blood bees

(Sphecodes spp.)

Overview
blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)
Photo by Babette Kis
 

Sphecodes is a very large genus of small bees known as blood bees. There are 319 valid described Sphecodes species worldwide as of 2015, 72 species in North America north of Mexico, and at least 23 species in Minnesota.

Blood bees are found on every continent except Antarctica. They occur in every state in the United States and in every province in Canada except for the Northwest Territories.

Like other cuckoo bees, blood bees do not construct nests. They are kleptoparasitic, meaning they lay their eggs in the nests of other ground-nesting bees in the family Halictidae, especially in the genera Lasioglossum, Halictus, Augochlora, Augochlorella, and Augochloropsis.

 
 

The female enters a host nest, kills the host’s eggs, and lays one of her own. In some species the female resides in the nest of the host, living alongside the host, and possibly taking over the role of queen.

Adult blood bees feed on flower nectar. They do not collect pollen because the young feed on the pollen collected by the host species.

 
     
 
Description
 
 

Blood bees resemble wasps in appearance and behavior. They have no pollen-collecting hairs (scopa), and their bodies are relatively hairless. Like wasps, they hover low over the ground searching for hosts nests.

Blood bees are 532 to (4 to 15 mm) in length. The body is strongly and deeply pitted (punctate). Almost all have a bright blood red abdomen. This is the feature that gives the genus its common name. On some the abdomen is only partly red. Rarely the abdomen is entirely black. All have a black head and a shiny black thorax. The tongue is short and pointed. The antennae have 12 segments on the female, 13 segments on the male. There is just a single line-like groove extending downward from the base of each antenna (subantennal suture).

There are branched hairs on the pronotal lobe, but this cannot be seen without a microscope.

The legs are slender, even spindly, and have no pollen collecting hairs.

On the forewing, the basal vein is strongly curved, like a sideways J. On the hind wing, the lobe at the base (jugal lobe) is longer than the submedian cell.

 
     
 
Distribution
 
 

Distribution Map

 

Sources

4, 24, 27, 29, 30, 72, 82, 83.

 
  12/9/2022      
         
 

Occurrence

 
 

Common

 
         
 
Taxonomy
 
 

Order

Hymenoptera (ants, bees, wasps, and sawflies)  
 

Suborder

Apocrita (narrow-waisted wasps, ants, and bees)  
 

Infraorder

Aculeata (ants, bees, and stinging wasps)  
 

Superfamily

Apoidea (bees and apoid wasps)  
  Epifamily Anthophila (bees)  
 

Family

Halictidae (sweat bees)  
 

Subfamily

Halictinae (sweat and furrow bees)  
 

Tribe

Sphecodini  
       
 

Subordinate Taxa

 
 

Atlantic cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes atlantis)

bilobed cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes confertus)

black-tipped cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes prosphorus)

blood bee (Sphecodes antennariae)

blood bee (Sphecodes banksii)

blood bee (Sphecodes carolinus)

blood bee (Sphecodes fattigi)

buttercup blood bee (Sphecodes ranunculi)

capped cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes galerus)

clematis blood bee (Sphecodes clematidis)

Cresson’s cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes cressonii)

crowned cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes coronus)

cyclops blood bee (Sphecodes heraclei)

Davis’s cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes davisii)

deadly cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes stygius)

eastern cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes pimpinellae)

Illinois cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes illinoensis)

Johnson’s cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes johnsonii)

minor cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes minor)

nimble cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes levis)

red-toothed cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes mandibularis)

scalloped cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes dichrous)

shiny-faced cuckoo sweat bee (Sphecodes solonis)

 
       
 

Synonyms

 
 

 

 
       
 

Common Names

 
 

blood bees

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Glossary

Jugal lobe

In Hymenoptera: The rear lobe at the base of the hindwing.

 

Scopa

A brush-like tuft of hairs on the legs or underside of the abdomen of a bee used to collect pollen.

 

 

 

 

 
 
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Babette Kis

 
 

Sphecodes sp. Blood bee

Sphecodes sp., blood bee, on goldenrod flowers, Barnes Prairie, Racine Co., WI. Photographed October 6, 2022.

  blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)  
           
    blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)   blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)  
           
    blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)      
 

Alfredo Colon

 
    blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)      
           
 
MinnesotaSeasons.com Photos
 
 

 

 
           

 

Camera

     
 
Slideshows
 
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About

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Iyptala's Garden
  Sphecodes  

 

slideshow

       
 
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Other Videos
 
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Sphecodes sp. bee removing Lasioglossum sp bees from nest hole [Nutfield Marshes - June 2020]

 
  Blood bee Genus Sphecodes
Bugging You From San Juan Island
 
   
 
About

Mar 31, 2022

 

 

Camcorder

 
 
Visitor Sightings
 
           
 

Report a sighting of this insect.

 
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  Terpsichore
5/6/2023

Location: Saint Paul, MN

Found while clearing last fall's leaves out of a flower bed

 
  Babette Kis
10/6/2022

Location: Barnes Prairie, Racine Co., WI

Sphecodes sp., blood bee, on goldenrod flowers, Barnes Prairie, Racine Co., WI. Photographed October 6, 2022.

blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)  
  Alfredo Colon
8/22/2019

Location: Woodbury, MN

blood bee (Sphecodes sp.)  
           
 
MinnesotaSeasons.com Sightings
 
 

 

 

 

 

Binoculars


Created: 12/9/2022

Last Updated:

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