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Hi
Hope this helps!
All specimens collected in DE
collected a male Hylaeus sparsus from Zizia aurea along a river floodplain and another male in a bog either on either Salix nigra or an unknown white flower that Ill need to track down the picture for it for ID
collected a female Hylaeus floridanus in bowls adjacent to an interdunal swale, need to track down what was flowering at the time
collected a male Hylaeus floridanus on one of these plants (solidago, ny ironweed, verbena, common milkweed)
collected 2 male Hylaeus georgicus from Salix nigra
collected 1 male Hylaeus sparsus from Salix nigra
J Davis
DE Division of Fish and Wildlife
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| species | count |
| Andrena cressonii | 13 |
| Hylaeus sparsus | 6 |
| Andrena nasonii | 5 |
| Andrena personata | 4 |
| Augochlora pura | 4 |
| Augochloropsis metallica | 4 |
| Ceratina calcarata | 4 |
| Colletes inaequalis | 4 |
| Nomada pygmaea group | 4 |
| Andrena alleghaniensis | 3 |
| Hylaeus fedorica | 3 |
| Hylaeus mesillae | 3 |
| Andrena illini | 2 |
| Ceratina strenua | 2 |
| Lasioglossum ephialtum | 2 |
| Nomada luteoloides | 2 |
| Andrena alleghaniensis/atlantica | 1 |
| Andrena crataegi | 1 |
| Andrena imitatrix/morrisonella | 1 |
| Augochlorella aurata | 1 |
| Bombus impatiens | 1 |
| Hylaeus modestus | 1 |
| Lasioglossum cressonii | 1 |
| Nomada cressonii group | 1 |
| Nomada denticulata | 1 |
| Nomada imbricata | 1 |
| Xylocopa virginica | 1 |
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Molly Jacobson
M.S. Conservation Biology
Native Pollinator Ecologist
SUNY-ESF Restoration Science Center
Illick 255 | mmja...@esf.edu
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hostplant
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sciname
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CountOfsciname
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Anethum graveolens
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Lasioglossum (Dialictus) coactus (Cresson, 1872)
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1
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Anethum graveolens
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Lasioglossum (Dialictus) hitchensi Gibbs
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1
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Anethum graveolens
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Lasioglossum (Dialictus) imitatum
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1
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Anethum graveolens
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Lasioglossum (Dialictus) spp. (tegulare sp. grp.)
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1
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Chaerophyllum tainturieri
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Andrena spp.
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1
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Chaerophyllum tainturieri
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Megachile (Litomegachile) mendica Cresson
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1
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Chaerophyllum tainturieri
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Panurginus polytrichus Cockerell
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4
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Daucus carota
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Andrena (Micrandrena) personata Robertson
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1
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Daucus carota
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Andrena (Opandrena) cressonii cressonii Robertson
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3
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Daucus carota
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Ceratina (Zadontomerus) shinnersi Daly
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1
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Daucus carota
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Halictus (Odontalictus) ligatus/poeyi
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3
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Daucus carota
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Hylaeus spp.
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3
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Daucus carota
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Lasioglossum (Dialictus) imitatum
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1
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Daucus carota
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Sphecodes spp.
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1
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Daucus carota
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Xylocopa (Xylocopoides) virginica (L.)
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1
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Pastinaca sativa
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Bombus (Cullumanobombus) griseocollis (DeGeer)
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1
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Dr. Katherine A. Parys
USDA Agricultural Research Service
Southern Pollinator Health Center
Pollinator Health in Southern Crop Ecosystems Research Unit
141 Experiment Station Rd./ PO Box 346
Stoneville, MS 38776
I have a MALE Hylaeus sparsus I collected from Ranunculus acris on June 20 1985 in Dickinson County (T43N R30W Sec 19) Michigan (in the UP). I collected a lot of Hylaeus up there, many from umbels, but this is the only H. sparsus I ever collected.
Va
Ms. Virginia Scott (she/her)
Entomology – Senior Collections Manager
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History
265 UCB – MCOL
Boulder, CO 80309-0265
http://www.colorado.edu/cumuseum/research-collections/entomology
From: 'Droege, Sam' via beemonitoring <beemon...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, May 8, 2026 12:05 PM
To: 'Google Groups' via beemonitoring <beemon...@googlegroups.com>
Cc: Jarrod Fowler <jarrod...@gmail.com>
Subject: [Beemonitoring] Is Hylaeus sparsus a pollen specialist?
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Question 1: Does this observation comport with what others have observed? If so, any evaluation of pollinators on valued wildflowers should account for what is happening in trees. I can suggest at least 3 hypotheses: 1) Trees support reproduction of many bees - Ceratina, Andrena, Colletes especially - and these “overflow” to the benefit of spring forbs; 2) Trees out-compete forbs, drawing bees away; 3) Trees are serviced by a different set of pollinating species, and so have little effect. My sense is that each of these options is at play to some extent.
