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Introductory Biogeography to Bees of the Eastern ... - Wild Rye

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Presently <strong>the</strong> human influences <strong>of</strong> land useage, through population and economic pressures, areimposing changes on <strong>the</strong> natural and semi-natural environment which have continued through <strong>the</strong>his<strong>to</strong>rical period from <strong>the</strong> prehis<strong>to</strong>ric.This Book hopes <strong>to</strong> sketch <strong>the</strong> invaluable natural resources <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Regions involved by representing<strong>the</strong> diversity <strong>of</strong> bee species <strong>the</strong>re and hopes <strong>to</strong> be an aid <strong>to</strong> all <strong>of</strong> those engaged in nature conservationand sustainable land management in <strong>the</strong> countries involved.The <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean in this context is defined as Continental Greece and archipelagoes southand eastward as well as <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean coasts and islands <strong>of</strong> Turkey and Mediterranean andMontane eco<strong>to</strong>nes inland. The Island <strong>of</strong> Cyprus, <strong>the</strong> extensive mediterranean habitats within Syria.The coastal Levant and areas <strong>of</strong> mediterranean landscape <strong>the</strong>re and <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sinai, and from <strong>the</strong>re areas<strong>of</strong> mediterranean habitat in Egypt and Libya. The Sinai Peninsula, <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean Sea Coasts <strong>of</strong>Egypt and also <strong>of</strong> Libya as far west as Cyrenaica furnish <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn boundaries <strong>of</strong> this easternMediterranean geography.Beyond <strong>the</strong> eastern Mediterranean, <strong>the</strong> Palearctic Middle East continues <strong>to</strong> desert and semi-desertlands <strong>of</strong> Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Israel and <strong>the</strong> Palestinian Terri<strong>to</strong>ries <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> central Syrian Desert.Iraq and Iran form <strong>the</strong> boundaries <strong>of</strong> this diverse and vast regions <strong>of</strong> mountain, lush irrigatedlowlands, wetland and desert. In addition <strong>the</strong> desert areas <strong>of</strong> Egypt can be viewed as belonging <strong>to</strong> thispart <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> biogeography.The level <strong>of</strong> recording <strong>of</strong> bee species in <strong>the</strong> region has varied, with some areas being better studiedand documented. However, <strong>the</strong>re even now remain large areas where knowledge <strong>of</strong> bee distributionand abundance is less than it should be for a proper knowledge <strong>to</strong> guide conservation and landmanagement programmes.The comments made here on <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> species are for within <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean andMiddle <strong>Eastern</strong> regions covered by this work. Many species have a wider distribution in <strong>the</strong>Palaearctic and o<strong>the</strong>r bioregions, although <strong>the</strong>re are many species where <strong>the</strong> Region is <strong>the</strong> centre <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong>ir distribution. A significant proportion <strong>of</strong> species are only found within <strong>the</strong> Region.This book serves as an introduction <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> bee faunal diversity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> following countries;-Greece. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Jordan. Palestine. Israel. Iraq. Iran. Egypt. Libya.A brief <strong>Biogeography</strong>.The evolution <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Angiosperm plants proceeded from <strong>the</strong> Lower Cretaceous so that by <strong>the</strong> MiddleCretaceous <strong>the</strong>re were several defined floras. By <strong>the</strong> late Cretaceous <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Holarctic floraadjoined a subtropical <strong>to</strong> tropical flora. At this time our Region was dominated by <strong>the</strong> Tethys Sea andland areas were islands. The shores <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tethys determined <strong>the</strong> migration <strong>of</strong> plant species andfloral communities.During <strong>the</strong> Tertiary <strong>the</strong> climate moved from tropical in <strong>the</strong> Eocene <strong>to</strong> very cold conditions during <strong>the</strong>Pleis<strong>to</strong>cene. The tropical and subtropical communities retreated southwards. These changes hadgreat influences on <strong>the</strong> type and pattern <strong>of</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> flora. Many plant species died out in2


hispidus and a selection <strong>of</strong> less common species. By this stage <strong>the</strong> dunes have an ability <strong>to</strong> contain afreshwater lens.Ano<strong>the</strong>r kind <strong>of</strong> sand ecology occurs where instead <strong>of</strong> dune formation sand is deposited at adistance from <strong>the</strong> sea on<strong>to</strong> rock strata or gravels. Cushions <strong>of</strong> Centaurea spinosa occur and canattain large dimensions. The appearance becomes one <strong>of</strong> coastal phrygana. Along with this resourcewhich is very attractive <strong>to</strong> a range <strong>of</strong> bee species grows Elymus farctus, Pancratium maritimum,Medicago marina and Reichardia picroides. In <strong>the</strong> most phryganic aspects this association involvesCoridothymus capitatus, LInum strictum, Phagnalon graecum, Helichrysum s<strong>to</strong>echas and with alower frequency <strong>of</strong> Paronychia macrosepala, Teucrium polium and Anagallis arvensis.Finally a fur<strong>the</strong>r Steppic element appears with a settlement <strong>of</strong> Artemisia campestris on inner dunes.Flowers such as Nigella arvensis, Daucus broteri and Eryngium campestre are found amongst <strong>the</strong>steppic grasses alongside <strong>the</strong> Artemisia and at this stage <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> psammosere <strong>the</strong> dune evolutionmerges <strong>to</strong> some degree with <strong>the</strong> steppic semi-desert.Mediterranean EgyptThe emergence <strong>of</strong> a steppic semi-desert from a coastal psammosere is also notable on <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean coast <strong>of</strong> Egypt where <strong>the</strong> vegetation communities have been studied. There remainsa great need <strong>to</strong> research <strong>the</strong> distribution and ecology <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bee communities associated with <strong>the</strong>mand with <strong>the</strong> terrestrial formations. Mashaly et al (2008) recognise four vegetation groupings for <strong>the</strong>Deltaic Nile coastal habitat which conform <strong>to</strong> three classes <strong>of</strong> vegetation type using Braun-Blanquet’s plant community analysis. The first class represents level sand and dune landscapes <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Delta and is <strong>of</strong> two alliances. The first alliance refers <strong>to</strong> newer coastal sand formations and ischaracterised by Pancratium maritimum, Silene succulenta, Senecio glaucus, Launaea fragilis,Cyperus capitatus, Echium angustifolium and Alhagi graecorum. The second alliance <strong>of</strong>psammophilous flora is found on older dune at distance from <strong>the</strong> sea and <strong>of</strong> which <strong>the</strong> commonestmembers are Plantago squarrosa, Echinops spinosus, Ononis serrata, Lycium schweinfurthii,Pseudoralya pumila, Erodium laciniatum, Launaea fragilis, Silene pseudoacteon, Lotus halophilus andRumex pictus. The second and third vegetation classes refer <strong>to</strong> saline and fresh water habitatsrespectively and no doubt support a number <strong>of</strong> bee species. These plant communities are<strong>the</strong>mselves distributed under <strong>the</strong> influences <strong>of</strong> variables in soil salinity, moisture, fertility, textureand chemistry, including <strong>the</strong> actions <strong>of</strong> Sodium, Potassium and Calcium and also <strong>of</strong> electricconductivity.Some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> oldest dune formation in coastal Egypt is referred <strong>to</strong> as Black dunes, containing scarceheavy metals drawn down from <strong>the</strong> Ethiopian drainage and vulnerable <strong>to</strong> mining activities. Galal andFawzy (2007) note that harsh wea<strong>the</strong>r conditions mean that dunes <strong>of</strong>ten have more plant species on<strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn slopes sheltered from <strong>the</strong> denuding effects <strong>of</strong> strong nor<strong>the</strong>rly winds. Although <strong>the</strong>vegetation communities here are mediterranean with a <strong>the</strong>rophytic constitution <strong>the</strong>re is generally awide influence from o<strong>the</strong>r floral zones and with some cosmopolitan element. Fur<strong>the</strong>rmore, <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean coastal zone is narrow and from sou<strong>the</strong>rn Palestine <strong>to</strong> Libya <strong>the</strong> Saharo-Arabian beltclosely intrudes <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> coastline.7


It is in Egypt that we find a broad transition from <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean lit<strong>to</strong>ral in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> full Desertlandscape.The Western Desert <strong>of</strong> Egypt is a vast arid expanse extending from <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean coast south <strong>to</strong><strong>the</strong> Sudanese border, a distance <strong>of</strong> 1000 km. The surface area accounts for two thirds <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> landsurface <strong>of</strong> Egypt. An outline <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> geology and morphology is given in Bornkamm & Kehl (1990) in<strong>the</strong>ir intensive account <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> floral ecology. The narrow Mediterranean sec<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> coast receivesan average <strong>of</strong> 150 mm <strong>of</strong> annual rainfall, but even this meagre <strong>to</strong>tal shrinks so that in <strong>the</strong> extremeregions <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> interior yearly rainfall is practically zero. Bornkamm & Kehl (1989) outline researchexpeditions in<strong>to</strong> this area <strong>to</strong> study <strong>the</strong> Landscape ecology beginning in <strong>the</strong> 1980s and continuing as arich his<strong>to</strong>ry <strong>of</strong> ecological investigations.Five zones for desert plant communities <strong>of</strong> Egypt.Five zones <strong>of</strong> rain fed desert vegetation exist interior from <strong>the</strong> lit<strong>to</strong>ral zone, excluding oases whichare maintained by <strong>the</strong> Sudanic water table.The first plant vegetation zone is semi-desert which begins away from <strong>the</strong> lit<strong>to</strong>ral areas. This zonehas a Saharo-Arabian vegetation with a strong Mediterranean component. Dwarf shrubs arefrequent with Thymelaea hirsuta as a dominant species and o<strong>the</strong>r floral communities signified byAsphodelus microcarpus, Plantago albicans, Hamada scoparia and Lycium europaeum. Alreadyconditions are such that although vegetation is permanent and diffused, high shrubs are only foundin <strong>the</strong> wadis. This first zone is occupied by <strong>the</strong> human population and <strong>the</strong>re is agriculture <strong>of</strong> orchardtrees such as dates, figs, olives and almonds, <strong>the</strong> arable areas are <strong>of</strong> barley and woody plants areused for firewood and <strong>the</strong>re are floral resources such as Asphodelus microcarpus in <strong>the</strong> fields.Grazing is also widespread and influences <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> plant associations.The second zone <strong>of</strong> precipitation dependent vegetation lies inland for 100 kms and relies on anaverage rainfall <strong>of</strong> as low as 10 <strong>to</strong> 20 mm. Annuals become scarce, Saharo-Arabian species remaindominant but <strong>the</strong>re is an increasing Irano-Turanian element and even Sudanic influence. Importantspecies being Pituranthus <strong>to</strong>rtuosus, Artemisia inculta, Gymnocarpus decandrum and Carduncellusmareoticus. This zone is vulnerable <strong>to</strong> Camel grazing on a periodic basis. There is a transition<strong>to</strong>wards plant communities comprised <strong>of</strong> islands <strong>of</strong> vegetation. However, Ashraf et al (2009) studiedroadside vegetation plots using a long highway in this zone and found that <strong>the</strong>rophytespredominated on flats and non-saline depressions. Here many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> perennial species areunpalatable <strong>to</strong> grazing animals, as <strong>the</strong>y are in dune areas <strong>of</strong> grazing. The long regime <strong>of</strong> grazing hasselected for <strong>the</strong> domination <strong>of</strong> vegetation by chemically obnoxious unpalatable species. Despite this,27 species <strong>of</strong> flowers in <strong>the</strong> Asteraceae were recorded, four members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Apiaceae and three <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Boraginaceae, 17 members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Fabaceae and a wide range <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r flowers <strong>of</strong> actual orpotential usefulness <strong>to</strong> bees. This floral biodiversity is hidden by <strong>the</strong> differential selection <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>heavy and long-term grazing regime so that <strong>the</strong> floral resources available <strong>to</strong> bee species is less thanit o<strong>the</strong>rwise would be under a managed regime <strong>of</strong> sustainable grazing.The greatest extent <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Western Desert falls in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> following two zones <strong>of</strong> extreme desert.Vegetation is temporary and scarce. There are no permanent water bodies. 99% <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> plantspresent are actually dead. However, in <strong>the</strong> first <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se categories Acacia raddiana grows andTamarix species also can be found. However, <strong>the</strong> conditions in <strong>the</strong> fourth zone are stringent except9


for areas <strong>of</strong> elevation. The vegetation is more Sudanic and <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian component becomessmall. These woody associations may provide conditions for o<strong>the</strong>r plants providing resources forsome bee species. However, <strong>the</strong> Acacia communities are <strong>of</strong>ten browsed or cut and <strong>the</strong>re is a need<strong>to</strong> study natural growth <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se plant communities.Morsy et al (2008) analysed <strong>the</strong> ecophysiology <strong>of</strong> a selection <strong>of</strong> xerophytic plants from this desertand showed that inorganic chemical properties <strong>of</strong> soils had a determining effect on <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong>particular plant species within <strong>the</strong> overall plant community. Desert plants have <strong>to</strong> endure a regime<strong>of</strong> salinity as well as drought and <strong>the</strong> chemistry <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> desert surface sands have a major role inallowing osmotic adjustment <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>se extreme environmental variables. It is <strong>the</strong> pattern <strong>of</strong> variationin <strong>the</strong>se chemical properties which affect <strong>the</strong> pattern <strong>of</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> plants.The potential for this zone <strong>to</strong> provide nesting and foraging resources for a desert bee community iscertain. What is also especially interesting is <strong>the</strong> degree <strong>to</strong> which slight elevations in annualprecipitation may influence <strong>the</strong> bee community <strong>of</strong> this zone <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> desert.Finally, <strong>the</strong> fifth zone is <strong>of</strong> sand plains with an annual rainfall <strong>of</strong> near zero. Ecosystem processes areallochthonous. (Bornkamm 1987). Devoid <strong>of</strong> producers and even primary production anddecomposition. This ecosystem is reliant on wind drifted organic debris, detrivores and <strong>the</strong>droppings <strong>of</strong> migra<strong>to</strong>ry birds and wea<strong>the</strong>ring <strong>of</strong>ten takes <strong>the</strong> place <strong>of</strong> decomposition. Here is <strong>the</strong>extreme environment beyond <strong>the</strong> level where xeric habitat can support flowering plants or bees.Oases and Irrigation featuresPhoenix, Tamarix, Alhagi, Juncus and Phragmites associate with o<strong>the</strong>r species <strong>to</strong> form substantialwaterside communities in wild oases, which are supplied from below ground water resources. Wellsalso provide a source <strong>of</strong> groundwater <strong>to</strong> plants in <strong>the</strong>ir vicinity. O<strong>the</strong>rwise <strong>the</strong>re are systems <strong>of</strong>artificial drainage which supports a varied plant community, <strong>of</strong>ten colonising following arableirrigation.In parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn Western Desert rare and possibly relictual plant communities and singlespecies stands are associated with oases in <strong>the</strong> escarpment <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Nubian tableland. Bornkamm et al(2000) review <strong>the</strong> researches <strong>of</strong> Zahran and o<strong>the</strong>rs in <strong>the</strong>se areas where in places palm speciessupport unders<strong>to</strong>ry plants and <strong>the</strong>re are areas <strong>of</strong> Tamarix woodland.WadisWadis are usually dry but are river beds which come <strong>to</strong> life following a period <strong>of</strong> rain. In <strong>the</strong> extremedesert zones annual rainfall is so low that rare downpours <strong>of</strong> rain occur less than annually but when<strong>the</strong>y do plant life develops. This plant life however has a short lifetime as after <strong>the</strong> rainfall event <strong>the</strong>water drains and evaporates quickly. The possibility is that some at least <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> larger wadisdeveloped during periods when rainfall was higher. During present day conditions <strong>the</strong> floral ecology<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> wadis will be influenced by <strong>the</strong> frequency and general level <strong>of</strong> annual precipitation, so that inthis regard <strong>the</strong> facility <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> environment for bees is determined by <strong>the</strong> climatic regime in which <strong>the</strong>wadi is situated. Landscape relief will provide local differences and patterning and <strong>the</strong> geologicalqualities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> surfaces.10


In a study <strong>of</strong> an extreme desert wadi in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> desert <strong>of</strong> Egypt Springuel et al (2006) carefullyresearched <strong>the</strong> appearance <strong>of</strong> vegetative growth following a period <strong>of</strong> rainfall . They noted that <strong>the</strong>onset <strong>of</strong> a flood following a downpour can move a seed bed, destroy existing vegetation anddisplace large quantities <strong>of</strong> surface material. This more powerful episode will damage existing beeecology by removing nesting strata. However, where <strong>the</strong> downpour is less severe fine sediment anddiaspores from adjacent areas can permeate <strong>the</strong> wadi and allow <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> vegetation. Thisvegetation has a typical life his<strong>to</strong>ry. In <strong>the</strong> initial stages annuals appear such as Astragalus vogelii,Euphorbia granulata and Glinus lo<strong>to</strong>ides. There is <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> emergence <strong>of</strong> perennial <strong>the</strong>rophyticcommunities with Lo<strong>to</strong>nosis platycarpa, Morettia philaeana, Pulicaria incisa and Zygophyllumsimplex and also <strong>the</strong> appearance <strong>of</strong> Crotalaria aegyptiaca, Fagonia, Pulicaria crispa and o<strong>the</strong>rs.These plants have <strong>to</strong> adjust <strong>the</strong>ir reproductive cycles <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> severe and uncertain conditions,o<strong>the</strong>rwise <strong>the</strong>y exist as accidental communities. In such an environment <strong>the</strong> first emergingaccidental vegetation represents <strong>the</strong> climax plant community.In this study area <strong>the</strong> only two woody perennials present were Acacia ehrenbergia and Tamarixnilotica. The former species is a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sudanic flora appearing in monotypic stands in <strong>the</strong>Western desert. here in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> desert <strong>the</strong>ir presence in <strong>the</strong> Wadi areas is uncertain. They needa ready supply <strong>of</strong> water and yet are vulnerable <strong>to</strong> displacement by excessive flood. The significancefor <strong>the</strong> landscape ecology for bees in this instance would be <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> an Acacia scrublandif a more regular rainfall pattern emerged.The <strong>Eastern</strong> desert <strong>of</strong>ten follows <strong>the</strong> zonation described by Bornkamm above for <strong>the</strong> WesternDesert. However, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> desert although immense is narrower and in <strong>the</strong> East is bordered by<strong>the</strong> Red Sea. Hassan (2002) studied <strong>the</strong> plant communities <strong>of</strong> a protected wadi in <strong>the</strong> extreme desert<strong>the</strong>re and confirmed that soils <strong>of</strong>ten made up <strong>of</strong> eroded rock material have a varying thickness andporosity which, allied with chemical characteristics <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> parent material, combine with small-scale<strong>to</strong>pography <strong>to</strong> determine <strong>the</strong> pattern <strong>of</strong> floral community present. Perennial species areaccompanied by ephemerals during periods <strong>of</strong> rain which however are less than annual inoccurrence. In <strong>the</strong> most sou<strong>the</strong>asterly areas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> eastern desert <strong>to</strong>wards <strong>the</strong> Sudan border highground is interspersed with sandy plains and orographic rainfall on higher peaks coupled withsometimes permanent springs also influences floral patterns <strong>of</strong> distribution. Sheded (2002) gives arecord <strong>of</strong> earlier floristic studies <strong>of</strong> this region and notes that subshrubs and Annuals benefit fromhigher rainfall on <strong>the</strong> slopes and a range <strong>of</strong> Annuals accompany a more diverse but still deserticcommunity <strong>of</strong> perennial plants. The commonest Perennials are Acacia <strong>to</strong>rtilis, Aerva javanica,Panicum turgidum, Polycarpaea repens, Fagonia indica, Launaea cassiniana, Forsskaoleatenacissima, Lycium shawii and Senna italica.The commonest Annuals are listed as Zygophyllumsimplex, Aristida mutabilis, Lo<strong>to</strong>nosis platycarpa, Aizoone canariense, Caylusea hexagyna, Triraphispumilio, Euphorbia granulata and Amaranthus graecizans.Danin (1974) also describes <strong>the</strong> vegetation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> desert and gives a thorough reference <strong>to</strong>works establishing <strong>the</strong> geobotanical study <strong>of</strong> this region. He notes that <strong>the</strong> depth <strong>of</strong> windblown sandhas a significant effect in some wadi areas. Ironically <strong>the</strong> deeper sands protect moisture more readilydue <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir porosity. This is an interesting aspect and suggests that for bees nesting in areas <strong>of</strong> deepsand <strong>the</strong>ir local habitat may be conducive <strong>to</strong> water retention provided <strong>the</strong>re is stability at a deeperlevel. The surface sands take in water yet protect from evaporation. Danin follows Davis (1953) innoting that individual wadis have a climax vegetation which is <strong>the</strong> outcome <strong>of</strong> plant competition indiffering local climates and edaphic conditions. Danin describes <strong>the</strong> importance <strong>of</strong> water11


