Wild Bees
There are approximately 4,000 species of wild bees in the United States. They play a very important role in pollinating wild flowers as well as crops.


Click on the images to see them enlarged.
In spring the most common bees are Andrenids, they are also called digger bees because they build nest in the ground, the hole is about as thick as a pencil.
Female Andrena bee on apple blossom.
Halictid bee: (Halictus possibly ligatus)
Carpenter bee, Xilocopa virginica on beebalm. Carpenter bees can cause damage to wood, but they are also excellent pollinators. You can tell them apart from bumblebees because their abdomens are almost hairless and appear shiny.
Halictid bee  on milkweed.
Notice the mass of pollen around the back leg of this female  Halictus ligatus bee
Halictid bee. Augochlora pura. on sunflower.
Another fine example of a bee loaded with pollen. Halictid bee. (Halictus possibly ligatus)
Halictid bee on lesser celandine
A leaf cutter bee or Megachilidae, a male Megachile sp. Femalesuse round pieces of leaves in their nests, you probably have seen the perfectly round holes that they leave in some plants. These bees have abundant hairs on their abdomens and this is how they carry pollen.
More about bees
A site with numerous wild bees:
solitary bees
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