Hi all,
It seems to be accepted knowledge that Hylaeus leptocephalus specializes on Melilotus spp (sweet clovers). But has there been extensive study on this?
I've been surveying the bees on our campus (SUNY ESF, Syracuse) for three years now and can safely say H. leptocephalus is the single most abundant bee we have on our grounds - more than honeybees or Bombus impatiens. And with the amount of specimens we've
collected (172), it really makes me wonder how closely tied they really are with Melilotus.
We have recorded females on 15 different plant species, and that is likely vastly undercounting as we see them on almost everything we look at but don't necessarily sweep - at some point we tired of pinning them all! In particular, flat-topped goldenrod seems,
on our campus, to be a major congregation or lekking spot for males and females both, followed by large numbers on creeping thistle, goutweed, boneset, hemp dogbane, mountain mint, and milkweeds. Obviously not all of these could be providing pollen (e.g.,
milkweeds). But while we have sweet-clover on campus, it is not abundant, and not located very close to our gardens where we have collected the bulk of these bees.
Additionally, while sweet-clover has a pretty long bloom period (iNat suggests into November in some cases), it does not seem to bloom before July. We have recorded H. leptocephalus consistently every year emerging in mid-April, and active all season until
late October.
So with this, it seems interesting to me that they'd be considered so strictly dependent on Melilotus. If anyone else has noticed any patterns, or has insight, I'm really curious!
Thanks,
Molly
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Molly Jacobson
M.S. Conservation Biology
Native Pollinator Ecologist
SUNY-ESF Restoration Science Center
Illick 255 | mmja...@esf.edu