microcatchments and <strong>the</strong>ir relation <strong>to</strong> soil patterns in surface holding rock strata in providingresources for plants.The biogeography <strong>of</strong> bees in both <strong>the</strong> Saharan and Arabian Deserts is strongly influenced by <strong>the</strong> level<strong>of</strong> moisture in <strong>the</strong> environment. The present day distribution <strong>of</strong> bee species here is affected by <strong>the</strong>present availability <strong>of</strong> water and his<strong>to</strong>ric geographic changes. Patiny and Michez (2007), examining<strong>the</strong> recorded distributions <strong>of</strong> a selection <strong>of</strong> bee species in <strong>the</strong> Saharan and Arabian Deserts showsthat although bees have a xeric affinity <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> moisture is critical at <strong>the</strong> geographical aswell as local ecological scale. The studied bee species are recorded mostly in <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean ando<strong>the</strong>r pre-Saharan areas. None <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> selected bees occurred primarily in <strong>the</strong> extreme desertregions. The xerophilous nature <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bees was limited by an absolute necessity for a minimummoisture gradient. Following this, within <strong>the</strong> entire North African region bee populations areconcentrated in favourable areas which exist as <strong>the</strong> outcome <strong>of</strong> geological processes over longperiods <strong>of</strong> time. In our area <strong>of</strong> study <strong>the</strong>se are <strong>the</strong> northwestern Libyan Plateau, <strong>the</strong> streams andriverine zones <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Nile and Jordan, and <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean coastal zones. This requirement for amoisture gradient is critically linked <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> ability <strong>of</strong> an area <strong>to</strong> support forage plants for <strong>the</strong> bees<strong>the</strong>mselves. Over geological time <strong>the</strong> climate <strong>of</strong> North Africa has undergone substantial changes andthis has influenced <strong>the</strong> present-day fragmented nature <strong>of</strong> some bee species distributions. Theauthors show that <strong>the</strong> vast extreme desert areas <strong>of</strong> North Africa have created gaps in <strong>the</strong>distribution <strong>of</strong> such species as Panurgus dentatus, Dasypoda sinuata and Promelitta alboclypeata.In considering <strong>the</strong> Western Desert as a whole, plant associations can generally be assigned <strong>to</strong> anorder represented by <strong>the</strong> following characteristic plant species;- Pituranthos <strong>to</strong>rtuosus,Helian<strong>the</strong>mum lippii, Astragalus trigonus, Salvia aegyptiaca, Farsetia aegyptiaca and Stipagrostisplumosa. Following this, it could be hypo<strong>the</strong>sised that although <strong>the</strong> Western desert may begeomorphologically ra<strong>the</strong>r uniform and immense, it has <strong>the</strong> potential <strong>to</strong> maintain plant communitieswhich are ecologically capable <strong>of</strong> sustaining communities <strong>of</strong> solitary bees. Under <strong>the</strong> present climateregime <strong>the</strong> largest extent <strong>of</strong> both <strong>the</strong> Western and eastern Deserts is extremely severe for plantgrowth and this condition reduces <strong>the</strong> potential for bee diversity away from <strong>the</strong> Mediterraneancoastal influence and permanent water bodies. However, where extreme xeric conditions arerelieved by a higher input <strong>of</strong> moisture allowing a stronger floral ecology <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> conditions for beesis greatly improved.An implication here is that any change in <strong>the</strong> climatic regime in <strong>the</strong>se hyperarid regions will res<strong>to</strong>remoisture levels <strong>to</strong> a level capable <strong>of</strong> supporting a richer flora and bee community without removing<strong>the</strong> xeric nature <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> habitat.West Asian sand and s<strong>to</strong>ne desertsAfter our resume <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Northwestern African desert <strong>of</strong> our region we can look at some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> mainplant community aspects <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> deserts from <strong>the</strong> Sinai north and eastwards, away from <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean coastal zone. In Palestine and Sinai a plant community order led by Var<strong>the</strong>miamontana and Phagnalon rupestre is frequent and supports a range <strong>of</strong> floral resources.12


Elsewhere in <strong>the</strong>se deserts Anabasis articulata is joined with o<strong>the</strong>r plants <strong>of</strong>ten on s<strong>to</strong>ny ground.Widely in <strong>the</strong> Negev on Hammada desert <strong>the</strong> plant Zygophyllum dumosum is characteristic <strong>of</strong> anumber <strong>of</strong> florally important plant community associations.On s<strong>of</strong>t calcareous features Salsola tetrandra, Suaeda and o<strong>the</strong>rs lead a rich floral community.On sandy desert and lit<strong>to</strong>ral areas including <strong>the</strong> vast dune areas <strong>of</strong> Iran <strong>the</strong> coastal sands and desertareas <strong>of</strong> Iraq <strong>the</strong>re are a number <strong>of</strong> psammophilous plant communities with affinities <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> EgyptianDesert outlined above. O<strong>the</strong>rwise we have s<strong>to</strong>ne or gravel deserts widely in Central Iran, Syria, <strong>the</strong>Judean, Negev and parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sinai Desert. Cliffs and outcrops <strong>of</strong> rock support plant life wheresome water is retained and shade provided. Hammada desert is made up <strong>of</strong> s<strong>to</strong>nes on sloping lands,whereas Reg Deserts are pavement like, comprised <strong>of</strong> compacted gravels overlying <strong>the</strong> soil.Plants <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Hammadas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Negev and parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sinai and Judean desert are influenced in<strong>the</strong>ir distributions by chemical qualities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bedrock <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> s<strong>to</strong>nes;- some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> plants listed forthis landform by Zohary are;-Zygophyllum dumosum, Odon<strong>to</strong>spermum pygmaeum, ranunculus asiaticus, Scabiosa aucheri,Lappula spinocarpos, Diplotaxis acris, Diplotaxis harra, Helian<strong>the</strong>mum kahiricum, Picris damascena,Bellevalia deser<strong>to</strong>rum, Tetrapogon villosus, Atractylis phaeoleptis, Asparagus stipularis, Farsetiaaegyptiaca, Limonium pruinosum, Limonium thouinii, Fagonia mollis, Scilla hanburyi, Alliumdeser<strong>to</strong>rum, Muscari inconstrictum, Colchicum tunicatum, Centaurea aegyptiaca and Euphorbiaisthmia.The Judean desert also supports an important number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r floral communities.SteppeThe exact definition <strong>of</strong> Steppe has been debated. It is here taken <strong>to</strong> refer <strong>to</strong> large habitat units <strong>of</strong>grasslands, sometimes partly wooded and sometimes treeless, and with semi-desert attributes andsometimes with a saline edaphic character. Following Zohary (1973) we can see Steppe as anenvironment with more complete vegetation cover than that <strong>of</strong> true Desert. However, <strong>the</strong> category<strong>of</strong> Semi-Desert will also be used and <strong>the</strong>re are examples <strong>of</strong> land where semi-desert shades in<strong>to</strong>Steppe. Semi-Deserts are more vegetated than Deserts but as Zohary points out <strong>the</strong>re is no exactdefinition for <strong>the</strong> term semi-desert.Rainfall pattern is critical for maintaining <strong>the</strong> distinctions in ecological categories and from this wecan deduce that rainfall pattern has a pr<strong>of</strong>ound effect on <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> bee communities. Wi<strong>the</strong>vidence <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> onset <strong>of</strong> recent climatic change any change in rainfall amount on a periodiclandscape scale will be likely <strong>to</strong> have pr<strong>of</strong>ound consequences for future vegetation cover patterns in<strong>the</strong> Region and through <strong>the</strong>se changes <strong>the</strong> distribution and composition <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bee faunas willchange.The Steppe ecological units are sometimes identified with large geographic categories. In this case<strong>the</strong> various areas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian phy<strong>to</strong>geographical Region.Steppe is also present at differing altitudes and landforms so that we need <strong>to</strong> consider montaneplateau and lowland steppes.13


For <strong>the</strong> purposes <strong>of</strong> this review it may be best <strong>to</strong> firstly outline <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian Region and <strong>the</strong>n<strong>to</strong> look at some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> essential plant communities found <strong>the</strong>re, especially <strong>the</strong> more widespreadplant communities which have an actual or potential ability <strong>to</strong> sustain a diverse community <strong>of</strong> bees.Lowland SteppeArtemisia is <strong>the</strong> leading Genus <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> s<strong>of</strong>t-leaved steppe vegetation which covers vast parts <strong>of</strong> ourarea. In <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Judean Desert and Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Negev a typical plant association is dominated byArtemisia herba-alba and with co-dominants <strong>of</strong> Salvia lonigera and Noaea mucronata. Where <strong>the</strong>reis no cultivation in <strong>the</strong> hills <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Negev this association is joined by a valuable selection <strong>of</strong>o<strong>the</strong>r plant species. These plants are listed by Zohary (1973) as;-Scorzonera judaica, S. papposa, Astragalus sanctus, A. cretaceus, Plantago albicans, P. coronopus, P.ovata, An<strong>the</strong>mis pseudocotula, Ranunculus asiaticus, Avena wiestii, Crithopsis delileana, Gageatenuifolia, Loliolum orientale, Adonis dentata, Silene apetala, Herniaria hirsuta, Euphorbiachamaepeplus, Reichardia tingitana, Matthiola longipetala, Reboudia pinnata, Calendula aegyptiaca,Crepis obovata, Gastrocotyle hispida, Filago pyramidata, Anchusa orientalis and o<strong>the</strong>rs.Of significance for <strong>the</strong> understanding <strong>of</strong> bee communities in <strong>the</strong> region <strong>of</strong> this plant association is <strong>the</strong>effect <strong>of</strong> grazing and fuel collection. Artemisia herba-alba becomes rare and Asphodelus microcarpusbecomes <strong>the</strong> dominant flower species. These are joined by <strong>the</strong> following;-Atractylis serratuloides, Teucrium polium, Argyrolobium uniflorum, Noaea mucronata,Helian<strong>the</strong>mum kahiricum, Echium angustifolium, Kickxia aegyptiaca, Ballota undulata, Limoniumthouinii, Gypsophila arabica, verbascum eremobium, Plantago albicans, Astragalus beershabensis,Urginea undulata and Stipa capensis.It is interesting <strong>to</strong> note that such a transformation benefits <strong>the</strong> appearance <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> flowerswhich are known elsewhere <strong>to</strong> be very attractive <strong>to</strong> species <strong>of</strong> bees from a number <strong>of</strong> Families. Theless pressurised association is also rich in floral resources but an interesting question is <strong>the</strong> extent <strong>to</strong>which <strong>the</strong> pressure <strong>of</strong> heavy grazing and collecting <strong>of</strong> firewood leads <strong>to</strong> changes in <strong>the</strong> composition<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> original bee community <strong>of</strong> this habitat.This steppe runs from western Jordan and through much <strong>of</strong> Syria in<strong>to</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iraq. In <strong>the</strong> area<strong>the</strong>re are a number <strong>of</strong> plant associations within <strong>the</strong> steppe. Climate is Continental with cold wintersand frosty nights and warm summers. To <strong>the</strong> east <strong>of</strong> this great expanse <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanianconditions become so dry that eventually <strong>the</strong> steppe merges with <strong>the</strong> Syrian Desert.Iranian Plateau SteppelandsZohary paints a ra<strong>the</strong>r bleak picture <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Central Plateau <strong>of</strong> Iran. A vast region <strong>of</strong> steppe and desertwhere Artemisia herba-alba again leads a good number <strong>of</strong> plant associations but in a region where<strong>the</strong> processes <strong>of</strong> Tragacanthic and Ruderal invasion has altered <strong>the</strong> botanical pr<strong>of</strong>ile. For <strong>the</strong> sake <strong>of</strong>understanding what are <strong>the</strong> latent natural resources available <strong>to</strong> bee species in this region it isimportant <strong>to</strong> look at some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> most representative floral associations described by Zohary for <strong>the</strong>Iranian central Plateau. Four Associations representative <strong>of</strong> thousands <strong>of</strong> square miles <strong>of</strong> Central Iranare given. The first Association exists where <strong>the</strong> soil surfaces are protected from grazing and humaninfluences and <strong>the</strong> remaining three Associations include a range <strong>of</strong> valuable floral resources amongst14


<strong>the</strong> steppic grasses. Among <strong>the</strong> flower species in <strong>the</strong>se widespread Artemisia Associations occur <strong>the</strong>following;-Noaea mucronata, Stachys inflata, Convolvulus chondrilloides, Buhsea coluteoides, Astragalusglaucacanthus, Astragalus gossypinus, Astragalus calliphysa, Astragalus jubatus, Astragalusphyllokentrus, Lactuca orientalis, Euphorbia connata, Euphorbia turcomanica, Pteropyrum olivieri,Pycnocycla spinosa, Echinophora platyloba, Celsia aucheri, Dianthus tabrisianus, heteranthiliumpiliferum, Boissiera squarrosa, Taenia<strong>the</strong>rum crinitum, Scrophularia benthamiana, Launaeaacanthodes, Stellera lesertii, Heliotropium dissitiflorum, Cornulaca leucacantha and Salsolaincanescens.Zohary gives thirteen Associations under this Class and suggests that <strong>the</strong> floral poverty <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> IranianSteppe compared <strong>to</strong> steppic areas elsewhere may be due <strong>to</strong> ecological fac<strong>to</strong>rs o<strong>the</strong>r than just humanland-use pressures.Where <strong>the</strong> steppe is post-segetal or post-pas<strong>to</strong>ral – areas abandoned by farming and having beendenuded <strong>of</strong> Artemisia by fuel collecting as well, <strong>the</strong>n a process <strong>of</strong> Tragacanthicisation has occurredAstragalus becomes co-dominant with Artemisia and <strong>the</strong> recorded sample communities containfloral elements sometimes reminiscent perhaps <strong>to</strong> aspects <strong>of</strong> garrigue habitats;- Teucrium polium,Phlomis aucheri, Convolvulus chondrilloides, Acantholimon leucanthum, Echinops persicus, Stachysinflata, Thymus serpyllum, Ephedra strobilacea, Euphorbia connata and o<strong>the</strong>rs. All <strong>the</strong>secommunities are led by one or more <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> numerous species <strong>of</strong> Astragalus <strong>of</strong> which more than 600occur in Iran. Zohary describes <strong>the</strong> great tracts <strong>of</strong> steppe where overgrazing reduces competitionand has allowed <strong>the</strong> entry <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se Tragacanths in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> plant communities. Astragalus andAcantholimon even become ruderal alongside plants that are <strong>to</strong>xic <strong>to</strong> lives<strong>to</strong>ck such as Euphorbia,Cousinia, Centaurea, Onopordon, Eryngium and some <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r genera.It is interesting <strong>to</strong> note that grazing on a landscape scale leaves behind a legacy <strong>of</strong> an altered plantcommunity ecology which must itself have influenced <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> wild bee communitiessince <strong>the</strong> evolution <strong>of</strong> pas<strong>to</strong>ralism and o<strong>the</strong>r forms <strong>of</strong> lives<strong>to</strong>ck management in <strong>the</strong> Region.Highland SteppeThere seems <strong>to</strong> be a point at which <strong>the</strong> Steppe at elevation in montane landscape interacts with <strong>the</strong>Tragacanthic shrublands. In <strong>the</strong> subalpine and alpine regions <strong>of</strong> Turkey dwarf Juniper leads a variedplant community rich in high altitude flora where humidity and rainfall is high.<strong>Eastern</strong> Ana<strong>to</strong>lian montane steppeThis ecoregion lies within <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian phy<strong>to</strong>geographic region. The montane steppe liesbetween 1500 <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs elevation with a rich flora <strong>of</strong> tragacanthic communities or in o<strong>the</strong>r areassteppic grasslands. Higher up are umbellifers <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> genera are dominant until <strong>the</strong> alpineregions where a rich flora <strong>of</strong> geophytes is found. There are also steppe forests in this ecoregion. Insome places typified by Almond and Juniper with a shrub layer <strong>of</strong> Roses with Berberis and Pistaciaand amongst <strong>the</strong>m a rich herb flora led by Artemisia and Astragalus. The <strong>to</strong>pographical diversity isone <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> features allowing for <strong>Eastern</strong> Ana<strong>to</strong>lia as a centre <strong>of</strong> floral endemism. Astragalus,Acantholimon, Cousinia, Centaurea and Onobrychis have speciated here. Tree species diversity is15


also very high with endemic taxa including Amygdalus kotschyi, Amygdalus cardauchorum,Crataegus davisii, Pyrus hakiarica and Pyrus salicifolia serratula.It is very likely that <strong>the</strong>se trees support a special assemblage <strong>of</strong> bees including many short-<strong>to</strong>nguedAndrenas and some species in <strong>the</strong> Halictidae.This Steppe vegetation community <strong>of</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Ana<strong>to</strong>lia was recently revised and analysed byHamzaoğlu (2006) with a new defined plant Order, climatic data and plant associations given withlife form analysis.Elsewhere through <strong>the</strong> Region in <strong>the</strong> high mountain zones <strong>the</strong> tragacanthic dwarf shrubcommunities include hundreds <strong>of</strong> flower species – Astragalus and Acatholimon predominate as <strong>the</strong>ydo on <strong>the</strong> plateau grazed steppe and along with spiny domed evolved elements in <strong>the</strong> generaEuphorbia, Erinacea, Genista and Cytisus (Zohary 1973), but here also <strong>the</strong>y support numerous o<strong>the</strong>rflowers in <strong>the</strong> genera Acanthophyllum, Onobrychis, Gypsophila, Minuartia, Tragopogon, Ononis,Noaea and o<strong>the</strong>rs.Mediterranean Tragacanthic subalpine steppe could be seen sometimes as a part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> montaneslope phrygana. Astragalus plays a leading role in <strong>the</strong> class <strong>of</strong> subalpine Mediterranean habitat fromSinai and Jordan in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Taurus and Aegean. There are a number <strong>of</strong> very important floristiccommunities here. In <strong>the</strong> Aegean region <strong>of</strong> Turkey <strong>the</strong> Tragacanthic community forms a continuouslayer <strong>of</strong> thorn-cushion plants resistant <strong>to</strong> grazing. These leading plants cohere with <strong>the</strong> followingflowers;-Erysimum kotschyanum, Iberis sempervirens, Moenchia mantica, Arenaria macrosepala, Saponariapulvinaris, Silene rhynchocarpa, Ranunculus cadmicus, Arabis cadmea, Alyssum minutum, Alyssumcephalotes, Aubretia integrifolia, Aethionema iberideum, Aethionema cordatum, Draba olympica,Thlaspi papillosum, Geum heterocarpum, Sideritis lanata, Lamium ehrenbergi, Lamiummicrophyllum, Veronica triloba, Cruciata coronata, Asyneuma cichoriiforme and o<strong>the</strong>rs.There are a number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r communities in <strong>the</strong>se landscapes which must be vital in determining<strong>the</strong> bee communities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> montane expanses above <strong>the</strong> tree-line. However, in Iraq and Iranano<strong>the</strong>r type <strong>of</strong> thorn-cushion community exists and in <strong>the</strong> Zagros and Elburz Mountains in<strong>to</strong>Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Ana<strong>to</strong>lia supports a great richness <strong>of</strong> flower species and plant communities whichundoubtedly support <strong>the</strong> rich diversity <strong>of</strong> bee species found in <strong>the</strong>se mountain regions. Thesignificance <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se communities for <strong>the</strong> rich bee diversity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian is such that it isworth listing some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> flower species which are mentioned in Zohary’s account <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> floralcommunities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se vast areas. In addition <strong>to</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> species <strong>of</strong> Astragalus and Acantholimonwhich <strong>of</strong>ten typify <strong>the</strong>se communities <strong>the</strong> following occur as members <strong>of</strong> particular associations orcommunities;-Genista montbretii, Onobrychis cornuta, Euphorbia macroclada, Hypericum scabrum, Rosa glutinosa,Convolvulus cataonicus, Mattiastrum cristatum, Onosma alboroseum, Onosma microcarpum,Onosma sericeum, Verbascum <strong>to</strong>mpskyanum, Verbascum cataonicum, Verbascum cheiranthifolium,Salvia caespi<strong>to</strong>sa, Scorzonera acantholimon, Scutellaria tauricola, Marrubium globosum, Nepetaaristata, Nepeta mussinii, Phlomis anisodonta, Phlomis linearis, Phlomis armeniaca, Prangosferrulacea, Eryngium glomeratum, Erysimum caespi<strong>to</strong>sum, Erysimum ibericum, Alyssum singarense,Alyssum minus, Dactylis glomerata, Daphne acuminata, Ballota aucheri, Veronica orientalis,Drabopsis verna, Silene aucheriana, Silene montbretiana, Thlaspi kotschyanus, Thymus kotschyanus,Euphorbia denticulata, Scutellaria pinnatifida, Eremopoa persica, Cruciata coronata, Bunium16