I spent 6 years observing a population of Halictus rubicundus in New York City (Queens). I routinely sampled their pollen loads. I also sampled pollen from plants in the area, including trees. As far as I could tell (with my ID skills limited to finding a visual match between a bee sample and a reference sample), most of the pollen they were gathering was from flowering trees, such as Prunus, Pyrus, Malus, and possibly Acer. They also visited things like Trifolium, Taraxacum, Hypochaeris, Coreopsis, etc. Individual bees seemed to have preferences, but could switch from trip to trip. If anyone is really, really good with pollen ID, I still have all the samples available. Could make for a nice little publication.
I will also vouch for redbud and willow being excellent plants supporting many native bee taxa, and out west here, mesquite, Chilopsis, and palo verde are amazing bee resources.
Related question 2: Does it make sense to promote tree species that are especially beneficial to pollinators? There is enormous public interest in establishing native plant gardens for pollinators. But if the goal was to support pollinators in general, trees might be a more effective investment. Of course there are many complicating variables, like: which bees? But in any case we are considering offering advice to local conservationists, to encourage including e.g., redbud or willow for the benefit of pollinators.
Makes sense to me, so long as the trees are native, and not some horrible thing like Bradford Pear. ;-)
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Just to add my own experience with bees and trees….
Many years ago, in the deserts of Arizona, I observed and collected many bees on trees, including several species in the genus Perdita, that specialised on visiting flowers of Mesquite trees (Prosopis spp). Somewhat later, I donated my bee collection, which also included many Bombus from UT, CO & AZ, with over 8,000 specimens, to the Macleay Museum at USyd. And there they sit, unappreciated, with much potentially useful information associated with each specimen. Sigh!
Does that make me a bono fide bee person?
Graham
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| Genus species | Common name | Habit |
| Ilex glabra | Inkberry | Shrub |
| Ilex montana | Mountain holly | Shrub |
| Ilex mucronata | Catberry | Shrub |
| Ilex opaca | American holly | Tree |
| Ilex verticillata | Common winterberry | Shrub |
| Baccharis halimifolia | Eastern baccharis | Shrub |
| Cornus (Swida) alternifolia | Alternateleaf dogwood | Shrub |
| Cornus (Swida) amomum | Silky dogwood | Shrub |
| Cornus (Swida) racemosa | Gray dogwood | Shrub |
| Cornus (Swida) rugosa | Roundleaf dogwood | Shrub |
| Cornus (Swida) sericea | Redosier dogwood | Shrub |
| Arctostaphylos uva-ursi | Kinnikinnick | Shrub |
| Epigaea repens | Trailing arbutus | Shrub |
| Kalmia angustifolia | Sheep laurel | Shrub |
| Kalmia latifolia | Mountain laurel | Shrub |
| Rhododendron arborescens | Smooth azalea | Shrub |
| Rhododendron atlanticum | Dwarf azalea | Shrub |
| Rhododendron calendulaceum | Flame azalea | Shrub |
| Rhododendron canadense | Rhodora | Shrub |
| Rhododendron groenlandicum | Bog Labrador tea | Shrub |
| Rhododendron maximum | Great laurel | Shrub |
| Rhododendron periclymenoides | Pink azalea | Shrub |
| Rhododendron prinophyllum | Early azalea | Shrub |
| Rhododendron viscosum | Swamp azalea | Shrub |
| Andromeda polifolia | Bog rosemary | Shrub |
| Chamaedaphne calyculata | Leatherleaf | Shrub |
| Eubotrys racemosus | Swamp doghobble | Shrub |
| Gaultheria procumbens | Eastern teaberry | Shrub |
| Lyonia ligustrina | Maleberry | Shrub |
| Gaylussacia baccata | Black huckleberry | Shrub |
| Vaccinium angustifolium | Lowbush blueberry | Shrub |
| Vaccinium corymbosum | Highbush blueberry | Shrub |
| Vaccinium fuscatum | Black highbush blueberry | Shrub |
| Vaccinium macrocarpon | Cranberry | Shrub |
| Vaccinium pallidum | Blue Ridge blueberry | Shrub |
| Vaccinium stamineum | Deerberry | Shrub |
| Cercis canadensis | Eastern redbud | Tree |
| Ceanothus americanus | New Jersey tea | Shrub |
| Dasiphora fruticosa | Shrubby cinquefoil | Shrub |
| Salix amygdaloides | Peachleaf willow | Shrub |
| Salix bebbiana | Bebb willow | Shrub |
| Salix candida | Sageleaf willow | Shrub |
| Salix caroliniana | Coastal plain willow | Tree |
| Salix discolor | Pussy willow | Shrub |
| Salix eriocephala | Missouri River willow | Shrub |
| Salix humilis | Prairie willow | Shrub |
| Salix interior | Sandbar willow | Shrub |
| Salix lucida | Shining willow | Shrub |
| Salix myricoides | Bayberry willow | Shrub |
| Salix nigra | Black willow | Tree |
| Salix pellita | Satiny willow | Shrub |
| Salix petiolaris | Meadow willow | Shrub |
| Salix pyrifolia | Balsam willow | Shrub |
| Salix sericea | Silky willow | Shrub |
| Salix serissima | Autumn willow | Shrub |
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