Pollinator Post 6/26/24 (2)


Who’s this bee on the flowerhead of Hayfield Tarweed, Hemizonia congesta? A male with long antennae and no scopae on the hind legs? iNaturalist’s AI has suggested a Sweat Bee, Lasioglossum (family Halictidae). I am not convinced – most Lasioglossum are much smaller than this.
A Sweat Bee, Halictus sp. (family Halictidae) is gathering pollen on a Morning Glory flower.
A Sweat Bee, Halictus sp. (family Halictidae) is gathering pollen on a Morning Glory flower. 
Balancing on the filaments, the little bee is using her mandibles and front legs to extract pollen from the anthers.

It’s a delicate job, one anther at a time.

The little bee is exiting the flower.

Side view of the bee shows that she has stowed the gathered pollen in the scopae that extends the whole length of her hind legs, as well as on the underside of her abdomen.

The furrow on the tip of her abdomen indicates that she is either a Halictus or Lasioglossum. The arrangement of hairs between her abdominal segments confirms that she is a Halictus sp.
The two genera differ in the position of the hair bands on the abdomen. In Halictus these are on the hind margin of the each tergite (body segment), but in Lasioglossum they are at the front of each tergite, often partly covered by the hind edge of the preceding tergite.