achyactis, Sameraria armena, Pimpinella tragium, Aethionema grandiflorum, Minuartia recurva,Minuartina juniperina, Amygdalus carduchorum, Acanthophyllum microcephalum, Acanthophyllumglandulosum, Taenia<strong>the</strong>rum crinitum, Trifolium pratense, Ziziphora clinopodioides, Helichrysumarmenium, Secale montanum, Lamium <strong>to</strong>men<strong>to</strong>sum, Arenaria gypsophiloides, Arenaria lessertiana,Arenaria polycnemifolia (<strong>the</strong>se Arenaria sandworts also signify <strong>the</strong>ir own communities in terrains <strong>of</strong>particular edaphic qualities in some areas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> mountains), Aethionema stenopterum, Aethionematrinervium, Marrubium kotschyi, Salvia atropetala, Nepeta daenensis, Alyssum sibiricum, Fibigiamulticaulis, Vicia persica, Euphorbia decipiens, Hypericum scabrum, Prangos uloptera, Stellariaorientalis, Scrophularia variegata, Asperula glomerata, Asperula se<strong>to</strong>sa, Galium humifusum, Galiumhyrcanicum, Campanula stevenii, Achillea vermicularis.Steppe Forest <strong>of</strong> Temperate regionsTemperate steppe forest is widespread in <strong>the</strong> Euxinian and in <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian. However, <strong>the</strong>rehas been a great depletion <strong>of</strong> this kind <strong>of</strong> habitat, <strong>of</strong>ten through tree felling. Selective tree fellinghas produced a thinly wooded parkland structure populated by wild fruit trees. This is <strong>the</strong> typicalforest steppe structure in <strong>the</strong> dry Euxinian <strong>of</strong> Inner Ana<strong>to</strong>lia. Between 750 and 2000 mtrs Quercusspecies lead a sometimes very damaged community with Rosaceous trees and o<strong>the</strong>rwise a steppicground flora. Often <strong>the</strong> land is just dotted with individual trees <strong>of</strong> Pyrus eleagrifolius and Crataeguslaciniata in a steppe <strong>of</strong> grasses and flowers.The Irano-Turanian open steppe forest has also an open structure, again led by Quercus species andwith scattered Juniperus, Pistacia and Amygdalus.Alpine Meadow SteppeThe high mountain <strong>to</strong>ps are snow covered for much <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> year. Here in <strong>the</strong> Alpine regions and onrocky scree is a specialised flora <strong>of</strong> meadow plants which maintains a particular pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> wild beespecies including a special fauna <strong>of</strong> Bumblebees. These habitats are <strong>the</strong> home <strong>of</strong> diverse beecommunities and are <strong>of</strong> conservation concern.The Zagros and Alborz Mountains support a transitional flora between <strong>the</strong> Ana<strong>to</strong>lian, Caucasian and<strong>the</strong> Hindu Kush. Noroozi et al (2007) note that 58% <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> alpine flora <strong>of</strong> Iran is endemic orsubendemic and that <strong>the</strong> Zagros in particular may warrant being considered as a separate floristicProvince. These alpine communities are gravely threatened by overgrazing and development.Saline Desert and marshlandSaltmarshes form an ecologically important part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> coastlines we have already looked at in <strong>the</strong>chapter on Coasts. But as well as <strong>the</strong>se coastal habitats which are sometimes rich in bee and plantspecies <strong>the</strong>re are great tracts <strong>of</strong> land away from <strong>the</strong> coasts which are saline. The major examples <strong>of</strong>saline deserts are in <strong>the</strong> vicinity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dead Sea and elsewhere in <strong>the</strong> Palestinian Rift Valley. The JafrDepression <strong>of</strong> Jordan. The Syrian Desert contains some areas <strong>of</strong> saline marshland. However, inAna<strong>to</strong>lia <strong>the</strong>re are extensive saline wetlands <strong>of</strong> global ecological importance. Iraq contains saline17


egions especially in Lower Mesopotamia and sou<strong>the</strong>rn Jazira. In Iran <strong>the</strong>re are very large areas <strong>of</strong>salt lands. Most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se salines are au<strong>to</strong>morphous (Zohary 1962) and are maintained bygroundwater. The remainder are termed hydromorphous and are <strong>the</strong> result <strong>of</strong> seasonal flooding.Sodium ions and o<strong>the</strong>r salts degrade <strong>the</strong> soil structure and impeded <strong>the</strong> osmotic processes <strong>of</strong> plantroots as well as being damaging <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> plant tissues. These stresses have enabled <strong>the</strong> evolution <strong>of</strong>halophytic plant species and communities which need <strong>to</strong> be assessed when researching <strong>the</strong> beefaunas <strong>of</strong> such regions as <strong>the</strong>y provide <strong>the</strong> resources for <strong>the</strong> pollina<strong>to</strong>r communities within <strong>the</strong>seregions.The Mediterranean saline wetlands are represented by plant communities typified by Salicornia.There are diverse associations.In <strong>the</strong> Rift Valley and large areas <strong>of</strong> Iraq and Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran Zohary describes <strong>the</strong> Class <strong>of</strong> halophyticcommunities led by species <strong>of</strong> Suaeda where winters are warmer. This genus is present with avariety <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r plants including a diverse number <strong>of</strong> Tamarix species, a Genus <strong>of</strong> significant resourcefor bees in <strong>the</strong>se regions.In such habitats vegetation is arranged in circles or concentric zones and <strong>the</strong>re is a seasonality aswell which means that plant community pattern and boundaries can vary according <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong>year. The regime <strong>of</strong> water deposition and evaporation or drainage influences <strong>the</strong> appearance <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong>se areas greatly.The most severe salines <strong>of</strong> Iraq were only briefly and partly described by Zohary, who noted that <strong>the</strong>conditions were extreme enough for some areas <strong>to</strong> be devoid <strong>of</strong> plant life. However, away fromthose areas o<strong>the</strong>r Iraqi salt lands were in cooler or temperate inland regions and supported a goodflora. Some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> characteristic plants <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se inland areas <strong>of</strong> Iraq include <strong>the</strong> following;-five species <strong>of</strong> Salsola, Seidlitzia florida, Kochia prostrata, Tamarix hispida, T. lep<strong>to</strong>stachya, T.brachystachys, T. salina, T. macrocarpa, T. octandra, T. rosea, Cornulaca aucheri, C. macran<strong>the</strong>ra,Panderia pilosa, Atropis distans, Limonium iconium, L. gmelinii, L. globuliferum.More recently <strong>the</strong> saline plant communities <strong>of</strong> Iran have been studied in greater depth and detail.More advanced classification <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> vegetation communities, maps <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> surface geology andanalysis <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> soil chemistry and o<strong>the</strong>r fac<strong>to</strong>rs can be found in Akhani, (2004), Akhani & Ghorbanli(1993) and Breckle (2002) and references <strong>the</strong>rein.In Turkey such saline communities are present around Tuz Golu which has a solontchak character,drying up in summer after <strong>the</strong> winter rains leaving a thick crust <strong>of</strong> chloride salts. Salsola inermis,Limonium iconicum, Artemisia fragrans, Frankenia hirsuta and many o<strong>the</strong>rs make up <strong>the</strong> variousecological plant communites around this region. There are o<strong>the</strong>r saline wetland habitats in Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Toge<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong>re is sense in treating <strong>the</strong>se all <strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>r as <strong>the</strong> Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lian Steppe. This is <strong>the</strong>treatment applied by <strong>the</strong> WWF in <strong>the</strong>ir creation <strong>of</strong> ecoregions for <strong>the</strong> globe. Here <strong>the</strong> Tuz Golu salinesystem is a centrepiece for <strong>the</strong> surrounding river basin saline steppes. In <strong>the</strong> Karapinar River basinless saline plant communities are led by Limonium ana<strong>to</strong>licum, and joined by Frankenia hirsuta ando<strong>the</strong>rs. Wetter areas have Tamarix gracilis, Juncus and Limonium globuliferum. These habitatssupport an endemic flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> following taxa;-Gladiolus halophilus, Acanthalimon halophilum, Ferula halophila, Asparagus lyconicus, Allium vuralii,Verbascum pyroliforme, Salvia halophila, Limonium iconicum, Limonium ana<strong>to</strong>licum, Limoniumtamaricoides, Hypericum salsugineum, Onosma halophilum and Taraxacum mirabile.18


In Iran solontchak and solonetz saltlands occupy vast areas. There are substantial areas which aredesert in that <strong>the</strong>re are no plants seemingly due <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> absence <strong>of</strong> moisture. Zohary noted that itappeared that <strong>the</strong>re were plant genera not known for salt <strong>to</strong>lerance which had halophytic ecotypesnear <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>se regions. The genus Tamarix in <strong>the</strong>se parts <strong>of</strong> Iran is most speciose and represents animportant pollina<strong>to</strong>r resource. Zohary lists 22 species <strong>of</strong> Tamarix for <strong>the</strong>se areas many but not all <strong>of</strong>which are halophytes. This genus is very attractive <strong>to</strong> many species <strong>of</strong> bee and in dry conditions is avital foraging resource.Syrian Semi-Desert and DesertWhere Hammada scoparia or Hammada eigii survives on <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian fringes and in <strong>the</strong>Syrian Desert <strong>of</strong>ten on Alluvial soils <strong>the</strong>re is sometimes a rich consort <strong>of</strong> segetal annuals and ruderalflowers. O<strong>the</strong>rwise Hammada is co-dominant with Anabasis syriaca in sometimes florally rich areas<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Negev and Syrian Desert. There are a number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r diverse floral community associationsin <strong>the</strong>se regions, some but not all <strong>of</strong> which have been altered by past or present arable farming.Interrelationship <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Topography and Climate features in IranHeshmati (2007) reviews <strong>the</strong> four ecological zones <strong>of</strong> Iran. The Hyrcanian, Irano-Turanian andZagrosian zones are included in my Introduction however <strong>the</strong> fourth zone, <strong>the</strong> Khalidj-Omanian,borders upon <strong>the</strong> Arabian <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> extent that this zone requires much more research in <strong>the</strong> context <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Arabian Region. It extends throughout <strong>the</strong> south <strong>of</strong> Iran including <strong>the</strong> Provinces <strong>of</strong> Khosistan,Boushehr, Hormozgan and Sistan-Baluchistan. The climate is sub-equa<strong>to</strong>rial, altitude is from sealevel <strong>to</strong> 1000 mtrs and representative plant species are Medicago, Acacia, Prosopis, Euphorbia ando<strong>the</strong>rs. Warncke’s records <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bees <strong>of</strong> Iran include this zone.The Hyrcanian Zone <strong>of</strong> Iran borders <strong>the</strong> Caspian Sea and extends eastwards. The geography allowsthree vegetation subdivisions. Firstly forest Steppe <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Alborz, <strong>the</strong>n Hyrcanian Forest, and thirdlyLowland Caspian Desert.The Alborz forest steppe is woodland <strong>of</strong> Juniperus sabina and Juniperus communis supporting a goodshrub and herb layer. However, felling <strong>of</strong> woodland has depleted <strong>the</strong> original nature <strong>of</strong> this habitatand <strong>the</strong>re are a number <strong>of</strong> human pressures at <strong>the</strong> landscape level as well.The mixed forest <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Hyrcanian once covered a vast area <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> middle elevations <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Alborz.The high rainfall, spring snow melt waters and humidity allow for a high productivity and much <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> forest has been felled and converted in<strong>to</strong> agriculture.. Typical forest tree species are Fagusorientalis, Carpinus betulus, Tilia rubra, Taxus baccata, Ulmus glabra, Quercus castanefolia, Parrotiapersica, Alnus glutinosa, Punica granatum and Paliurus spina-christi.Caspian Desert on <strong>the</strong> fringes <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Caspian Sea is <strong>of</strong>ten grazed or o<strong>the</strong>rwise farmed. Here <strong>the</strong>re is ahalophytic community <strong>of</strong> Artemisia, Salsola, Anabasis and o<strong>the</strong>r genera and doubtless <strong>the</strong> beecommunity requires study. Heshmati (1999) has described <strong>the</strong> main plant species in detail.The Zagros has a semi-arid climate with a temperate winter. There is a steppe forest community andQuercus woodland, with subalpine areas above <strong>the</strong> forest zone, as described under Steppe.The Irano-Turanian Plateau <strong>of</strong> Iran <strong>of</strong> deserts, sand dunes, salines and steppes.19


The dwarf scrub communities can be rich in plant species, especially where annual rainfall exceeds100mm.Heshmati (2007) gives a succinct and very useful summary <strong>of</strong> key plant species <strong>of</strong> Iran in relation <strong>to</strong>altitude, average annual rainfall and ecological zone.Phrygana, Garrigue, Batha, Maquis and ForestThe following account is based on Chapter 15 <strong>of</strong> Zohary (1973) volume 2 for an overview <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean vegetation. The definition here is based on <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean climatic vegetationsincluding some mountain floral communities where summer drought and winter rainfall are <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean pattern. Our area is <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean where rainfall is already lower thanthat <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> West. winters are far less cold than nearby steppe and desert regions and summersusually not as hot.Soils are <strong>of</strong> two main types. The terra rossa hard limes<strong>to</strong>nes and <strong>the</strong> white or grey rendzinas derivedfrom Chalk. Locally <strong>the</strong>re are volcanic or sand soils. Soil pr<strong>of</strong>iles are <strong>of</strong>ten <strong>of</strong> a humiferous underlayerabove mineral subsoil prone <strong>to</strong> eradication in <strong>the</strong> event <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> removal <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> vegetative cover.Many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> plants have <strong>to</strong>ugh deep root systems able <strong>to</strong> penetrate in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> harder subsoil ground.There are two main categories;- a lowland zone and a mountain zone.<strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean vegetations are <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> classes, <strong>the</strong> ones below are trulyMediterranean whereas some closely related plant communities are really steppe formations;-Quercetea calliprinithis is typical <strong>of</strong> lowlands within 150 km <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> coasts. This Mediterranean lowland band decreasesin width southwards and in <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>astern Mediterranean is sometimes narrow or completelyabsent.Here are several plant community Orders;-Maquis and Forest.The forest woodland species are led by arboreal species within <strong>the</strong> following genera;-Pistacia, Quercus, Crataegus, Styrax, Cercis, Arbutus, Rubia, Lonicera, Aris<strong>to</strong>lochia, Bryonia,Cera<strong>to</strong>nia, Laurus, Rhamnus, Phillyrea, Spartium, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me, Genista, Pinus, Cupressus, Juniperusand Smilax.The Mediterranean maquis and forests are rich in plant species and this has been encouraged byinterference in <strong>the</strong> habitats. The winter-deciduous life strategy is seen <strong>to</strong> be somewhat at odds with<strong>the</strong> present environmental conditions and some tree species are survivals from Tertiary tropicalconditions. Leading arboreal species <strong>of</strong>ten have deep roots as well as some lateral roots and manyare able <strong>to</strong> regenerate from dormant buds after experiencing fire or cutting. Osmotic values andtranspiration rates <strong>of</strong> this woodland flora is adapted <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean bimodal climaticconditions.20


In <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean plant species have <strong>of</strong>ten been prevented from westward spread by<strong>the</strong> extent <strong>of</strong> desert from Palestine <strong>to</strong> Libya which has ruptured <strong>the</strong> lit<strong>to</strong>ral continuity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean. This desert barrier was in place during <strong>the</strong> Pliocene by <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> developmen<strong>to</strong>f <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean maquis following upon <strong>the</strong> regression <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tethys. The adjacentIrano-Turanian has had an enduring influence on this lowland Mediterranean flora. There aresignificant biregional species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> arboreal communities including Quercus boisseri, Pyrus syriaca,Amygdalus communis, Amygdalus orientalis, Cercis siliquastrum and Crataegus aronia which havespread westwards. <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean maquis species have conversely influenced <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian such as Rubia tenuifolia, Juniperus oxycedris and Jasminum fruticans. O<strong>the</strong>rwise many <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> eastern Mediterranean maquis members are circum-Mediterranean or are closely related <strong>to</strong>congeners in <strong>the</strong> Western Mediterranean.Where this Maquis is not reduced by human activity <strong>the</strong>n Quercus calliprinos tends <strong>to</strong> becomedominant and overall floral diversity diminishes as woodland becomes more uniform. However, inhis<strong>to</strong>ric times such extent <strong>of</strong> woodland is so fragmentary that it is uncertain what identity a truelandscape scale forest <strong>of</strong> this type would unfold. One aspect is that with <strong>the</strong> depletion <strong>of</strong> much <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Mediterranean woodland regrowth is not assured or on <strong>the</strong> same trajec<strong>to</strong>ry due <strong>to</strong> fac<strong>to</strong>rs suchas soil depletion or change, <strong>the</strong> removal <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> seed s<strong>to</strong>re and <strong>the</strong> invasion by o<strong>the</strong>r plant species orcommunities. In <strong>the</strong> Judaean Mountains Zohary reported that a 20 year study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> vegetation onabandoned terraces did not find a reestablishment <strong>of</strong> a tree climax community. A dwarf shrubpioneer community appeared but <strong>the</strong>re was no successful succession <strong>to</strong> forest. This could alsosuggest that original woodland establishment was predicated on particular climatic conditions or apattern <strong>of</strong> wea<strong>the</strong>r over a number <strong>of</strong> seasons at least which would allow successful germination or<strong>the</strong> growth <strong>of</strong> saplings <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> forest species. However, evidence from o<strong>the</strong>r areas suggests thatforest regrowth can take 50 years or more <strong>to</strong> develop following <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> agriculture.In Many areas surviving patches <strong>of</strong> mature woodland are evidence <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> former climax vegetation,but <strong>the</strong> surrounding land has <strong>of</strong>ten lost soil <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> extent that regeneration would not conform <strong>to</strong><strong>the</strong> original woodland community.A fur<strong>the</strong>r savannah-like vegetation alliance <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean maquis is evidenced by <strong>of</strong>tensolitary trees in an open landscape. Species are Pistacia lentiscus allied with Cera<strong>to</strong>nia siliqua, Oleaeuropea, Juniperus and some o<strong>the</strong>rs. Some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se trees have tropical affinities. There are anumber <strong>of</strong> varieties <strong>of</strong> this kind <strong>of</strong> open forest association, <strong>the</strong> most typical found in Palestinecontains <strong>the</strong> following characteristic additional plant species;-Rhamnus palaestinus, Phillyrea media, Asparagus aphyllus, Rubia tenuifolia, Clematis cirrhosa,Crataegus aronia, Smilax aspera, Pistacia palaestina, Tamus communis and Quercus calliprinos.This is an outstanding Association floristically with 250 plant species recorded. The floral diversity issuch an important resource for <strong>the</strong> wild bee communities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> region. The following plants areamong <strong>the</strong> frequent members <strong>of</strong> this open maquis;-Phagnalon rupestre, Sarcopoterium spinosum, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Dactylis glomerata, Andropogondistachyus, Teucrium polium, Micromeria nervosa, Coridothymus capitatus, Majorana syriaca, Alcea21


