broad-banded leafcutter bee
broad-banded leafcutter bee (Megachile latimanus)
Illinois Status: common, native
Photo © Rob Curtis, The Early Birder
Features and Behaviors
FEATURES
This species has a stocky, black body that is covered with pale-yellow and black hairs. The pollen-collecting hairs on leafcutting bees are on the underside of the abdomen, not on the legs, as is the case in most other bees. Like all bees, they have a thick body with the division between the thorax and abdomen easily seen, four wings, hairs, stocky legs, long antennae and eyes on the side of the head.
BEHAVIORS
This species is a common bee active between April through September in dry areas of prairies, grasslands and farm fields. Leafcutter bees paper their nest with pieces of leaves. These are solitary bees with huge jaws that nest in wood or other cavities.
Illinois Range
Taxonomy
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Megachilidae
Habitats
Prairie and Edge Habitats
black soil prairie; dolomite prairie; edge; gravel prairie; hill prairie; sand prairie; shrub prairie