. Many species cannot be identified from a photo. Many species are very similar to other species. IF in doubt, ID it at a higher rank (taxon). This approach helps maintain data integrity. ID at the taxon rank (level), you are sure of. You can write “I think it is this (____) species” as a comment, even if the (menu selection) is more general.    

Recap: If you are only sure that it is an insect, ID it as an insect. If you are sure it is a bee, but not sure of a more detailed taxon for the bee, ID it as a Bee. If you are sure it is Genus Bombus (Bumblebee), ID as Bombus. If you know the subgenus, go with that. But only ID at species if you can support the ID with anatomy details that make it that species.      
         
Even a relatively few wrong and speculative IDs (particularly at the species level) ruin credibility. CAUTION: The Artificial Intelligence on iNaturalist makes ID recommendations, but they are often incorrect. 

VT Green Bees*
Family: Halictidae
Subfamily: Halictinae

Tribe

 Genus 

Subgenus

A. BINOMIAL NAME (Genus _ species (epithet)). 

 Common Name                  

Halictini

Agapostemon

Agapostemon

Agapostemon sericeus

Silky Striped Sweat Bee

Halictini

Agapostemon

Agapostemon

Agapostemon splendens

Brown-winged Striped Sweat Bee

Halictini

Agapostemon

Agapostemon

Agapostemon virescens

Bicolored Striped Sweat Bee

Halictini

Agapostemon

Agapostemon

Agapostemon texanus

Texas Striped Sweat Bee*

Halictini

Agapostemon

Agapostemon

Agapostemon subtilior

Fine Striped Sweat Bee

Augochlorini

Augochlora

Augochlora

Augochlora pura

Pure Green Sweat Bee

Augochlorini

Augochlorella

None

Augochlorella aurata

Golden Sweat Bee

Augochlorini

Augochloropsis

Paraugochloropsis

Augochloropsis metallica

Metallic Epaulated-Sweat Bee

Augochlorini

Augochloropsis

Paraugochloropsis

 (Augochloropsis viridula)

Northeastern Sweat Bee 

*Texas Striped Sweat Bee: None reported on iNaturalist in Vermont as of 2025.


Agapostemon: All females have a green abdomen except for Agapostemon virescens, which has a black abdomen with white stripes. Females have a raised rim around the propodeum, and both males and females have gray-green compound eyes.


Agapostemon males have a black abdomen with yellow stripes, yellow legs, and a yellow labrum (upper lip).


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Silky Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon sericeus) Females can show some white hair in stripes on the abdomen, but the background color is bright green, not black as in the Bicolored (A. Virescens).            

                    

Look for a metallic green head and thorax. The key differences are based on sex: males have a distinctive yellow and black striped abdomen, while females are metallic green with silvery-white abdominal bands and a rough thorax.   

 

The male abdomen has a flat, yellow and black striped pattern that may look duller compared to the bicolored species' vibrant metallic sheen. yellow spots on the sixth abdominal segment. 


Similar species: Females are challenging to separate from Brown-winged Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon splendens) and Texas Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon texanus). Males of all 4 Agapostemon species are usually not identifiable (to species level) from photos.


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Brown-winged Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon splendens) A. splendens is not expected in VT except at best as a rarity in dune habitat.  Females are likely recognizable by their dark brown wings, while males may be recognized by their massively swollen hind femur.     

  

A rare metallic green sweat bee with dark brown wings (females) or massively swollen hind femurs (males).


Similar species: Similar to the more widespread Silky Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon sericeus) and Texas Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon texanus).

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Bicolored Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon virescens): The combination of the green thorax and the black-and-white striped abdomen is unique in our area. Males, which are only active at the end of the season, have a yellow and black striped abdomen like the other males in the genus. Unlike other species, male Bicolored tend to be dark under the abdomen. Medium-sized bee with a metallic green head and thorax. Females have a black and white striped abdomen, while males have a black and yellow striped abdomen.     


ID to the species of male Agapostemon is usually quite difficult. Males are difficult to ID to species without a view of sternites. Consider revising species-level IDs to Subgenus Agapostemon if the diagnostic characters of species cannot be verified.


Similar species: Female Silky Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon sericeus) can occasionally have faint white hair bands on the abdomen, but on a green background.