se<strong>to</strong>sa, Teucrium divaricatum, Salvia hierosolymitana, Helichrysum sanguineum, Cistus salviifolius,Cistus creticus and Fumana thymifolia.There are o<strong>the</strong>r types <strong>of</strong> this maquis found on Crete and on Cyprus, where <strong>the</strong>re are several relatedAssociations.Within Syria and Lebanon Pistacia lentiscus and Cera<strong>to</strong>nia siliqua form an Association with Myrtuscommunis. Again this open maquis structure includes a great floral biodiversity which is critical for<strong>the</strong> bee communities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean. The associating plants here include;-Styrax <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Sarcopoterium spinosum, Quercus calliprinos, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Coridothymuscapitatus, Inula viscosa, Rhamnus palaestinus, Cistus creticus, Satureja thymbra, Phagnalon rupestre,Teucrium polium, Carlina involucrata, Prasium majus, Pimpinella peregrina, Rubia tenuifolia, Salviahierosolymitana, Centaurea iberica and o<strong>the</strong>rs.In Ana<strong>to</strong>lia Olea europea takes <strong>the</strong> place <strong>of</strong> Pistacia lentiscus in this type <strong>of</strong> Association. In AegeanAna<strong>to</strong>lia Quercus coccifera joins this kind <strong>of</strong> maquis and a number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r Quercus species formmaquis associations through <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>astern and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Mediterranean.Evergreen trees also play <strong>the</strong> role <strong>of</strong> lead arboreal members <strong>of</strong> florally rich maquis through largeareas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean, <strong>the</strong> three leading species being Pinus halepensis, Pinus brutia andCupressus sempervirens.On <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>astern fringes <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ana<strong>to</strong>lian maquis and on <strong>the</strong> junctures <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean with<strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian in Syria, Jordan, Palestine and Lebanon <strong>the</strong> tree Crataegus aronia associates withPyrus syriaca, Rhamnus palaestinus, Amygdalus korschinskii, Amygdalus webbii and Pistaciaatlantica <strong>to</strong> form a fur<strong>the</strong>r distinctive maquis association.Mediterranean dwarf shrub communities <strong>of</strong> Batha, Phrygana and Garrigue.These are evergreen chamaephytic communities <strong>of</strong>ten short-term but sometimes climactic. Thearboreal components are continually interrupted or destroyed. In Palestine, Lebanon, Syria andTurkey this Association is signified by Sarcopoterium spinosum and is florally very important. Typicalspecies on calcareous surfaces especially include <strong>the</strong> following;-Cistus creticus, Fumana thymifolia, Fumana arabica, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Teucrium polium, Teucriumdivaricatum, Hyparrhenia hirta, Andropogon distachyus, Osyris alba, Dactylis glomerata, Rhamnuspalaestinus, Micromeria nervosa, Lotus peregrinus and Salvia triloba.This kind <strong>of</strong> garrigue association is widespread and maintains a large bee community on <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean lowlands throughout <strong>the</strong> regions. There are many variations and on Cyprus forinstance Sarcopoterium is joined typically by <strong>the</strong> following;-Genista fasselata, Galium suberosum, Noaea mucronata, Lithospermum hispidulum, Urgineamaritima, Fumana thymifolia, Coridothymus capitatus, Vicia palaestina, Vicia senocarpa, Salvia22


verbenacea, Trifolium stellatum, Trifolium procumbens, Trifolium clypeatum and An<strong>the</strong>mis creticaamong many o<strong>the</strong>rs.On Crete this type <strong>of</strong> Sarcopoterium Association has a different character again. Zohary gives aCretan example which includes <strong>the</strong> following plants;-Anthyllis hermanniae, Satureja thymbra, Phlomis lanata, Phlomis fruticosa, Teucrium microphyllum,Euphorbia acanthothamnos, Erica verticillata, Genista acanthoclada, Rhamnus prunifolius,Hypericum empetrifolium, Dactylis glomerata, Thymelaea hirsuta, Helichrysum siculum and Trifoliumangustifolium.On rocky ground from Israel northwards, a sometimes sparse Alliance <strong>of</strong> garrigue flora ischaracterised by Coridothymus capitatus and closely allied with Cistus. This community typicallygrows on rendzina soils and is relatively poor in Annual species. Typical plants include;-Satureja thymbra, Fumana thymifolia, Fumana arabica, Helian<strong>the</strong>mum fasciculi, Sarcopoteriumspinosum, Phagnalon rupestre, Teucrium polium, Crupina crupinastrum, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa,Atractylis comosa, Oryzopsis miliacea, Avena sterilis, Hippocrepis unisiliquosa, Linum strictum, ononisantiquorum, Onobrychis squarrosa and trifolium <strong>to</strong>men<strong>to</strong>sum.This community varies through <strong>the</strong> range which extends <strong>to</strong> Lebanon, Syria and Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.In o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> region one or o<strong>the</strong>r species <strong>of</strong> Cistus and sometimes Helian<strong>the</strong>mum stipulatumlead associations.In some areas <strong>of</strong> sandy soils or terra rossa <strong>the</strong> plant Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa is dominant, leading a plantcommunity <strong>of</strong> great richness and significance for <strong>the</strong> ground-nesting bee fauna.A fur<strong>the</strong>r Association in Palestine and Cyprus is dominated by Genista fasselata. Zohary gives anexample from Cyprus which has <strong>the</strong> following additional species;-Rhamnus oleoides, Thymelaea tar<strong>to</strong>uraira, Fumana arabica, Fumana thymifolia, Galium suberosum,Cistus creticus, Pistacia lentiscus and Pistacia palaestina.Various related communites are dominated sometimes by ei<strong>the</strong>r Salvia trilobata, Satureja thymbraor Phlomis viscosa.Semi-Steppe dwarf shrubs.This is an order <strong>of</strong> plant communities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Batha , <strong>of</strong>ten Mediterranean but with Irano-Turanianelements, situated on <strong>the</strong> fringes <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> eastern Mediterranean and Irano-Turanian regions andcomprised <strong>of</strong> very diverse assemblages <strong>of</strong> Annuals and hemicryp<strong>to</strong>phytes in xeric environments.There are many Associations here and <strong>the</strong> plant species occupying dominant niches in some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>mare as follows;-23


Ononis natrix, Salvia dominica, Ballota undulata, Echinops polyceras, Convolvulus dorycnium,Psoralea bituminosa, Alkanna strigosa, Thymelaea hirsuta, Euphorbia hierosolymitana,sarcopoterium spinosum, Centaurea damascena and Coridothymus capitatus.In Palestine, sou<strong>the</strong>rn Ana<strong>to</strong>lia, sou<strong>the</strong>rn Syria and parts <strong>of</strong> Cyprus <strong>the</strong> plant Ziziphus lotus which is aTertiary invasive <strong>of</strong> former Tropical savannah now leads segetal plant communities as well as somegarrigue types. Ano<strong>the</strong>r Tertiary invasive is Hyparrhenia hirta, sometimes co-dominant with Ziziphusspina-christi in relict savannah communities in Palestine. These Tertiary invasive species support richcommunities <strong>of</strong> flowers as <strong>the</strong>y have colonised xeric Mediterranean habitats denuded in <strong>the</strong> past <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong>ir primary vegetation coverings.Mediterranean and semi-Steppic orders on s<strong>to</strong>ny ground (Var<strong>the</strong>mietea).These are <strong>the</strong> plant communities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> rocks, chasms, walls and scree within <strong>the</strong> Mediterraneanzone. True lithophytes and chasmophytes make up <strong>the</strong> plant societies <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se habitats. Within quitesmall areas four basic types <strong>of</strong> habitat can be found. Intact rock surfaces inhabited by a smallnumber <strong>of</strong> robust chaemophytes, rock with shallow cavities containing soil, rock with fissures andfinally rock with chasms. These rock habitats will be <strong>of</strong> especial importance <strong>to</strong> bee species able <strong>to</strong>construct nests on <strong>the</strong> rock surfaces or within small rock fractures or amongst scree and rock debris.Typical plant species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se domains are Var<strong>the</strong>mia montana, Onosma orientale, Ballota saxatalis,Stachys palaestina, Micromeria fruticosa, Sedum nicaeense, Umbilicus intermedius and Hyoscyamusaureus.This habitat is most important also for <strong>the</strong> high level <strong>of</strong> plant species endemicity it supports.The Montane MediterraneanThis Mediterranean vegetation zone lies above <strong>the</strong> lowland Mediterranean and begins at 1000 mtrsrising <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs where it joins <strong>the</strong> subalpine. The altitudinal limits can vary and <strong>the</strong> naturalboundaries have been strongly influenced by <strong>the</strong> his<strong>to</strong>ry <strong>of</strong> human land management <strong>of</strong> thisenvironment.The Mediterranean Montane zone is naturally forest and a fur<strong>the</strong>r essential habitat for invertebratefaunas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> region, including many bee species.Typical tree species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> montane Mediterranean forests are some members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> generaQuercus, Juniperus and Acer, also <strong>the</strong> following;-Ostrya carpinifolia, Cotinus coggygria, Colutea arborescens, Fontanesia phillyreoides, Crataegusmonogyna, Pyracantha coccinea, Eriolobus trilobatus, Prunus ursina, Fraxinus ornus, Castanea sativaand Pinus nigra.These tree species support a special community <strong>of</strong> perennial herbs and shrubs including <strong>the</strong>following species;-24


Blechnum spicant, Asplenum trichomanes, Asplenum adiantum-nigrum, Phyllitis sagittata, Pterisvittata, Calamintha clinopodium, Adenocarpus complicatus, Cornus australis, Buxus longifolius,Scutellaria diffusa, Salvia grandiflora, Cytisus drepanolobus, Hypericum hircinum and many o<strong>the</strong>rs.Deciduous tree groupings are <strong>of</strong>ten typified by Quercus cerris whereas in <strong>the</strong> upper areas coniferforests are more prevalent, characterised by Cedrus or Abies cilicica and Juniperus excelsa each <strong>of</strong>which also lead important forest communities.Genetic diversity within plant species is a critical aspect <strong>of</strong> Mediterranean plant diversity and <strong>the</strong>chemical pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> essential oils can vary across <strong>the</strong> geographical range <strong>of</strong> a particular species in away which reveals patterns <strong>of</strong> dispersal, evolution and adaptation. This is a most important subjectfor bee biogeography and conservation and is described and thoroughly referenced in Thompson(2005). Distribution patterns are <strong>the</strong>mselves <strong>the</strong> outcome <strong>of</strong> repeated geological events and coldand warm periods which has caused faunas and floras <strong>to</strong> survive and change in refuge areas.Agricultural environments.Late Pleis<strong>to</strong>cene domestication <strong>of</strong> animals and plants by Man was followed by a segetal stage where<strong>the</strong>re was a balance between man and nature but in <strong>the</strong> neo-segetal <strong>the</strong> agricultural processes came<strong>to</strong> dominate <strong>the</strong> landscape and food surpluses led <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> expansion <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> human population anddiversification <strong>of</strong> activities.Faunas were transformed and many large herbivores became extinct.Zohary believes that many edible plants in <strong>the</strong> wild became extinct because <strong>of</strong> man’s overuse <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong>m for food.Man’s activities are a part <strong>of</strong> nature. He is a product <strong>of</strong> evolution and an epidemic in <strong>the</strong> bioticenvironment <strong>to</strong> some degree. An excellent and readable account <strong>of</strong> human archaeology and <strong>the</strong>origin and spread <strong>of</strong> farming in <strong>the</strong> Near East can be found in Mi<strong>the</strong>n (2003).To some extent perhaps what we see is a migration and evolution <strong>of</strong> a human system through <strong>the</strong>Near East and Mediterranean. The development <strong>of</strong> farming and <strong>the</strong> spread <strong>of</strong> human civilisationsexpanding (and <strong>of</strong>ten retreating) through <strong>the</strong> landscapes <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean and NearEast since 22,000 BP following <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> last Ice Age.Hundreds <strong>of</strong> plant species provide food, medicine, fuel and domestic materials <strong>of</strong> all kinds.pot herbs and salad plantsOften sustaining nomadic societies in <strong>the</strong> Middle East;-Aizoon canariense, Alternan<strong>the</strong>ra sessilis, Amaranthus, Anchusa hybrida, Apium graveolens,Arisarum vulgare, Asparagus aphyllus, Atriplex, Bellis perennis, Brassica <strong>to</strong>urnefortii, Brassica nigra,Centaurea, Chenopodium, Chrysan<strong>the</strong>mum coronarium, Cichoricum divaricatum, Cirsium, Corchorusoli<strong>to</strong>rius, Crepis, Crithmum maritimum, Erodium, Erucaria, Erysimum, Foeniculum vulgare, Gundelia<strong>to</strong>urnefortii, Helminthia echinoides, Isatis lusitanica, Lamium moschatum, Lepidium latifolium,Malva, Moricandia nitens, Nasturtium <strong>of</strong>ficinale, No<strong>to</strong>basis syriaca, Plantago coronopus, Portulacaoleracea, Reboudia pinnata, Rheum ribes, Rheum palaestinum, Rumex, Salvadora persica, Scandix,25


Sedum nicaeense, Silene vulgaris, Silybum marianum, Sinapis alba, Sisymbrium, Thrincia tuberosa,Tolpis altissima, Urospermum picroides, Urtica, Veronica anagallis-aquatica and o<strong>the</strong>rs.Bulbs and RootsAlhagi maurorum, Arum, As<strong>to</strong>ma seselifolium, Biarum, Bunium, Colchicum, Crocus, Cyclamenpersicum, Emex spinosa, Erodium hirtum, Geranium tuberosum, Glycyrrhiza glabra, Hordeumbulbosum, Rheum, Scorzonera, Tamus communis, Zosima absinthiifolia and many o<strong>the</strong>rs.<strong>Wild</strong> fruitsCentral Asian fruit species have been studied by Vavilov.A representative list <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Region is as follows;-Amelanchier, Amygdalus, Arbutus andrachne, Berberis, Blepharis, Capparis, castanea sativa,Cera<strong>to</strong>nia siliqua, Cordia gharaf, Cornus, Corylus, Cerasus, Crataegus, Elaeagnus angustifolia,Eriolobus trilobatus, Cocculus pendulus, Ficus carica, Ficus pseudo-sycomorus, Glossonemaboveanum, Hyphaene <strong>the</strong>baica, Gundelia <strong>to</strong>urnefortii, Juglans regia, Lycium, malus, Mespilusgermanica, Moringa peregrina, Morus nigra, Nitraria retusa, Nymphaea caerulea, Ochradenusbaccatus, Olea europaea oleaster, Pinus pinea, Pistacia, Prosopis farcta, Pyrus, Rubus, Salvadorapersica, Vaccinium, Vitis orientalis, Zizypus.<strong>Wild</strong> orchards can be found in large areas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Middle East where fruit trees are left <strong>to</strong> grow insteppic landscapes. Sometimes wild tree species are used as s<strong>to</strong>cks for grafting <strong>of</strong> domesticatedcultivars. Large Genera <strong>of</strong> short-<strong>to</strong>ngued bees such as Andrena will form part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> pollina<strong>to</strong>rcommunity for <strong>the</strong>se fruits and <strong>the</strong> distribution and conservation requirements <strong>of</strong> many species arenot yet researched through <strong>the</strong> regions.In Turkey Ozbek (2008b) notes 123 species <strong>of</strong> bee recorded as pollina<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>of</strong> orchard fruit trees. It isfascinating <strong>to</strong> imagine <strong>the</strong> original recruitment and development <strong>of</strong> this type <strong>of</strong> bee community fromoriginally dispersed forest tree habitats. Today at least forty species <strong>of</strong> Andrena attend <strong>the</strong>seorchard trees with emergence times coinciding with spring blossoming. A fur<strong>the</strong>r thirty species <strong>of</strong>Halictidae comprise ano<strong>the</strong>r substantial part <strong>of</strong> this pollina<strong>to</strong>r assemblage and twenty species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Megachilidae with smaller numbers <strong>of</strong> species from among <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r Families.Peas and beansAstragalus, Vicia, Lathyrus, Lupinus, Pisum and o<strong>the</strong>r genera provide Man and his animal herds withnourishment. <strong>Bees</strong> such as species <strong>of</strong> Anthophora and Eucera are members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> pollina<strong>to</strong>rcommunity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se crops. Legume forage and grazing intensity and distribution are interwoven with<strong>the</strong> abundance and distributions <strong>of</strong> many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se bee species.Spices and CondimentsThese resources were essential from early times in man’s his<strong>to</strong>ry.Anethum graveolens, Coriandrum sativum, Ridolfia segetum, Cuminum cyminum, Artemisia, mentha,Myttus communis, Foeniculum vulgare, Nigella sativa, Origanum, Majorana syriaca, Salvia triloba,Salvia horminum, Salvia sclarea, Pituranthos <strong>to</strong>rtuosus, Ziziphora, Teucrium polium, Thymus andmany o<strong>the</strong>rs.26


MannaTamarix, Hammada salicornica, Quercus.Medicinal PlantsZohary gives <strong>the</strong> following list;-Acanthus spinosus, Acanthus syriacus, Achillea san<strong>to</strong>lina, Achillea fragrantissima, Achyran<strong>the</strong>saspera, Adonis aestivalis, Alhagi maurorum, Allium akaka, Althaea <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Alyssum campestre,Ammi visnaga, Anacamptis pyramidalis, Andrachne aspera, Apium graveolens, Artemisia herba-alba,Artemisia judaica, Artemisia maritima, Asparagus stipularis, Asperugo procumbens, Astragalushamosus, Atraphaxis spinosa, Balanites aegyptiaca, Ballota nigra, bellis perennis, Bongardiachrysogonum, Brassica nigra, Calamintha graveolens, Calotropis procera, Capparis spinosa, Capsellabursa-pas<strong>to</strong>ris, Cassia italica, Cassia senna, Caylusea canescens, Centaurea behen, Chenopodiumabrosioides, Chrozophora obliqua, Citrullus colycinthis, Cleome droserifolia, Cleome trinerva, Cnicusbenedictus, Commicarpus africanus, Conium maculatum, Convolvulus scammonia, Corchorusoli<strong>to</strong>rius, Cucimis prophetarum, Cynodon dactylon, Cyperus rotundes, Cytinus hypocystis, Daturametel, Datura stramonium, Diplotaxis harra, Dorema ammoniacum, Echinops persicus, Ephedraalata, Eremurus spectabilis, Ephorbia obovata, Eupa<strong>to</strong>rium cannabinum, Ferula asa-foetida,Globularia arabica, Glossonema bruguieri, Glycyrrhiza glabra, Hammada salicornica, Heliotropiumarbainense, Hyoscyamus muticus, Hyoscyamus reticulatus, Iris pseudacorus, Juncus maritimus,Lallemantia iberica, Laurus nobilis, Leontice leon<strong>to</strong>petalum, Lythrum salicaria, Malabaila secacul,Malva sylvestris, Mandragora <strong>of</strong>ficinarum, Matricaria chamomilla, Melissa <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Mentha,Myrtus communis, Nepeta micrantha, Ochradenus baccatus, Origanum, Peganum harmala, Pistaciakhinjuk, Pituranthos triradiatus, Plantago ovata, Plantago major, Pulicaria undulata, Punicagranatum, Pyrethrum, Reaumuria hirtella, Retama raetum, Ricinus communis, Salsola longifolia,Salvia leucophylla, Salvia sclarea, Salvia triloba, Sambucus nigra, Scandix pecten-veneris, Scirpuslacustris, Silene schimperiana, Styrax <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Teucrium, Trian<strong>the</strong>ma pentandra, Tribulus terrestris,Urginea maritima, Var<strong>the</strong>mia, Verbena <strong>of</strong>ficinalis and Ziziphora tenuior.Naghibi et al (2005) note that <strong>the</strong> Lamiaceae have genera such as Nepeta, Phlomis, Eremostachys,Salvia and Lagochilus which have a strong diversity in <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean and Southwestern Asia.The essential oils <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se plants are partly responsible for <strong>the</strong>ir long his<strong>to</strong>ry <strong>of</strong> use by man, includingprehis<strong>to</strong>ric periods where <strong>the</strong>re is evidence that species now known only in <strong>the</strong> wild were formerlycultivated. Culinary, Medicinal and o<strong>the</strong>r uses are sometimes recorded from <strong>the</strong> same plant speciesby ethnobotanical research.Extracts <strong>of</strong> Oil, Gum or ResinThe following are among <strong>the</strong> plants used in industrial processes;-Amygdalus, Artemisia judaica, Astragalus, Balanites aegyptiaca, Boswellia, Brassica, Cistus creticus,Commiphora, Cymbopogon schoenanthus, Eruca sativa, Ferula, Lallemantia iberica, Lavandulas<strong>to</strong>echas, Liquidambar orientalis, Mentha, Moringa peregrina, Origanum, Opapananx chironium,Pinus, Pistacia lentiscus, Ruta chalepensis, Styrax <strong>of</strong>ficinalis and Thymus.DyesAlkanna tinc<strong>to</strong>ria, Ammi visnaga, Anchusa italica, An<strong>the</strong>mis tinc<strong>to</strong>ria, Arnebia hispidissima, Asperugoprocumbens, Chrozophora plicata, Chrozophora tinc<strong>to</strong>ria, Echium italicum, Euphorbia helioscopia,27


