Abelhas-do-suor
Lasioglossum spp.
Abelha
Registro em nível de gênero que abrange as pequenas a minúsculas abelhas-do-suor solitárias que visitam flores compostas, ervas e muitas perenes nativas. Polinizadoras subestimadas — o que a maioria das pessoas vê como 'minúsculas abelhas pretas' nas flores costuma ser, na verdade, espécies de Lasioglossum.
Plants in the catalog
Plantas que esta espécie poliniza · 1
Plantas de néctar · 12
Small native sweat bees are part of the broad native-bee guild the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center notes basswood supports, though the source does not name genera.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags special value to native bees generally, which includes small sweat bees such as Lasioglossum that work the small two-lipped flowers.
Carries the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center "Special Value to Native Bees" designation, which covers small sweat bees among the native-bee guild it supports.
Small sweat bees and other native bees forage the shallow flowers; the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center lists boneset as a plant of special value to native bees and supporting conservation biological control.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center records "Special Value to Native Bees" for Epilobium canum; small sweat bees (Lasioglossum spp.) are among the generalist native bees that work the flowers.
Second-year umbels are heavily worked by small native bees + hoverflies.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Special Value to Native Bees; the shallow, accessible flowers suit small native sweat bees among many other short-tongued visitors.
Small sweat bees are among the flower visitors that pollinate the tall spring blooms held above the traps; the elevated flowers are thought to keep these pollinators out of reach of the plant's own snap-traps.
Plantas de pólen · 18
Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center lists special value to native bees; the abundant early flowers feed ground- and small-bodied native bees emerging in early spring.
Small native sweat bees are typical early-spring visitors to mass-flowering Prunus; consistent with the documented Special Value to Native Bees, though not named individually by the source.
Lasioglossum sweat bees work the cup-shaped flowers heavily; the image used here documents Lasioglossum calceatum visiting a California poppy bloom at Munich Botanical Garden. The cup architecture suits short-tongued sweat bees particularly well.
Small native sweat bees work the open composite flowers heavily for pollen during the morning bloom window.
Small sweat bees in the Lasioglossum genus visit the tiny ray florets in dense numbers; yarrow flower-head architecture supports both large and small bee species concurrently.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, citing the Xerces Society Pollinator Program, lists Opuntia humifusa as having special value to native bees; small sweat bees (Lasioglossum spp.) are among the native bees that forage the abundant pollen of the open yellow flowers.
Small sweat bees visit the tiny ray florets in numbers; the dense corymb supports both large and small bee species at once.
Small sweat bees commonly visit strawberry flowers for pollen. NC State Extension records a specialized native Andrena bee (A. melanochroa) on this plant; absent a matching catalog entry for that genus, small ground-nesting bees are represented here by Lasioglossum.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center records special value to native bees. The shallow open umbels are well matched to short-tongued spring bees such as small sweat bees (Lasioglossum), which work the accessible pollen and nectar early in the season.
NC State notes the Physalis genus supports specialized native bees; small sweat bees such as Lasioglossum are among the generalist visitors that forage pollen from the open yellow flowers. Mapped at plausible confidence — the toolbox states a genus-level bee association, not a species-specific record for Physalis pruinosa.
Small sweat bees such as Lasioglossum work the pollen-rich open flowers on sunny days, when the blooms are receptive.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Helianthus tuberosus as of Special Value to Native Bees; small native sweat bees (Lasioglossum spp.) are among the generalist native bees that forage such late-summer composite sunflowers, mapped here as the closest catalog representative of that documented native-bee value.
Carries the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center "special value to native bees" flag; small native sweat bees (Lasioglossum and relatives) work the spring flowers for pollen.
Distribuição
Cosmopolita; centenas de espécies por toda a América do Norte.