Halictus sp. female · vagabitė ♀ «Halictus sp. female · vagabitė ♀^Thumbnails«Halictus sp. female · vagabitė ♀^Thumbnails«Halictus sp. female · vagabitė ♀^Thumbnails

Halictus sp. female · vagabitė ♀

  • End-banded Furrow Bees
  • Furchenbienen
  • vagabitė
  • slaidbite
  • smuklik

The genus Halictus is a large assemblage of bee species in the family Halictidae. The genus is divided into 15 subgenera, some of dubious monophyly, containing over 200 species, primarily in the Northern Hemisphere (a few species occur in South America, Asia and Africa). Most species are black or dark brown, sometimes metallic greenish-tinted, with apical whitish abdominal bands on the terga.

Many species in the genus are eusocial, with colony sizes ranging from very small (two to four bees) to large (>200). Nests are typically burrows in the soil, with several ovoid "cells" in which pollen mixed with nectar is provided as food for the developing larvae; a single egg is laid on a pollen mass, and the cell is sealed. In a few species, the cells are arranged in clusters resembling a honeycomb, but constructed of soil rather than beeswax. Like most ground-nesting bees, the brood cells are lined internally with a waterproofing secretion.

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