Glycyrrhiza glabra, Indig<strong>of</strong>era, Lawsonia alba, Punica granatum, Resedea luteola, Tephrosiaapollinea, Teucrium polium and Verbena supina.Detergents and TanninsAcacia, Anabasis, Hammada, Limonium, Nuphar luteum, Nymphaea alba, Glycyrrhiza echinata,Glycyrrhiza glabra, Quercus boissieri, Quercus macrolepis, Pistacia, Punica granatum, Salix, Salsola,Tamarix.Wood productsA great variety <strong>of</strong> woods and timbers are and his<strong>to</strong>rically have been exploited for crafts andconstructions.Fuel and charcoal productionMany tree and scrub species have traditionally been cut for use as fuelfor domestic fires, kilns andfurnaces and local markets for <strong>the</strong>se products are widespread including on <strong>the</strong> Mediterraneanislands where wood fires and s<strong>to</strong>ves are widely used especially during <strong>the</strong> winter months.Piles <strong>of</strong> dead ends and cut logs and discarded branches are a very important nesting habitat for beessuch as wood-nesting Megachilidae.Hedging and boundary plantations.Some hedges are survivals <strong>of</strong> cleared woodlands whereas many are planted <strong>to</strong> mark field boundariesand <strong>to</strong> act as shelter or as s<strong>to</strong>ckpro<strong>of</strong> barriers. Often hedges provide foraging and nesting habitatsfor bees such as members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Genus Hylaeus and Ceratina.Farming and <strong>the</strong> Segetal EraIncipient farming <strong>to</strong>ok place in Mesopotamia in steppe forest or parkland habitats. Scattered treeswith herb rich grasslands and shrublands. Domestication <strong>of</strong> animals and hunting created a managedgrazing regime. Foraging selected for cereals and pulses. The legumes are critically important formany bee species. Not only are species <strong>of</strong> Pisum, Vicia, Lens and Cicer, Lathyrus, TrifoliumOnobrychis, Medicago, Melilotus, Lotus, Trigonella and Ornithopus sustaining domesticated animalsin huge numbers but also <strong>the</strong> beans and peas are primary foodstuffs for man.In <strong>the</strong> modern agricultural environment <strong>of</strong> Alfalfa Medicago sativa Ozbek(2008a) gives a detailed lis<strong>to</strong>f <strong>the</strong> bee species responsible for pollinating this legume in <strong>the</strong> region in which this plant isconsidered <strong>to</strong> have evolved;-AndrenidaeAndrena ovatula ( Kr.)A. labialis (Kr.)A. flavipes Prz.A..labiata regina Fr.A. variabilis Sm.A.panurgimorpha Mavr.A.lepida Sch.Panurgus calcaratus Scop.P. sculpturatus Mor.P. punctiventris Mor.Melitturga clavicornis Latr.HalictidaeRophites canus Ev.Lasioglossum limbellum Mor.L. nitidiusculum (Kr.)L. griseolum Mor.L. angusticeps Perk.28


L. convexiusculum (Sch.)L. buccales Prz.L. longirostris Mor.L. viridiaeneus Bl.L. morio (F.)L. distinctus patulus KohlL. debilior Prz.L. ordubadensis Fr.L. nigripes Lep.L. obscuratus Mor.L. lativentris (Sch.)L. fallax Mor.L. sexnotatum (Kr.)L. xanthopus (Kr.)L. anellus KohlL. marginellum asiaticum D.T.L. morbillosus Kriech.L. leucozonium (Sch.)L. sociorum Bl.L. damascenus Prz.L. malachurum (Kr.)L. laticeps Sch.L. lineare Sch.L. mandibulare Mor.L. morinellus War.L. cephalicus Mor.Halictus subauratus RossiH. concinnus vestitus Lep.H. pollinosus SichelH. maculatus Sm.H. asperulus Prz.H. tetrazonius pen<strong>the</strong>ri Bl.H. sajoi Bl.H. bifidus War.H. senilis Ev.H. tetrazonianellus StrandH. patellatus Mor.H. alfkenellus StrandH. frontalis turkomannus Prz.H. sexcinctus albohispidus Bl.H. quadricinctus F.Sphecodes monilicornis Kby.Nomia diversipes Latr.Systropha planidens Gir.MelittidaeMelitta leporina Prz.MegachilidaeAnthocopa avosetta (War.)A.grumi Mor.Hoplitis acuticornis (Duf. EtPar.)H. carinata (Stanek)H. fulva (Ev.)H. laeviscutum (Alf.)H. leucomelana (Kr.)H. mollis Tk.Osmia aurulenta (Panzer)O. cerinthidis Mor.O caerulescens L.O. cyanoxantha Prz.O. cypricola Mavr.O. difficilis Mor.O. dives Moc.O. melanogaster Sp.O. nigrohirta Fr.O. signata ErichsonAnthidium cingulatum Latr.A.diadema Latr.A.eximium Gir.A.florentinum (F.)A. manicatum L.A.oblongatum (Ill.)A.punctatum Latr.A.undulatiforme Fr.Anthidiellum insulare (Mor.)Ant. strigatum luteum (Fr.)Archianthidium pubescens(Mor.)Icteranthidium cimbiciformeSm.I. laterale (Latr.)I. limbiferum (Mor.)Pseudoanthidiumreticulatum(Moc.)Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella albisecta (Klug)Chalicodoma erice<strong>to</strong>rum(Lep.)Ch. flavipes (Sp.)Ch. hungarica Moc.Ch. Monstrifica(Mor.)Ch. parietina nes<strong>to</strong>rea (Br.)Megachile analis Nyl.M. ana<strong>to</strong>lica RebmannM. apicalis Sp.M. centuncularis (L.)M. circumcincta ozbeki Tk.M. lagopoda (L.)M. picicornis Mor.M. pilidens Alf.M. rotundata F.M. sexmaculata thracia Tk.M. terminata Mor.29


Coelioxsis afra Lep.ApidaeAmegilla quadrifaciata VillAnthophora aestivalis PanzerA.atroalba Lep.Eucera caerulescens Fr.E. cinerea Lep.E. clypeata ErichsE. cineraria Ev.E. dalmatica Lep.E. interrupta Baer.E. nigrescens PerezE. nitidiventris Mocs.E. pollinosa Sm.E. vestita Mor.Tetralonia dentata KlugT. graja (Ev.)T. hungarica Fr.T. tricincta (Erichs)Nomada fucata Pz.N. cinnabarina F.Xylocopa valga Gerst.X. violacea L.Bombus cryptarum (F.)B. terrestris (L.)B. argillaceus Scop.B. armeniacus Rad.B. ruderarius simulatilis Rad.B. sylvarum daghestanicusRad.B. s. distinctus VogtB. incertus Mor.B. cullumanus apollineus Scor.B. niveatus Kriech.Apis mellifera LThe diversity <strong>of</strong> bees at <strong>the</strong> Family and species levels indicates <strong>the</strong> importance <strong>the</strong>se legume pastureand meadow habitats have for bee communities <strong>to</strong>day as well as <strong>the</strong> significance for wild and semiwildlegume grassland habitats now and during prehis<strong>to</strong>ry.The Segetal Flora80% <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> segetal plant species are Annuals, mainly <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> winter and o<strong>the</strong>rs are relicts <strong>of</strong> ancientcultivation at a time when early farmers were unable <strong>to</strong> remove all <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> native plants whenclearing ground. These his<strong>to</strong>rical processes, changes in farming techniques, temporary or permanentabandonment and many o<strong>the</strong>r changes in management have assisted <strong>the</strong> emergence <strong>of</strong> thisspeciose set <strong>of</strong> communities. Zohary made a provisional classification <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se farmland vegetationsin<strong>to</strong> four Classes. Some relate <strong>to</strong> irrigated crops and ano<strong>the</strong>r <strong>to</strong> saline farmed lands but here we lookat <strong>the</strong> Class <strong>of</strong> Secalinetea orientalia which was defined <strong>to</strong> include <strong>the</strong> arable wild floral communities<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> rain-fed farmed lands.The Secalinetea orientaliaThis wild plant community orders comprises segetals in crops <strong>of</strong> Wheat, Barley, Maize, <strong>Rye</strong>, Sorgum,Legumes and o<strong>the</strong>rs in subarid <strong>to</strong> humid rainfed farmed environments. Typical plant species makeup communities which must support pollina<strong>to</strong>r communites in very large areas <strong>of</strong> farmed lands.Common flower species number a hundred or more and <strong>the</strong>re are many less common or widespreadflowers in particular areas or particular arable habitats. Zohary gives examples <strong>of</strong> someAssociations;-Alluvial deep soils <strong>of</strong> lowlands in sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey, Syria, Palestine which have been farmed forthousands <strong>of</strong> years. Plants found in <strong>the</strong> crops here in winter aspect are;-30


Prosopis farcta and Diplotaxis erucoides very commonly joined by dozens <strong>of</strong> flower species. InCentral Ana<strong>to</strong>lia sometimes Centaurea depressa and Isatis tinc<strong>to</strong>ria are dominant. In Iran Achilleasan<strong>to</strong>lina, Hul<strong>the</strong>mia persica and o<strong>the</strong>rs characterise fur<strong>the</strong>r diverse communities <strong>of</strong> farmlandsegetal flowers.These flower communities have evolved and spread from <strong>the</strong>ir original habitats and formed diversecommunities within <strong>the</strong> farmed landscapes.The Ruderal Flora.Roadsides, derelict sites, refuse areas and suchlike harbour an important array <strong>of</strong> plants recruitedfrom <strong>the</strong> floral provinces <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Region. The structure and appearance <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se communities variesgeographically and through te seasons but some typical species are;-Malva nicaeensis, Malva parvifolia, Malva sylvestris, Lavatera cretica, No<strong>to</strong>basis syriaca, Sonchusoleraceus, Erodium moschatum, Lolium rigidum, Avena barbata, Ranunculus marginatus, Viciaangustifolia, Hordeum murinum, Centaurea iberica, Silybum marianum, Cynodon dactylon,Chrysan<strong>the</strong>mum coronaria, Torilis lep<strong>to</strong>phylla, Scabiosa prolifera, Rhagadiolus stellatus andEuphorbia helioscopia.I have been struck by how rich <strong>the</strong> bee communities are in ruderal associations about his<strong>to</strong>rical,roadside, new construction and industrial abandoned areas in <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean where <strong>the</strong>seplants form complex and surprisingly varied floral resources for insects <strong>of</strong>ten close by suitablenesting habitats for at least some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> groups <strong>of</strong> bees. Fur<strong>the</strong>r, <strong>the</strong>re are also parklands, vacantlots and abandoned gardens in a suburban or village context which provide a variety <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r suchruderal communities, and where <strong>the</strong>re has been gardening enrichment sometimes influences <strong>the</strong>presence <strong>of</strong> particular flower species.Very many segetal species <strong>of</strong> plant are dependent now upon <strong>the</strong>ir farmed environments and cannotbe found ‘in <strong>the</strong> wild.’ Many o<strong>the</strong>rs are <strong>to</strong> be found in natural communities as well as in <strong>the</strong> fields. Afur<strong>the</strong>r role for some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se segetal plants is <strong>to</strong> act as leading members <strong>of</strong> recovering postagriculturalareas.Pas<strong>to</strong>ralismThere are his<strong>to</strong>rical and geographic dimensions <strong>to</strong> present conditions <strong>of</strong> grazing and generallives<strong>to</strong>ck farming.Non-palatable plants and even communities <strong>of</strong> such plants have been selected for over millenia bygrazing ei<strong>the</strong>r by settled pas<strong>to</strong>ralism or forms <strong>of</strong> nomadic herding. Huge areas are intensively grazedand wooded areas deliberately burnt <strong>to</strong> produce a flush <strong>of</strong> palatable herbs and grasses. So much hasgrazing fragmented and reduced forest areas that <strong>the</strong> remaining flora, even <strong>the</strong> tree species, nolonger consists <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> full complement <strong>of</strong> species. Steppe and desert regions are degraded in<strong>to</strong>sparse shrublands with pockets <strong>of</strong> annuals persisting. Hence pas<strong>to</strong>ralism itself has been a fac<strong>to</strong>r in<strong>the</strong> desertification <strong>of</strong> large areas.By <strong>the</strong> same <strong>to</strong>ken many habitats are maintained by grazing . There is a need for a balanced andmanaged grazing regime in large areas so that <strong>the</strong> needs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> farming community may be met in<strong>the</strong> context <strong>of</strong> a conserved flora and fauna. Where grazing is <strong>of</strong> a moderate frequency and intensityhabitats essential for <strong>the</strong> flowering plant and insect faunas can be maintained.31


Aspects <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> regionsBelow is a small number <strong>of</strong> coloured maps modified from a number <strong>of</strong> published sources in order <strong>to</strong>illustrate some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> geographical <strong>the</strong>mes influencing <strong>the</strong> diversity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bee species and <strong>the</strong>irpresent distributions. The climate is changing and this will effect vegetation composition and <strong>the</strong>areas in which plant and bee communities will survive. Large areas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> region are presentlyunable <strong>to</strong> support many species due <strong>to</strong> extreme low rainfall. However, quite small changes in rainfallpattern may result in <strong>the</strong> res<strong>to</strong>ration <strong>of</strong> extreme desert regions <strong>to</strong>wards a wider range <strong>of</strong> life forms.The picture above shows a pattern <strong>of</strong> annual rainfall across <strong>the</strong> geographic region we are looking at.The vast regions coloured yellow are devoid <strong>of</strong> settled agriculture except where <strong>the</strong>re is substantialhuman managed irrigation or periodic river flooding, as for example <strong>the</strong> Nile Delta. Bee and plantcommunities contend with conditions <strong>of</strong> extreme aridity and also <strong>the</strong> pressures <strong>of</strong> nomadic pas<strong>to</strong>ralsubsistence. However <strong>the</strong> orange zone, with higher rainfall, allows a cultivation <strong>of</strong> wheat, barleys,olives, almonds and some o<strong>the</strong>r fruit and vegetables. This significant connected band <strong>of</strong> rainfallmaintainedagriculture enables pollinating insects <strong>to</strong> exist on wild floral areas, farmed systems <strong>of</strong>crops supporting farmland flowers, and also citrus fruits and o<strong>the</strong>rs which support and aresupported by <strong>the</strong> pollination services <strong>of</strong> communities <strong>of</strong> wild bees both social and solitary.32


In <strong>the</strong> illustration above we can see <strong>the</strong> position <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Floral Regions. The Sudanian savannah liesmostly <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> south <strong>of</strong> our areas. However, <strong>the</strong> Sudanian has a his<strong>to</strong>rical and present day influencethrough processes such as <strong>the</strong> Nile Drainage. The greatest Floral Region upholding all <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rnparts <strong>of</strong> our area is <strong>the</strong> Saharo-Arabian or Sindian Region comprised <strong>of</strong> vegetation communitiesadapted <strong>to</strong> stringent environmental conditions and yet enabling an adapted Desert fauna <strong>of</strong> beesincluding many little-studied species such as some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> genus Anthophora.The illustration also shows <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean Region which is met by <strong>the</strong> Irano-Turanian in <strong>the</strong>Levant and Ana<strong>to</strong>lia. Here amid <strong>the</strong>se two vast groupings are mountain Regions with <strong>the</strong>ir owndistinctive Floral identities (marked in dark green) and also <strong>the</strong> Colchian and <strong>the</strong> Hyrcanian FloralRegions adjoining <strong>the</strong> Black and Caspian Seas.33


The map above is a simple adaptation from Zohary (1970) and shows <strong>the</strong> plant community positionsin more detail. Turkey in <strong>the</strong> north has <strong>the</strong> Euxinian deciduous and mixed forest domains in darkblue. Ana<strong>to</strong>lia is dominated by Euxinian forest steppe and in <strong>the</strong> centre <strong>of</strong> this formation is <strong>the</strong>Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lian Artemisia steppe, some <strong>of</strong> which is associated with saline hydrology. The light pinkregion <strong>of</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn and western Turkey as well as Cyprus, Rhodes and <strong>the</strong> coastal Levant marks <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean communities. Note <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean communites continuing alsoin coastal Egypt but <strong>the</strong> disjuncture created by <strong>the</strong> Nile drainage (shaded blue) and also <strong>the</strong> Saharo-Arabian communities marked in yellow. This feature is interesting as it is de fac<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> result <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>present day level <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean Sea. The Saharo-Arabian communiites continue eastwardswith a strong latitudinal border until <strong>the</strong>y reach eastern Mesopotamia. To <strong>the</strong> north <strong>the</strong> large greenarea centrally placed shows <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mesopotamian Steppe floral communities.The brown shading marks <strong>the</strong> original range <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Iranian Forest Steppe. To <strong>the</strong> east is <strong>the</strong> IranianArtemisia steppe and sand communities marked in grey. Halophytic and Hydrophytic plantassociations are shown in red and can be seen widely occurring. Communities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sudanian desertsavannah and forest can be seen in purple. Between <strong>the</strong> Black Sea and <strong>the</strong> eastern Caspian is <strong>the</strong>high altitude Iranian Artemisia steppe and oak forest communities coloured lilac. Finally we can see<strong>the</strong> vast swa<strong>the</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Hyrcanian Forest systems running across <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn borders <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Caspianand marked in turquoise.34


In <strong>the</strong> map above we can see that <strong>the</strong>re are strong latitudinal features <strong>of</strong> mountain range and valleyswhich influence <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> bees and plants. As well as folding <strong>the</strong>re are patterns <strong>of</strong> drainageinterspersed amid very arid zones which are influenced by up and down warping <strong>of</strong> subsurfacegeological formations.The Tertiary Foldings complement <strong>the</strong> geographic connections <strong>of</strong> Central Asia and <strong>the</strong> influence <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Central Asian bee communities.35


Surface geology has a big influence <strong>of</strong> plant community and affects <strong>the</strong> nature <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> beecommunities. Ground-nesting bees need <strong>to</strong> be adapted <strong>to</strong> nest in <strong>the</strong> substrate which is locallyavailable. The larval bees need <strong>to</strong> be adapted <strong>to</strong> feed on <strong>the</strong> pollen resources present in <strong>the</strong> nearbyvegetation. Wood nesting and o<strong>the</strong>r non-fossorial bees require <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong> dead wood or o<strong>the</strong>rsuitable material for <strong>the</strong> creation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir nests. The relative abundance <strong>of</strong> such groups as Megachileand Chalicodoma can be influenced by <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong> particular surface geologies. Acidity andcalcareous soil chemistries can determine <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong> particular species <strong>of</strong> plant and bee.36