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Fine Striped Sweat Bee (Agapostemon subtilior) Metallic green sweat bee and then check for a thickened or "toothed" black mark on the male clypeus (faceplate), yellowish hairs on the thorax and legs, and a distinct dark mark on the basal (lower) part of the hind tibia for both males and females. Females are entirely metallic green, while males have metallic green heads and thoraxes with black and yellow striped abdomens.


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Tribe Augochlorini

Characteristics include black mandibles (mouthparts-jaws) with two similarly sized teeth, dark brown wings, a well-developed paraocular lobe*, sharp inner margins on the compound eyes, and a uniformly smooth scutum. Also, females have a central keel on the first sternite (S1). *A feature on a bee's face, an area extending along the sides of the head, parallel to the inner margin of the compound eyes. 



Pure Green Sweat Bee (Augochlora pura): Augochlora has a metallic green head, thorax, and abdomen. The forked mandible is rarely visible in photos, but distinctive. Small to medium-sized, metallic green sweat bee (5–9 mm long) with shiny, bright green head, thorax, and abdomen. Distinguishing features include a uniformly smooth scutum, (A bee's scutum is the shield-shaped, large, and often hair-covered section of the thorax located between the head and the wings), dark brown wings, and the propodeal triangle (a plate above the back of the thorax) with striations that completely traverse it. Squared-off (truncated) marginal cell at the end of their wings. Note head shape and clypeal lobe, etc.


Similar species: Often impossible to confidently separate from Golden Sweat Bees (Augochlorella aurata) without clear photos.


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Golden Sweat Bee (Augochlorella aurata) Augochlorella has a smaller head than Augochlora, mandibles with one main tooth and a small subapical tooth, a square paraocular lobe, and a rounded inner margin on the compound eye (the eye is narrower at the top than at the bottom). The abdomen is curved and teardrop-shaped, and the wings are light brown.


The end of the mandible of females is shaped like a mitten, though this is often not visible in photos. While variable in size, this tends to be the smallest green bee in VT. Especially small and golden individuals are probably safely ID without seeing finer details.  Small, metallic green bee (5-7mm) that can have golden, yellow-green, or coppery-green colors, sometimes with coppery-pink hues. Key features include rounded mandibles (shaped like a mitten) that distinguish it from A. Pura with its (A. aurata) forked tips, and an unridged propodeum (unlike Agapostemon) 


Most similar to Pure Green Sweat Bees (Augochlora pura), many won’t be identifiable from photos. They are similarly sized and have the same metallic green coloration. 


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Augochloropsis has one distinct feature that separates it from the other three genera — large, asymmetric or angular tegulae that are usually extensively green. On the first and second abdominal segments (T1 and T2), there is a row of stiff hairs, sparse on some species and dense on others.


Females with pollen-collecting hairs on hind leg femora and tibiae. Forewing with three submarginal cells and curved basil vein. Males and females with green trochanter, femur, and tibia. (Upper leg). 



Metallic Epaululated-Sweat Bee (Augochloropsis metallica) The green, bean-shaped tegula is distinctive, though not always obvious. Brilliant metallic green bee that is larger than other green sweat bees, with a broad, bell-shaped abdomen. Key distinguishing features include D-shaped, metallic green tegulae (wing bases) and bright metallic green upper legs.


Similar species: Slightly smaller than Striped Sweat Bees (Genus Agapostemon) without the angular end of the thorax. Larger and brighter than the Pure Green Sweat Bee (Augochlora pura).



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Northeastern Sweat Bee (Augochloropsis viridula): Metallic green head and thorax. The abdomen is a key feature: females have black-and-white stripes, while males have black-and-yellow stripes.   


Males and females have green trochanter, femur, and tibia. Forewing with three submarginal cells and a strongly basil veined. Large, asymmetric, or angular (not oval but bean-shaped) tegulae (where wings join body) that are usually extensively green. On the first and second abdominal segments (T1 and T2), there is a row of stiff hairs, sparse on some species and dense on others.

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* Data from various sources, including: Vermont Center for EcoStudies, Bee Watching, Minnesota Native Bees, Wikipedia, and Zookeys*. Any errors should be attributed to me and not the source data.


Additional ID tools: 


For further Green bee ID guide view: North American Halictid Green Bee Genera Quick Guide Agapostemon, Augochloropsis, Augochlora, Augochlorella 

Clare Maffei, USFWS Native Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab, July 2021 


Also see Identification keys at A review of the Augochloropsis (Hymenoptera, Halictidae) and keys to the shiny green Halictinae of the midwestern United States

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