References for Geography .Abbas, M. S. El-Morsy, M. H. Shahba, M. A. and Moursy, F. I. (1989) ‘Ecological studies in coastalsand dune rangelands in <strong>the</strong> north-west <strong>of</strong> Egypt’ In. Porqueddu C. & Tavares de Sousa M.M. (eds.)Sustainable Mediterranean grasslands and <strong>the</strong>ir multi-functions = Les pâturages méditerranéensdurables et leur multi-fonctionnalité Zaragoza : CIHEAM-IAMZ / FAO / ENMP / SPPF, 2008. 501 p.(Options Méditerranéennes : Série A. Séminaires Méditerranéens ; n. 79).Akhani, H. (2004). Halophytic vegetation <strong>of</strong> Iran: <strong>to</strong>wards a syntaxonomical classification.’ Annali diBotanica 4.Akhani, H. (2007). ‘Diversity, biogeography, and pho<strong>to</strong>syn<strong>the</strong>tic pathways <strong>of</strong> Argusia andHeliotropium (Boraginaceae) in South-West Asia with an analysis <strong>of</strong> phy<strong>to</strong>geographical units.’ Bot. J.Linn. Soc. 155.Akhani, H. & Ghorbanli, M. (1993). ‘A contribution <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> halophytic vegetation and flora <strong>of</strong> Iran.’ inLeith, H. & Al Masoom, A. (eds). ‘Towards <strong>the</strong> rational use <strong>of</strong> high salinity <strong>to</strong>lerant plants. V 1.’Kluwer.Ashraf, M. Y. Amal, A. M. Hosny, A. M. & Ahmed H. A. A. (2009) ‘Vegetation Analysis along Alamain– Wadi El-Natrun Desert Road.’ Aust. Jour. Basic and Applied Sc. 3: 1.Breckle, S-W. (2002). ‘Salt Deserts in Iran and Afghanistan.’ in Barth & Böer (eds). ‘SabkhaEcosystems.’ Kluwer.Bornkamm, R. (1987) ‘Allochthonous ecosystems.’ Landscape Ecology 1: 2.Bornkamm, R. & Kehl, H. (1989) ‘Landscape ecology <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> western desert <strong>of</strong> Egypt’ Jour. AridEnvironments 17.Bornkamm, R. & Kehl, H. (1990) ‘The plant communities <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Western desert <strong>of</strong> Egypt’Phy<strong>to</strong>coenologia 19: 2.Bornkamm, R. Springuel, I. Darius, F. Sheded, Mh. G. & Radi, M. (2000) ‘Some observations on <strong>the</strong>plant communities <strong>of</strong> Dungul Oasis (Western Desert, Egypt)‘ Acta Bot. Croat. 59: 1.Brullo, S. & Furnari, F. (1981). ‘Phy<strong>to</strong>geographical considerations on <strong>the</strong> coastal vegetation <strong>of</strong>Cyrenaica.’ Anales Jardin Botanico de Madrid 37: 2.Danin, A. (1974) ‘Notes on <strong>the</strong> vegetation near Suez and Fayid (Egypt).’ Israel J. Botany 23.Davis, P. H. (1953) ‘The vegetation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> deserts near Cairo.’ J. Ecol. 41.37


Frey, W. Kürschner, H. & Probst, W. ( ) ‘Flora <strong>of</strong> Persia.’ in Encyclopedia Iranica.Galal, T. M. & Fawzy, M. (2007) ‘Sand Dune vegetation in <strong>the</strong> Coast <strong>of</strong> Nile Delta, Egypt.’ Global J.Environ. Res., 1: 2.Hamzaoğlu, E. (2006) ‘Phy<strong>to</strong>sociological Studies on <strong>the</strong> Steppe Communities <strong>of</strong> East Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.’Ekoloji 15: 61.Hassan, L. M. (2002) ‘Plant Life in <strong>the</strong> Digla Conserved Area, Hyperarid Desert, Egypt.’ OnLine J. Biol.Sciences 2: 8.Heshmati, G. A. (1999). ‘Introducing important characteristics <strong>of</strong> geology, soil, vegetation types andkey species <strong>of</strong> Golestan Province.’ J. Ag. Sc. Nat. Res. 6: 3.Heshmati, G. A. (2007). ‘Vegetation characteristics <strong>of</strong> four ecological zones <strong>of</strong> Iran.’ Int. J. Plant.Prod. 1: 2.Mashaly, I. A. El-Habashy, I. E. El-Halawany, E. F. & Omar, G. (2008) ‘Habitats and PlantCommunities in <strong>the</strong> Nile Delta <strong>of</strong> Egypt I. Deltaic Mediterranean Coastal Habitat.’ Pak. J. Biol. Sci., 11(22).Mashaly, I. A. El-Habashy, I. E. El-Halawany, E. F. & Omar, G. (2009) ‘Habitats and PlantCommunities in <strong>the</strong> Nile Delta <strong>of</strong> Egypt II. Irrigation and Drainage Canal Bank Habitat.’ Pak. J. Biol.Sci., 12 (12).Mi<strong>the</strong>n, S. (2003) ‘After The Ice: A Global Human His<strong>to</strong>ry 20,000-5,000 BC.’ Phoenix.Morsy, A. A. Youssef, A. M. Mosallam, H. A. M. & Hashem, A. M. (2008) ‘Assessment <strong>of</strong> SelectedSpecies along Al-Alamain-Alexandria International desert Road, Egypt.’ J. Applied Sc. Res. 4: 10.Naghibi, F. Mosaddegh, M. Motamed, S. M. & Ghorbani, A. (2005) ‘Labiatae Family in folk Medicinein Iran: from Ethnobotany <strong>to</strong> Pharmacology.’ Iranian J. Pharm. Res. 2.Noroozi, J. Akhani, H. & Breckle, S-W. (2007). ‘Biodiversity and phy<strong>to</strong>geography <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> alpine flora<strong>of</strong> Iran.’ Biodivers. Conserv. Springer.Novak, I. D. (2003).’Introduction <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Geology <strong>of</strong> Lesbos, Greece.’ U <strong>of</strong> Maine (c) Irwin D. Novak.Ozbek, H. (2008a). ‘<strong>Bees</strong> visiting Alfalfa in Turkey and Megachile rotundata F. (Hym; Megachilidae).’Uludag Bee J. 8: 1.Ozbek, H. (2008b). ‘Insects visiting temperate region fruit trees in Turkey.’ Uludag Bee J. 8: 3.Patiny, S. & Michez, D. (2007). ‘<strong>Biogeography</strong> <strong>of</strong> bees (Hym; Apoidea) in Sahara and <strong>the</strong> Arabiandeserts.’ Insect Syst. Evol. 38.38


Sheded, M. (2002) ‘Vegetation Analysis in <strong>the</strong> South <strong>Eastern</strong> Part in <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn <strong>Eastern</strong> desert <strong>of</strong>Egypt.’ Online Journal <strong>of</strong> Biological Sciences 2: 9.Springuel, I. Shehed, Mh. Darius, F. & Bornkamm, R. (2006) ‘Vegetation dynamics in an extremedesert wadi under <strong>the</strong> influence <strong>of</strong> episodic rainfall.‘ Polish Bot. Studies 22.Sýkora, K. V. Babalonas, D. & Papastergiadou, E. S. (2003) ‘Strandline and sand-dune vegetation <strong>of</strong>coasts <strong>of</strong> Greece and <strong>of</strong> some o<strong>the</strong>r Aegean countries.’ Phy<strong>to</strong>coenologia 33: 2-3.Thompson, J. D. (2005). Plant Evolution in <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean.’ Oxford University Press.Zohary, M. (1973). ‘Geobotanical Foundations <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Middle East’ Vol. 1 & 2. Stuttgart, GustavFischer Verlag.Vogiatzakis, I. N., Pungetti, G. & Mannion, A. M. (2008). ‘Mediterranean Island Landscapes: Naturaland Cultural Approaches.’ Springer.39


The Bee Species CatalogueI have researched <strong>the</strong> literature and with enormous help and encouragement from MaximilianSchwarz, George Else, Stuart Roberts, Erwin Scheuchl, Stefan Risch, Andreas Müller, Andreas Ebmer,Seb Patiny, Michael Kuhlmann, Fritz and Josef Gusenleitner, Michael Engel, Jelle Devalez, PeterHartmann, Hizmet Ozbek, Paul Williams Borek Tkalcu, Chris O’Toole. Also a warm thank you <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>staff <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Plant Protec<strong>to</strong>n Department, Ministry <strong>of</strong> Agriculture, Cyprus and <strong>to</strong> many friends andfellow researchers at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Aegean including <strong>of</strong> course Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Theodora Petanidou<strong>to</strong> whom I am immensely grateful for <strong>the</strong> opportunity <strong>to</strong> study <strong>the</strong> bee species <strong>of</strong> Greece. Thanksand acknowledgements <strong>to</strong>o <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> staff at <strong>the</strong> En<strong>to</strong>mology Labora<strong>to</strong>ry, Heraklion, Crete.All flower visitation records and behavioural observations cited for Anthophora species from Israeland Israeli Occupied Terri<strong>to</strong>ries were made available by Chris O'Toole and I thank him for making thisdata available from his unpublished doc<strong>to</strong>ral <strong>the</strong>sis.A special Thank you <strong>to</strong> my mo<strong>the</strong>r who has given me so much support during times away and afterand <strong>to</strong> Maximilian for his tireless encouragement and support.Note on identification and recording resourcesThis basic introduction <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> fauna and region cannot hope <strong>to</strong> assist in identification or catalogue<strong>the</strong> synonymy. However, <strong>the</strong> references given under each bee Family are <strong>the</strong> main written sourcesfor modern descriptions <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> genera and species. Most important also is <strong>the</strong> creation <strong>of</strong> localcollections <strong>of</strong> specimens and <strong>the</strong> accessibility <strong>of</strong> regional Museum,Ministeria, Private and Universitycollections. In <strong>the</strong> eastern Mediterranean two very good collections are <strong>the</strong> MavromoustakisCollection in Cyprus and <strong>the</strong> Lesbos Collection at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Aegean in Mytiline. In Turkey<strong>the</strong> Tubitak programme is developing an excellent bee science resource and bee conservationistsand naturalists in all o<strong>the</strong>r countries in <strong>the</strong> region should research for local and regional resources.The Internet has revolutionised <strong>the</strong> possibilities <strong>of</strong> conservation and natural his<strong>to</strong>ry research.Excellent on-line resources incude <strong>the</strong> Bee Atlas and on-line Papers in Belgium <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong>Mons-Hainault. Ano<strong>the</strong>r superb resource is Andreas Mueller’s website on <strong>the</strong> Osmiine bees <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Western Palearctic at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Zurich, Switzerland. There is now a global taxonomy serviceonline and <strong>the</strong> Internet needs <strong>to</strong> be used <strong>to</strong> search and contact resources, especially for thoseworking in less resource areas. Individuals working locally should create <strong>the</strong>ir own specimencollections and library <strong>of</strong> papers, many <strong>of</strong> which can now be found on-line.Finally, <strong>the</strong>re is a need for more link-ups between botanical conservation and bee study andconservation.I sincerely hope this initial summary will be extended and help and encourage survey and research <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> bee fauna <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> regions.The order <strong>of</strong> Families and Genera given here is listed below.40


41ColletidaeColletesHylaeusAndrenidaeAndrenaCamp<strong>to</strong>poeumPanurginusPanurgusMelitturgaPlesiopanurgusHalictidaeSystrophaRophi<strong>to</strong>idesRophitesDufoureaNomiaPseudapisLipotrichesCeylalictusNomioidesHalictusLasioglossumSphecodesMellitidaeDasypodaEremophantaPromelittaMacropisMelittaMegachilidaePararophitesLithurgusChelos<strong>to</strong>maHae<strong>to</strong>smiaHeriadesH<strong>of</strong>feriaHoplitisHoplosmiaOchreriadesOsmiaPro<strong>to</strong>smiaPseudoheriadesStenoheriadesStenosmiaWainiaTrachusaAnthidiellumEoanthidiumAfranthidiumRhodanthidiumAnthidiumPseudanthidiumIcteranthidiumStelisAglaoapisAllodioxysDioxysEnslinianaMetadioxysParadioxysProdioxysEudioxysCreigh<strong>to</strong>nellaChalicodomaCoelioxysRadoszkowskianaMegachileApidaeProxylocopaXylocopaCeratinaPithitisExoneuridiaAcanthonomadaNomadaEpeolusAmmoba<strong>to</strong>idesSchmiedeknechtiaBiastesAethammobatesAmmobatesParammoba<strong>to</strong>desChiasmognathusPasitesAncylaGlazunoviaTarsaliaEuceraCubitaliaTetraloniaTetraloniellaAmegillaAnthophoraHabropodaMelectaEupavlovskiaParacrocisaThyreomelectaThyreusBombusApis


The Bee SpeciesFamily ColletidaeSubfamily ColletinaeGenus ColletesCentral Asia has an estimated 2,000 bee species and shares with <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean Basin <strong>the</strong> status<strong>of</strong> a world centre for bee biodiversity. There are at least 35 endemic or subendemic species <strong>of</strong>Colletes in ei<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> Turanian Basin or higher Mountains <strong>of</strong> Central Asia. (Kuhlmann 2005).Colletes acutiformis Noskiewicz 1936Israel. Libya.Colletes albomaculatus (Lucas 1849)Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Iran; Elburz.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July in <strong>the</strong> Elburz at 2300 mtrs.Colletes alfkeni Noskiewicz 1958Turkey; Sirnak. Syria. Israel.Colletes alfredjohni Kuhlmann 2002Iran.Colletes anceps Radoszkowski 1891<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Adiyaman, Van. Iran.A summer bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August in Iran.Colletes anchusae Noskiewicz 1924Turkey.This bee is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> Cynoglottis barrelieri (Boraginaceae). Possibly also C. chetikiana. (Müllerand Kuhlmann 2003).Colletes ankarae Warncke 1978Turkey; Ankara eastwards.Colletes armeniacus (Friese 1921)Turkey; Hakkari.A Central Asian species on <strong>the</strong> wing during June.Colletes arztbergi Kuhlmann 2003Syria.42


Colletes askhabadensis Radoszkowski 1886SyriaColletes asiaticus Kuhlmann 1999<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Colletes bidentulus Noskiewicz 1936Turkey; Ankara, Konya, Nevsehir. Iran; Mazandaran.Colletes brevigena Noskiewicz 1924Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.Colletes bytinskii Noskiewicz 1955Israel.Colletes carinatus Radoszkowski 1891Continental Greece. Turkey.Colletes cariniger Pérez 1903Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Israel. Egypt. Libya.Colletes caskanus (Strand 1919)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Iran.Recorded as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards in highland Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing April <strong>to</strong> June. A spring Colletes including Iran.Colletes chengtehensis Yasumatsu 1935Continental Greece. Iran.Colletes c.f. comatus Noskiewicz 1936Turkey; Sivas.This probably refers <strong>to</strong> an undescribed species.Colletes coriandri Pérez 1895Egypt. Libya.Colletes cretaceus Morawitz 1876Turkey; Malatya. Jordan. Iran.A Central Asian species.Colletes creticus Noskiewicz 1936Greece on Crete.Colletes cunicularius (Linnaeus 1761)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Colletes cyprius Noskiewicz 1936Cyprus.43


Colletes daviesanus Smith 1846Turkey; Adiyaman, Afyon, Bingöl, Eskisehir, Van.Colletes dorsalis Morawitz 1888Central and eastern Turkey. Iran; Elburz.A Central Asian species. In <strong>the</strong> Iranian Elburz found on <strong>the</strong> wing during July at 2300 mtrs.Colletes elegans Noskiewicz 1936Jordan. Israel. Egypt.Colletes eous Morice 1904Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Widespread Turkey. Iran.Colletes floralis Eversmann 1852Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August at 2100 mtrs on Mount Olympos, Greece.Colletes fodiens (Fourcroy 1785)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.The subspecies C. f. kirgisicus Radoszkowski 1868 also in Turkey and in Iran.Colletes formosus Pérez 1895Israel. Jordan. Libya.Colletes foveolaris Pérez 1903Continental Greece. Turkey; Bilecik, Izmir. Libya.A spring bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in May.Colletes fuscicornis Noskiewicz 1936Israel.Colletes glaber Warncke 1978Turkey.Colletes graeffei Alfken 1900Continental Greece.Colletes hakkari Kuhlmann 2002<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Colletes hederae Schmidt & Westrich 1993North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Colletes hethiticus Warncke 1978Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran; Elburz, Churasan.This is <strong>the</strong> commonest Colletes in some parts <strong>of</strong> Turkey. Active during <strong>the</strong> summer in Iran.44


Colletes hiekeseniori Kuhlmann 2003Turkey; Van.Colletes hylaeiformis Eversmann 1852Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.Colletes idoneus Cockerell 1922<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Hakkari. Iran.Colletes intricans Spinola 1838Egypt. Libya.Colletes iranicus Noskiewicz 1962<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Colletes jejunus Noskiewicz 1936Jordan. Egypt.Colletes judaicus Noskiewicz 1955Israel. Jordan.Colletes lacunatus Dours 1872Israel. Egypt. Libya.Colletes laevifrons Morawitz 1894Iran, Elburz.An alpine summer-flying Colletes active up <strong>to</strong> 3500 mtrs.Colletes lebedewi Noskiewicz 1936Turkey; Agri, Siirt, Sivas, Van.Colletes maidli Noskiewicz 1936Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine.Iran. Egypt.Recorded visiting Eryngium creticum. A bee <strong>of</strong> high summer and early autumn. Mavromoustakisnoted this species on Cyprus on <strong>the</strong> wing in June and July and also gave flower visits for Rubusulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus, Echinops spinosus, Myrtus communis and Nerium oleander. Found on <strong>the</strong> wingduring July and August in Iran.Colletes marginatus Smith 1846Continental Greece. Turkey; Ardahan, Hakkari, Nevsehir.Colletes maroccanus Warncke 1978Libya.Colletes meyeri Noskiewicz 1936Continental Greece. Turkey.45


Colletes mixtus Radoszkowski 1891Turkey; Igdir.This bee is found here on <strong>the</strong> western fringe <strong>of</strong> its’ Asiatic range which extends <strong>to</strong> China.Colletes mlokossewiczi Radoszkowski 1891Continental Greece. Widespread Turkey.Colletes nanaeformis Noskiewicz 1959Jordan. Egypt.Colletes nanus Friese 1898Syria. Israel. Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Colletes nasutus Smith 1853Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria. Iran; Samnan, ElburzFound up <strong>to</strong> 2300 mtrs in Iran during July..Colletes nigricans Gistel 1857Greece.Colletes ot<strong>to</strong>manus Noskiewicz 1958Central and eastern Turkey. Syria.Colletes pallescens Noskiewicz 1936Continental Greece. Iran.A steppic bee.Colletes perezi Morice 1904(Continental?) Greece. Israel. Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Colletes persicus Warncke 1979Iran; Chuzistan, Beluchistan.On <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April.Colletes pseudojejunus Noskiewicz 1959Israel. Jordan. Egypt.Colletes pumilus Morice 1904Israel. Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Colletes punctatus Mocsáry 1877Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iran.Colletes radoszkowskii Noskiewicz 1936Turkey; Erzurum, Konya. Iran; Churastan.Colletes roborovskyi Friese 1913<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.46


As with a number <strong>of</strong> Colletes species found in Iran this bee has an alpine or montane summer habitat.Colletes rozeni Kuhlmann 2005Israel.Colletes rubellus Noskiewicz 1936Israel.Colletes senilis (Eversmann 1852)Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July at 2300 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Iranian Elburz.Colletes similis Schenck 1861Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Lebanon.Israel. Jordan. Iran.Mavromoustakis recorded this species on <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> September, visiting An<strong>the</strong>mis,Polygonum equisetiforme, Foeniculum piperitum, Pulicaria dysenterica, Statice virgata and Alyssumtroodi.A summer bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Elburz Mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran where on <strong>the</strong> wing up <strong>to</strong> 2300 mtrs and active in<strong>to</strong>Oc<strong>to</strong>ber.Colletes squamosus Morawitz 1878Iran; Elburz, Schiraz.A subendemic species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Central Asia steppe deserts. Active during July.Colletes squamulosus Noskiewicz 1936Cyprus. Syria. Israel. Iran.Colletes standfussi Kuhlmann 2003Greece.Colletes subnitens Noskiewicz 1936<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.A Central Asian endemic <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Alpine zones. On <strong>the</strong> wing during July at 2300 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Elburzmountains.Colletes succinctus (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos.A species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Temperate zone.Colletes transi<strong>to</strong>rius Noskiewicz 1936Turkey; Antalya, Adiyaman.Colletes tuberculatus Morawitz 1894Widespread Turkey. Iran.The subspecies C. t. ana<strong>to</strong>licus Noskiewicz in Continental Greece, Turkey, Israel. Jordan. Iran.A mountain bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> summer months.47


Colletes wahrmanni Noskiewicz 1959Turkey; Konya.A Central Asian bee.Colletes warnckei Kuhlmann 2002Turkey; Hakkari, Kars. Iran.≈Subfamily HylaeinaeHylaeus acer Da<strong>the</strong> 1980Turkey.Hylaeus adriaticus (Warncke 1988)Continental Greece; nor<strong>the</strong>rn Peloponnesos and Olympos.Hylaeus adspersus (Alfken 1935)Turkey.Hylaeus alexandrinus (Warncke 1992)Israel. Sinai. Egypt.Hylaeus alpina Morawitz 1867Continental Greece; Olympos.Hylaeus alticolus (Warncke 1981)Iran; Elburz.On <strong>the</strong> wing at 2400 mtrs during July.Hylaeus angustatus (Schenck 1859)Crete. Turkey. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June and July. The specimens on Crete have been referred <strong>to</strong> as H. a. punctifronsPérez in Warncke (1992).Hylaeus annularis (Kirby 1802)Subspecies H. a. elbursus (Warncke 1981) in sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.on <strong>the</strong> wing from mid May <strong>to</strong> mid July in Iran.Hylaeus araxanus (Warncke 1981)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.noted visiting Ferula, Daucus carota and o<strong>the</strong>r umbelliferae.Hylaeus armeniacus (Warncke 1981)Turkey. Israel. Iran; Elburz, Fars.On <strong>the</strong> wing mid May <strong>to</strong> mid June.48


Hylaeus biarmicus (Warncke 1992)Egypt.Hylaeus bifasciatus (Jurine 1807)Continental Greece; North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.A Pontic bee. Known from eastern Azerbaijan and may possibly occur in nor<strong>the</strong>rmost Iran.Hylaeus bisinuatus Foerster 1871Crete. Turkey. Iran; Kordestan, Hamadan, Teheran.Found during July and August. In Iran noted visiting Medicago, Trifolium and Alhagi.Hylaeus brevicornis (Nylander 1852)Iran.Widespread Iran from May <strong>to</strong> August when flying <strong>to</strong> Ferula, Peucedanum anisum, Daucus carotaand Alhagi pseudoalhagi.Hylaeus cervinus (Warncke 1992)Turkey. Iran.Hylaeus chukar (Warncke 1992)Turkey.Hylaeus clusium (Warncke 1981)Iran; Kopet Dag.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July at 2000 mtrs.Hylaeus clypearis (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece. Crete.Active during July.Hylaeus communis Nylander 1852Warncke (1982) reports this species from Iran; Isfahan, Mazandaran.H. c. creticus (Warncke 1981) on Crete.On <strong>the</strong> wing at 2100 mtrs during June.H. c. implicatus Da<strong>the</strong> 1980 Turkey. Iran.Active during July.Hylaeus conformis nive<strong>of</strong>asciatus (Foerster 1871)Libya. Egypt.Hylaeus cornutus Curtis 1831Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Active in summer when visits Daucus carota in Iran.Hylaeus crassanus (Warncke 1972)Turkey.49


Hylaeus crispulus Da<strong>the</strong> 1980Turkey. Iran; Elburz mountains.Subspecies H. c. koenigsmanni Da<strong>the</strong> 1981 Crete.H. c. hermonus (Warncke 1981) Israel.Subspecies H. c. ana<strong>to</strong>licus (Warncke 1981) Turkey.Hylaeus cypricolus (Warncke 1972)Cyprus. Turkey. Egypt.Hylaeus decaoctus (Warncke 1992)Turkey.Hylaeus decep<strong>to</strong>rius (Benoist 1959)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Hylaeus difformis (Eversmann 1852)Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran; Mazandaran.Hylaeus dolichocephalus (Morawitz 1876)Iran; Khorasan.On <strong>the</strong> wing during August.Hylaeus duckei (Alfken 1904)Continental Greece; Olympos, nor<strong>the</strong>rn Pindos. nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing at 1400 mtrs during July.Subspecies H. d. stellatus (Warncke 1992) recorded from sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey.Hylaeus elatus (Warncke 1981)Israel. Egypt.Noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during April and May.Hylaeus euryscapus (Foerster 1871)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Mediterranean and Black Sea coasts.Hylaeus excelsus (Alfken 1931)Turkey. Iran.Hylaeus friesei Alfken 1904Continental Greece, Peloponnesos.Hylaeus funereus (Warncke 1992)Turkey.Hylaeus gazagnairei Vachal 1891Libya; Cyrenaica.Hylaeus gibbus Saunders 1850Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Iran.50


On <strong>the</strong> wing during July. In Iran noted active from late May in<strong>to</strong> August.Hylaeus glacialis (Morawitz 1872)Turkey.The subspecies H. g. giresunus (Warncke 1992) also from Turkey.Hylaeus gracilicornis (Morawitz 1867)Continental Greece on Olympos. Corfu.Hylaeus heliacus (Warncke 1992)Turkey.Hylaeus hermonus (Warncke 1981)Israel; Mount Hermon.Active on <strong>the</strong> wing during June at 2000 mtrs.Hylaeus hungaricus (Alfken 1905)Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.Hylaeus hyalinatus (Smith 1842)Subspecies H. h. milossa (Warncke 1981) Greece; Cyclades on Milos.Subspecies H. h. minos (Warncke 1981) Crete.Subspecies H. h. iranicus Da<strong>the</strong> 1980 Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Hylaeus hyperpunctatus (Strand 1909)Subspecies H. h. helenae (Pittioni 1950) on Continental Greece. Turkey.Subspecies H. h. tauricus (Warncke 1981) Turkey.Hylaeus imparilis Foerster 1871Greece; North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey.Active during June and July.Hylaeus iranicus Da<strong>the</strong> 1980Turkey. Iran.Hylaeus irritans Da<strong>the</strong> 1980Turkey. Iran.Hylaeus kahri Foerster 1871North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. A similar species on Crete may be distinct (Da<strong>the</strong> 1981). Active insummer.Hylaeus klugii (Friese 1898)Egypt. Israel. Iran; Khuzestan.Subspecies H.k. kermana (Warncke 1981) in sou<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.Subspecies H. k. mesopotamae (Warncke 1992) Iraq and Iran.Hylaeus koenigsmanni Da<strong>the</strong> 198151


Crete.Active during July.Hylaeus kotschisus (Warncke 1981)Turkey. Israel. Iran; Khorasan, Elburz.On <strong>the</strong> wing at 2000 mtrs..Hylaeus kurdus (Warncke 1981)Turkey; Hakkari.Active during August when found at 2600 <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs.Subspecies H. k. trochilus (Warncke 1992) also in Turkey.Hylaeus laevithorax(Alfken 1924)Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from March <strong>to</strong> May.Hylaeus lep<strong>to</strong>cephalus (Morawitz 1870)Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Hylaeus lineolatus (Schenck 1861)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran..On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> August in Cyprus and Crete, recorded visiting Cistus villosus and Rubusulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus. Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in Iran from mid May <strong>to</strong> mid July.Hylaeus longimaculus (Alfken 1936)Greece; Crete, Rhodes. Turkey. Palestine. Lebanon. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran; Elburz, Hamadan, Teheran. Egypt.Hylaeus maculatus (Alfken 1904)Israel. Lebanon. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Hylaeus meridionalis Foerster 1871North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Found during July.Hylaeus monedulus (Warncke 1992)Turkey.Hylaeus moricei (Friese 1896)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.<strong>Eastern</strong> populations are referable <strong>to</strong> H. m. luteifrons (Strand 1909).On <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August when recorded visiting Medicago sativa.Hylaeus nigritus (Fabricius 1798)Turkey.Hylaeus nivaliformis Da<strong>the</strong> 1977Continental Greece, Olympos.52


Hylaeus nyroca (Warncke 1992)Iraq.Hylaeus orientalicus (Warncke 1981)Turkey. Israel.Hylaeus oriolus (Warncke 1981)Iran; Elburz.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during July at 1600 mtrs.Hylaeus pictipes (Nylander 1852)Turkey. Israel.Hylaeus pictus (Smith 1853)Warncke notes subspecies H. p. damascenus (Magretti 1890) in sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel. Iraq.Iran.Hylaeus planulus (Warncke 1981)Turkey; Hakkari.Inhabits mountain habitat at 2600 <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs where flies during August.Hylaeus punctatus (Brullé 1832)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.A summer bee on Cyprus reported from June <strong>to</strong> September, visiting Cistus villosus, Rubus ulmifoliusana<strong>to</strong>licus and Mentha longifolia.Hylaeus punctulatissimus Smith 1842Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran; Elburz.Hylaeus punctus (Foerster 1871)North Continental Greece, Corfu. Turkey.Hylaeus querquedulus (Warncke 1981)Turkey; Hakkari. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during August at 2600 <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs.Hylaeus rubicolus (Saunders 1850)Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Egypt.Hylaeus rubosus (Warncke 1981)Turkey. Iran.Hylaeus rugicollis (Morawitz 1873)Turkey. Israel. Iran.Hylaeus scutellaris (Morawitz 1873)Turkey. Iran; Kerman, Teheran.53


Hylaeus scutellatus (Spinola 1838)Continental Greece. Turkey. Israel. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Hylaeus sidensis (Warncke 1981)Turkey. Lebanon. Israel.Hylaeus signatus (Panzer 1798)Turkey.Subspecies H. s. berlandi (Benoist 1943) Turkey. Iran.Hylaeus sinuatus (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece; Rhodopi. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Subspecies H. s. gribodoi (Vachal 1895) Iran; Hamadan, Mazandaran, Elburz.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in Iran from mid July <strong>to</strong> early August.Hylaeus soror (Pérez 1903)Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Hylaeus styriacus Foerster 1871Turkey.Subspecies H. s. creccus (Warncke 1992) also from Turkey.A Pontic bee.Hylaeus sulphuripes (Gribodo 1894)Egypt. Libya.Hylaeus taeniolatus Foerster 1871North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Hylaeus tardus (Warncke 1981)Iran; Elburz, Hamadan, Fars.Noted at 1850 up <strong>to</strong> 2060 mtrs during May in<strong>to</strong> August. Flies <strong>to</strong> Umbelliferae.Hylaeus tephronotus (Warncke 1992)Turkey.Hylaeus tetris Da<strong>the</strong> 2000Turkey.Hylaeus <strong>to</strong>rquatus (Warncke 1992)Turkey. Syria.Hylaeus trifidus (Alfken 1936)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Hylaeus trinotata Pérez 1895Turkey.54


Warncke gives a subspecies H. t. graeca (Warncke 1992) from central and sou<strong>the</strong>rn ContinentalGreece, also a subspecies H. t. mesopotamica from Sumel, a location possibly in Iraq.Hylaeus tyrolensis (Foerster 1871)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Hylaeus variegatus (Fabricius 1798)Turkey. Israel. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Subspecies H. v.coriaceus (Pérez 1895) on Crete, appearing from May <strong>to</strong> July.Hylaeus vulgaris (Morawitz 1876)Iran; Fars, Khorasan.≈Family AndrenidaeSubfamily AndreninaeAndrena (Ulandrena) abbreviata Dours 1873The subspecies A. a. dominica Warncke 1975From Greece eastwards <strong>to</strong> Israel and on Crete and Cyprus. Turkey.One <strong>of</strong> a good number <strong>of</strong> Andrena species originally described from Continental Greece or <strong>the</strong> Greekislands.Andrena (Taenandrena) aberrans Eversmann 1852Continental Greece.A primarily Central European and Continental species but recorded from <strong>the</strong> Greek ChalkidikiPeninsula; Mount Athos at 600 mtrs.Andrena (Ulandrena) acerba Warncke 1967Found in <strong>the</strong> Greek Aegean, including Lesbos and Samos, <strong>the</strong>re is a concentration <strong>of</strong> records ineastern Turkey and Adana.Andrena (Aciandrena) aciculata Morawitz 1886Continental Europe and Asia Minor with records from Crete and <strong>the</strong> Aegean including Lesbos andRhodes and <strong>to</strong> Cyprus and Turkey.55


Andrena (Orandrena) acrana Warncke 1967Turkey.Andrena (Chrysandrena) aegyptiaca Friese 1899Found in Israel and Nilotic Egypt, this species has a now disjunct distribution with records also fromnorthwest Africa.Andrena (Suandrena) aegypticola Friese 1899Found in Nilotic Egypt and Israel. On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. a. larnacensis Mavromoustakis 1954is found and is quite possibly a full species.Andrena (Aenandrena) aeneiventris Morawitz 1872A successful Palaearctic distribution and from Greece <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> fringe <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sinai - <strong>the</strong> bee is found inCyprus, Rhodes and Crete. Turkey east <strong>to</strong> Iran.Mavromoustakis recorded this Andrena from March <strong>to</strong> June on Cyprus, with flower records for Ammimajus, Calendula persica, Ferula communis anatriches, Tordylium syriacum, Scandix pecten –veneris, Petroselinum sativum and Foeniculum piperitum. He also discovered this bee on Rhodes.Andrena (Carandrena) aerinifrons Dours 1873A montane species with records from sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey and Israel and Jordan but also from Al Jabal alakhdar, Libya.Andrena (Melandrena) albifacies Alfken 1927North <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Gulf <strong>of</strong> Aqaba and nilotic Egypt <strong>to</strong> Israel with a record from Libya. Iraq.Andrena (Truncandrena) albopicta Radoszkowski 1874<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iraq. Iran.Andrena (Melandrena) albopunctata (Rossi 1792)The race A. a. funebris Panzer 1798 occurs from Continental Greece <strong>to</strong>wards <strong>the</strong> eastern Sinai, Israeland Turkey <strong>to</strong> Syria and on Crete and Cyprus. The species has a wide sou<strong>the</strong>rn Palaearctic range.Andrena (Micrandrena) alfkenella Perkins 1914Greece and TurkeyAndrena (Micrandrena) alfkenelloides Warncke 1965This bee has a strongly East Mediterranean distribution from Continental Greece through <strong>to</strong> West andSouthwest Turkey, Israel and Jordan and including <strong>the</strong> large islands <strong>of</strong> Crete, Lesbos and Cyprus.<strong>Bees</strong> from Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey are referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies A. a. cardalia Warncke 1975Known as a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry in <strong>the</strong> orchards <strong>of</strong> highland Jordan.Andrena (Euandrena) allosa Warncke 1975The subspecies A. a. canigica Warncke 1975 recorded from western Turkey. In sou<strong>the</strong>rn ContinentalGreece <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. a. pileata Warncke 1975 occurs.Andrena (Euandrena) alutacea S<strong>to</strong>eckhert 1942Turkey.56


Andrena (Aciandrena) amicula Warncke 1967Records are confined <strong>to</strong> nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Nobandrena) ana<strong>to</strong>lica Alfken 1935Continental Greece, Turkey, Syria and Lebanon.Andrena (Ptilandrena) angustior (Kirby 1802)A single record from Beghazi, Libya may refer <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> race A. a. impressa Warncke 1967. The speciesis strongly western Continental.Andrena (Plastandrena) apiformis Kriechbaumer 1873A scarcely recorded species with a Sou<strong>the</strong>asterly Continental distribution. Recorded in Greece andsou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Leucandrena) argentata Smith 1844Continental Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Graecandrena) argyre<strong>of</strong>asciata Schmiedeknecht 1900An African bee present in Egypt.Andrena (Graecandrena) arsine Schmiedeknecht 1900Confined <strong>to</strong> nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Cryptandrena) aruana Warncke 1967Very locally recorded from Israel and Palestine.Andrena (Nobandrena) asiatica Friese 1921From <strong>the</strong> eastern Aegean including Lesbos and Samos <strong>to</strong> eastern Turkey through <strong>the</strong> Levant in coastalSyria and Lebanon. The distribution is centred on Asia Minor.Andrena (Melandrena) assimilis Radoszkowski 1876Continental Greece, also Lesbos and eastwards through Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) astica Warncke 1967An <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean species found on Crete and Cyprus, Lesbos, Sou<strong>the</strong>astern coastal Turkeyand Israel.Andrena (Nobandrena) a<strong>the</strong>nensis Warncke 1965Continental Greece with a distribution running in<strong>to</strong> central Turkey and Black Sea.Andrena (Melanapis) atrocoerulea Giraud 1863Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) atrotegularis Hedicke 1923Continental Greece, Lesbos and <strong>to</strong> eastern Turkey and Syria.Andrena (Leucandrena) barbilabris (Kirby 1802)57


A European bee with records from Continental Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) bassana Warncke 1969A special longitudinal range, found in Israel and Lebanon. In central Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. b.etesiaca Warncke 1975 occurs.Andrena (Truncandrena) bengasinensis Schul<strong>the</strong>ss 1924Coastal North Africa from Libya at Benghazi east <strong>to</strong> Cairo.Andrena (Micrandrena) biarmica Warncke 1975The eastern Aegean from Lesbos and Samos east through inland Turkey.Andrena (Parandrenella) bicarinata Morawitz 1876Turkey.Andrena (Euandrena) bicolor Fabricius 1775Widespread in Continental Greece and Turkey and recorded from Crete and Cyprus and Israel.Andrena (Hyperandrena) bicolorata (Rossi 1790)Continental Greece, Crete and coastal Turkey with records from LibyaAndrena (Chlorandrena) bifida Warncke 1967Confined <strong>to</strong> coastal Libya.Andrena (Plastandrena) bimaculata (Kirby 1802)Subspecies A. b. oligotrichia Mavromoustakis 1952 is found on Cyprus whereas <strong>the</strong> nominate race isthrough Continental Greece and Turkey including <strong>the</strong> Aegean and Israel.Flower records from Cyprus for <strong>the</strong> first brood <strong>of</strong> this bivoltine species, on <strong>the</strong> wing during Marchand April, are for Prunus dulcis, Crataegus azarolus, Pyrus, Tamarix (rarely) and Sinapis alba. Asecond generation is on <strong>the</strong> wing from June in<strong>to</strong> early July and visits Proteroa corymbosa, Tamarixand Eryngium creticum.Andrena (Simandrena) biskrensis Pérez 1895A record for nilotic Egypt o<strong>the</strong>rwise Western Palaearctic distribution is through Northwest Africa.Andrena (Aenandrena) bisulcata Morawitz 1877Continental Greece, <strong>the</strong> coasts <strong>of</strong> Turkey. Lebanon and Israel.Andrena (Aenandrena) bonasia Warncke 1969The nominate subspecies is recorded from central sou<strong>the</strong>rn and eastern Turkey.In Israel <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. b. naevia Warncke 1969 is found.Andrena (Pallandrena) braunsiana Friese 1887A small number <strong>of</strong> records from central and eastern Turkey <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. b. de<strong>to</strong>rta Warncke1975.Andrena (Cryptandrena) brumanensisFriese 189958


A strongly sou<strong>the</strong>rn and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Palaearctic distribution. Continental Greece, with Crete andAegean records. Turkey. Cyprus. Israel and Lebanon.Andrena (Andrena) bulgariensis Warncke 1965Tukey; Kars.Andrena (Graecandrena) butea Warncke 1965Inland central and eastern Turkey. Israel.The subspecies A. b. ketupa Warncke 1975 also present in Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) bytinskii Warncke 1969A restricted range in sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey and Israel.Andrena (Micrandrena) calandra Warncke 1975A scarcely recorded bee <strong>of</strong> south and central eastern Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) callida Warncke 1974Coastal Egypt and Jordan.Andrena (Chlorandrena) callosa Warncke 1967Very local range in Libya;- Benghazi and eastern Gulf <strong>of</strong> Sirte.Andrena (Truncandrena) caneae Strand 1915Range from Continental Greece <strong>to</strong> Lesbos and Crete. Widespread Cyprus. Turkey <strong>to</strong> Lebanon.This species was originally described from Crete.Andrena (Avandrena) canohirta (Friese 1922)Continental Greece, <strong>the</strong> Aegean at Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) cantiaca Warncke 1975Central and eastern Turkey and on <strong>the</strong> Greek Aegean at Lesbos.The subspecies A. c. infuscata Warncke 1975 also rcorded in Turkey.Andrena (Euandrena) canuta Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Lepidandrena) caprimulga Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Hoplandrena) caran<strong>to</strong>nica Pérez 1902A Continental temperate and nor<strong>the</strong>rn species recorded from Aegean Greece at Lesbos.Andrena (Campylogaster) caroli Pérez 1895Nilotic Egypt and Israel.Andrena (Poliandrena) caspica Morawitz 1886Included here is A. unicincta Friese 1899. Continental Greece. Sou<strong>the</strong>astAegean islands. Turkey.Syria. Lebanon. Israel.59


Andrena (Poliandrena) castanea Warncke 1975Turkey; Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Andrena (Avandrena) caudata Warncke 1965Very locally known from south east Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) cervina Warncke 1975Found on Cyprus.Andrena (Aenandrena) chae<strong>to</strong>gastra Pittioni 1950Cyprus, Turkey and Israel.Andrena (Aciandrena) chelma Warncke 1975South Continental Greece, Peloponnesos.Andrena (Leucandrena) christineae Dubitzky 2006Turkey. Iran.Andrena (Euandrena) chrysopus Pérez 1903North eastern Turkey.Andrena (Zonandrena) chrysopyga Schenck 1853Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.A Continental species which may be present in European Turkey and north Continental Greece.Andrena (Notandrena) chrysosceles (Kirby 1802)Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) ciconia Warncke 1975Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) cineraria (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece.Andrena (Chlorandrena) cinerea Brullé 1832Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Western Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) cinereophila Warncke 1965Continental Greece through Turkey and Crete, <strong>the</strong> Aegean including Lesbos and Rhodes and <strong>to</strong>Cyprus and Israel.Andrena (Simandrena) cinnamonea Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Hoplandrena) clusia Warncke 1966Central Turkey and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece.60


Andrena (Ulandrena) crecca Warncke 1965Turkey.Andrena (Zonandrena) creticola Strand 1915Crete. Israel.Andrena (Parandrenella) crispa Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Cubiandrena) cubiceps Friese 1914Turkey except <strong>the</strong> north. North Greece and sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean. Israel.Andrena (Cubiandrena) cubicepsella Warncke 1975Central Turkey. Syria.Andrena (Melit<strong>to</strong>ides) curiosa (Morawitz 1877)Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Notandrena) curvana Warncke 1965Continental Greece.Andrena (Lepidandrena) curvungula Thomson 1870Continental Greece and through <strong>the</strong> Greek Aegean including Lesbos and Rhodes. Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) cussariensis Morawitz 1886Sou<strong>the</strong>ast and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Suandrena) cyanomicans Pérez 1895Israel and nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Cordandrena) cypria Pittioni 1950Central and eastern Turkey. Cyprus. Israel. Jordan.Mavromoustakis located <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> this species on Cyprus, finding <strong>the</strong> species active on openmontane slopes close <strong>to</strong> Pinus nigra forest during May and early June, flying <strong>to</strong> Alyssum. He reportedan ecological separation between this bee and <strong>the</strong> closely related A. ventricosa Dours which ispresent but on coastal areas and lower hillsides.Andrena (Plastandrena) cypricola Mavromoustakis 1952CyprusAndrena (Melandrena) danuvia S<strong>to</strong>eckhert 1950Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) dauma Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Holandrena) decipiens Schenck 185962


Continental Greece and Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) delphiensis Warncke 1965Continental Greece and North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Parandrenella) dentiventris Morawitz 1874Central and south central Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) derbentina Morawitz 1886A Caucasian species recorded from <strong>the</strong> Greek Aegean at Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Chrysandrena) dilleri Gusenleitner 1998Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Distandrena) distinguenda Schenck 1871Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Andrena (Fumandrena) djelfensis Pérez 1895Continental Greece.Andrena (Lepidandrena) dorsalis Brullè 1832Continental Greece. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Simandrena) dorsata (Kirby 1802)Turkey. Continental Greece and Lesbos. Turkey. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Trunandrena) doursana Dufour 1853The subspecies A. d. bengasia Warncke 1980 found about coastal Egypt and Libya.Andrena (Melandrena) dubiosa Kohl 1905Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria.Andrena (Ulandrena) elegans Giraud 1863Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece through central Turkey.Andrena (Lepidandrena) elisaria Gusenleitner 1998<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) elmaria Gusenleitner 1998Central and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Cyprus. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Jordan.Andrena (Micrandrena) enslinella S<strong>to</strong>eckhert 1924Recorded from Greek Peloponnesos and through Turkey.Andrena (Campylogaster) erberi Morawitz 1871Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Crete. Central and eastern Turkey.Recorded from Attica by Schmiedeknecht. Originally described by Morawitz from <strong>the</strong> island <strong>of</strong> Syra,it may be widespread in <strong>the</strong> Cyclades. One <strong>of</strong> a good number <strong>of</strong> Andrena species on <strong>the</strong> island <strong>of</strong>63


Crete first recorded <strong>the</strong>re by Alfken. Recorded from Rhodes by Mavromoustakis. A summer bee outin July and visiting Echinops and Mentha in Attica.Andrena (Carandrena) eremobia Guiglia 1933Records from Egypt and Israel.Andrena (Notandrena) erythrocnemis Morawitz 1870Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on lesbos. Coastal Turkey. Lebanon.Andrena (Carandrena) euzona Pérez 1895Israel. Jordan. Egypt.Andrena (Plastandrena) eversmanni Radoszkowski 1867Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) exquisita Warncke 1975Turkey; Bosphorus.Andrena (Truncandrena) fabalis Warncke 1966Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Carandrena) falcinella Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel. Lebanon.Andrena (Micrandrena) falsifica Perkins 1915North Continental Greece.Andrena (Hoplandrena) ferox Smith 1847Central sou<strong>the</strong>rn and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) ferrugineicrus Dours 1872Libya.Andrena (Parandrenella) figurata Morawitz 1866Cyprus. Turkey.Andrena (Holandrena) fimbriata Brullè 1832Continental Greece.Andrena (Holandrena) fimbria<strong>to</strong>ides Scheuchl 2004Israel. Jordan.The male recorded at orchard blossoms <strong>of</strong> Apricot Armeniaca vulgaris during April.Andrena (Zonandrena) flavipes Panzer 1799Through Greece and <strong>the</strong> Aegean Islands. (But not recorded Crete). Turkey through <strong>the</strong> Levant <strong>to</strong>nilotic Egypt. Cyprus.Recorded as a pollina<strong>to</strong>r in <strong>the</strong> orchards <strong>of</strong> Jordan.64


Andrena (Nobandrena) flavobila Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn central Turkey.Andrena (Poliandrena) florea Fabricius 1793Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) floricola Eversmann 1852Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Lepidandrena) florivaga Eversmann 1852Turkey.Andrena (Holandrena) forsterella Osytshnjuk 1978Continental Greece. Lesbos and some o<strong>the</strong>r Aegean islands though not recorded Crete. Turkey.Cyprus. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Nobandrena) fratercula Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Andrena) fucata Smith 1847Extreme north Continental Greece and nor<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) fuligula Warncke 1965Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey <strong>to</strong> Israel and Jordan.Andrena (Andrena) fulva Müller 1766North Continental Greece and Lesbos.Andrena (Chrysandrena) fulvago (Christ 1791)North Continental Greece and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) fulvitarsis Brullé 1832Continental Greece. Lesbos. South Aegean islands. Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Melandrena) fuscocalcarata Morawitz 1877Lesbos. Central Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Melanapis) fuscosa Spinola 1838Andrena f. fuscosa Erichson 1835 from Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete and some smaller Aegeanislands through Turkey. A.f. rutila from <strong>the</strong> Levant through Egypt and Cyprus. The ranges in <strong>the</strong>Syrian Desert and Mediterranean not reported.Andrena (Chlorandrena) galbula Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Orandrena) gallinula Warncke 1975Turkey.65


Andrena (Lepidandrena) gamskrucki Warncke 1965Continental Greece.In western Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. g. eburnea Warncke 1975 occurs. In central and sou<strong>the</strong>asternTurkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. g. impasta Warncke 1975 occurs.Andrena (Orandrena) garrula Warncke 1965North - eastern Greece and Turkey. Jordan.The subspecies A. g. lomvia Warncke 1969 occurs in Israel.Andrena (Micrandrena) garzetta Warncke 1975Turkey.Andrena (Simandrena) gasparella Patiny 1998Turkey; Aksehir, Konya.Andrena (Zoandrena) gazella Friese 1922Extreme sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey through <strong>the</strong> Levant <strong>to</strong> Nilotic Egypt.The subspecies A. g. flammea Warncke 1975 is noted from Turkey.Andrena (Taeniandrena) gelriae Van Der Vecht 1927<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Euandrena) glabiventris Alfken 1935Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Chrysandrena) glandaria Warncke 1975South Aegean. South and eastern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Ulandrena) glareola Warncke 1969<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Ptilandrena) glidia Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Lesbos and o<strong>the</strong>r Aegean islands. Crete. Cyprus. South coastal Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) gordia Warncke 1975Cyprus and in sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Distandrena) govinda Warncke 1974Nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Graecandrena) graecella Warncke 1965North Continental Greece. Israel.Andrena (Melandrena) grandilabris Pérez 1903South and eastern Turkey. Cyprus. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Euandrena) granulosa Pérez 190266


Northwestern Continental Greece.Andrena (Zonandrena) gravida Imh<strong>of</strong>f 1832Continental Greece. Lesbos. O<strong>the</strong>r Greek Islands. Central Turkey.Dours reported that this bee was present in large numbers on some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Greek islands.Andrena (Fumandrena) griseigena Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>asternTurkey.Andrena (Ptilandrena) grossella Grünwaldt 1976South Continental Greece.This bee is on <strong>the</strong> wing during late Oc<strong>to</strong>ber <strong>to</strong> mid November.Andrena (Orandrena) gunaca Warncke 1975Central Turkey.Andrena (Poliandrena) guttata Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel <strong>to</strong>wards Sinai.Andrena (Trachandrena) haemorrhoa (Fabricius 1781)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Charitandrena) hat<strong>to</strong>rfiana (Fabricius 1775)The subspecies A. h. dimidiata Brullé 1832 is found in Continental Greece, <strong>the</strong> south Aegean and inwestern <strong>to</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Cordandrena) hedikae Jaeger 1934The subspecies A. h. inexpectata Warncke 1975 in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) heinrichi Grünwaldt 2005Greece; Aegean on Samos. Western Turkey; Kusadasi.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during April and early May.Andrena (Graecandrena) helenica Warncke 1965Continental Greece and Lesbos.Andrena (Thysandrena) helouanensis Friese 1899Jordan and <strong>Eastern</strong> Egypt.Andrena (Andrena) helvola (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece and Turkey.Andrena (Chrysandrena) henotica Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel and Jordan.Andrena (Chrysandrena) hesperia Smith 1853Continental Greece. Lesbos. Samos. South Aegean and Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Lebanon. Israel.Nilotic Egypt.67


Andrena (Poliandrena) hibernica Warncke 1975Turkey; Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.In <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. h. caucasica Warncke 1975 occurs.Andrena (Carandrena) hieroglyphica Morawitz 1876The subspecies A. h. kurdistanica Engel 2005 found in Turkey.Andrena (Taeniandrena) hova Warncke 1975Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) humabilis Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Chlorandrena) humilis Imh<strong>of</strong>f 1832Continental Greece. Lesbos. South Aegean. Crete. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey <strong>to</strong> Israel. Jordan.Specimes in Turkey are referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies A. h. indigena Warncke 1975.Noted as a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> pollina<strong>to</strong>r community among orchards <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry in Jordan.Andrena (Zonandrena) hungarica Friese 1887Subspecies A. h. macroura Warncke 1975 found in Central Turkey.Andrena (Margandrena) hyacinthina Mavromoustakis 1958Cyprus. Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Lebanon. Syria. Israel.Andrena (Poecilandrena) hybrida Warncke 1975Central sou<strong>the</strong>rn <strong>to</strong> eastern Turkey.The subspecies A. h. tauriensis Warncke 1975 also in eastern Turkey.Andrena (Graecandrena) hyemala Warncke 1973Continental Greece. Aegean islands on Lesbos. Rhodes. Crete. North Turkey. Israel <strong>to</strong> Sinai.The subspecies A. h. repressa Warncke 1975 also in Turkey.Andrena ((Thysandrena) hypopolia Schmiedeknecht 1883Continental Greece. Turkey. Libya.The subspecies A. h. albiscopa Warncke 1967 is reported from Central Turkey eastwards.Andrena (Aenandrena) hystrix Schmiedeknecht 1883Central and eastern Turkey.Subspecies A. h. rufilata Warncke 1975 reported from Turkey.Andrena (Nobandrena) iliaca Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Lebanon, Jordan and Israel.Recorded as a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry in Jordan.Andrena (Micrandrena) illyrica Warncke 1975Continental Greece.68


Andrena (Fumandrena) immaculata Warncke 1975Central and eastern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Graecandrena) impunctata Pérez 1895Continental Greece. South Aegean and Crete. Turkey. Israel, Sinai and nilotic Egypt.<strong>Bees</strong> found in Israel in<strong>to</strong> North Africa are referable <strong>to</strong> A. i. contusa Warncke 1967.Andrena (Campylogaster) incisa Eversmann 1852Continental Greece and throughout Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) incognita Warncke 1975South central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Andrena) inconstans Morawitz 1877Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) induta Morawitz 1895<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Melli<strong>to</strong>ides) innesi Gribodo 1894Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel. Egypt. Libya.Andrena (Taeniandrena) intermedia Thomson 1870Continental Greece. Sou<strong>the</strong>ast and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Campylogaster) iranella Popov 1940Iran.Andrena (Ulandrena) isabellina Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey <strong>to</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel.Andrena (Chlorandrena) isis Schmiedeknecht 1900Jordan and Egypt.Andrena (Leimelissa) ispida Warncke 1965Throughout Turkey.Andrena (Aciandrena) janthina Warncke 1975Far sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Poecilandrena) kilikiae Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Aciandrena) konyella Warncke 1975Throughout Turkey.Andrena (Pallandrena) korbella Grünwaldt 2005<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.69


Apparent up <strong>to</strong> 2600 mtrs during April and May.Andrena (Zonandrena) korleviciana Friese 1887Continental Greece.Andrena (Ptilandrena) kornosica Mavromoustakis 1954An island endemic bee <strong>of</strong> Cyprus.An early bee, both sexes recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in January and February, <strong>of</strong>ten in montane habitat <strong>to</strong>2,500ft.Andrena (Margandrena) krausiella Gusenleitner 1998Lebanon. Israel. Jordan.A visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards in Jordan.Andrena (Poliandrena) kriechbaumeri Schmiedeknecht 1883Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Fumandrena) kurda Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Hoplandrena) labergeiella Gusenleitner 1998Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Holandrena) labialis (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Thassos. Lesbos. Crete. Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Aegean. Turkey. Syria.In Iran and from Central Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. l. megala Warncke 1975 is recorded.Andrena (Poecilandrena) labiata Fabricius 1781Continental Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Aciandrena) lamiana Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Cyprus.Andrena (Notandrena) langadensis Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Corfu. Lesbos. South Aegean. Crete. South and eastern Turkey. Israel. Egypt.Subspecies A. l. clanga Warncke 1965 recorded in Turkey.Andrena (Larandrena) larisana Warncke 1965Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Aegean Turkey.Two subspecies are also present;- A. l. medioxima Warncke 1975 (Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia and sou<strong>the</strong>rnTurkey) and A. l. sculpturata Warncke 1975 (sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey).Andrena (Campylogaster) lateralis Morawitz 1876Continental Greece. Turkey. Israel. Iran.Andrena (Taeniandrena) lathyri Alfken 1899Continental Greece. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.70


Andrena (Poecilandrena) laticeps Morawitz 1877Turkey.Andrena (Simandrena) lepida Schenck 1861Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Cyprus. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Notandrena) lepurana Warncke 1974Libya.Andrena (Suandrena) leucocyanea Pérez 1895Libya and western Egypt.Andrena (Taeniandrena) leucopsis Warncke 1967Continental Greece. Turkey. Lebanon.Specimens are referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies A. l. finschii Warncke 1975.Andrena (Notandrena) leucura Warncke 1974Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel.Andrena (Carandrena) levantina Hedicke 1938Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) limassolica Mavromoustakis 1948CyprusOn <strong>the</strong> wing late January and February. Mavromoustakis reported this bee <strong>to</strong> be oligolectic on Gageachlorantha.Andrena (Melandrena) limata Smith 1853Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Rhodes. Cyprus. North Turkey. Israel. The bees <strong>of</strong> this species on<strong>the</strong> Mediterranean Islands and Israel at least can be referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies A. l. batesiae Cockerell1910.Andrena (Poliandrena) limbata Eversmann 1852The subspecies A. l. squamea Giraud 1863 is in Continental Greece <strong>to</strong> Thassos, Lesbos and westernTurkey. In <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Greek Aegean, Rhodes;- and in <strong>the</strong> remainder <strong>of</strong> Turkey <strong>the</strong> race A. l.dusmeti Warncke 1967 is recorded.Andrena (Micrandrena) lindbergella Pittioni 1950Cyprus and Lebanon.Andrena (Distandrena) longibarbis Pérez 1895Israel and Egypt.Andrena (Stenomelissa) lonicera Warncke 1973Rarely recorded and although not found in our area it may be present in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greeceas it is present just north <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> border. It is <strong>the</strong> only Western Palaearctic representative <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>subgenus Stenomelissa <strong>of</strong> which three fur<strong>the</strong>r species are within <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Palaearctic.71


Andrena (Zonandrena) lophura Warncke 1975Turkey.<strong>the</strong> subspecies A. l. ana<strong>to</strong>liae Warncke 1975 also in Turkey.Andrena (Thysandrena) lunata Warncke 1975Central Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) luscinia Warncke 1975East and Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Carandrena) lutea Warncke 1967Libya.Andrena (Melandrena) magna Warncke 1965South Continental Greece. Central Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) magunta Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Margandrena) marginata Fabricius 1776North Continental Greece and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Distandrena) mariana Warncke 1968South Israel. Egypt <strong>to</strong> Benghazi, Libya.Andrena (Melandrena) marmora Nurse 1904Palestine and Israel.Andrena (Truncandrena) medeninensis Pérez 1895Turkey. Cyprus. Egypt.Examples in Turkey referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies A. m. usura Warncke 1967.Andrena (Simandrena) mehelyi Alfken 1936Turkey.Andrena (Poliandrena) melaleuca Pérez 1895Nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Poliandrena) melanota Warncke 1975South and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Simandrena) melba Warncke 1966<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey and Jordan.Andrena (Melit<strong>to</strong>ides) melit<strong>to</strong>ides Friese 1899West and sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.A visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> fruit tree orchards in Jordan.72


Andrena (Chrysandrena) merula Warncke 1969Continental Greece. Lesbos, Samos and some o<strong>the</strong>r Aegean islands. Crete. Cyprus. Palestine. Israel.Andrena (Chlorandrena) microcardia Pérez 1895South Israel. Libya.Andrena (Brachyandrena) miegiella Dours 1873North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Truncandrena) minapalumboi Gribodo 1894Egypt and Libya.Andrena (Aciandrena) minima Warncke 1974Nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Micrandrena) minutula (Kirby) 1802The race A. m. dargia Warncke 1965 from Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Much <strong>of</strong> Turkey(except for nor<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey where <strong>the</strong> nominate race is distributed). Cyprus.Andrena (Micrandrena) minutuloides Perkins 1914Continental Greece. Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Suandrena) mirna Warncke 1969Turkey.Andrena (Leucandrena) mistrensis Grünwaldt 2005Continental Greece; Mistra, Corinth, Mykene. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late March.Andrena (Andrena) mitis Schmiedeknecht 1883Rarely recorded Continental Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) mizorhina Warncke 1975Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Lepidandrena) Mocsáryi Schmiedeknecht 1884Continental Greece. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Poliandrena) mollissima Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Cryptandrena) monacha Warncke 1965Greece; Lesbos. Cyprus. West and sou<strong>the</strong>rn coastal Turkey. Syria and Lebanon.Andrena (Plastandrena) mongolica Morawitz 1880South central and eastern Turkey. Iran.Andrena (Orandrena) monilia Warncke 196773


Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel. Jordan.Andrena (Euandrena) montana Warncke 1973Continental Greece; Olympos.On <strong>the</strong> wing in early August at 2500 mtrs.Andrena (Truncandrena) moricei Friese 1899Israel.Andrena (Taeniandrena) morinella Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey; Sertavul.Andrena (Melandrena) morio Brullé 1832The nominate subspecies throughout Continental Greece, Lesbos and many smaller Aegean islands.Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Throughout Turkey <strong>to</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Syria.The race A. m. lugubris Erichson 1841 reported in Lebanon and Israel south <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sinai and niloticEgypt and western coastal Libya.Andrena (Didonia) mucida Kriechbaumer 1873Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Lebanon and Israel.Andrena (Truncandrena) mucronata Morawitz 1871Continental Greece. Corfu. Israel.Out during April in <strong>the</strong> environs <strong>of</strong> A<strong>the</strong>ns.Andrena (Philandrena) muscaria Warncke 1965A rarely recorded species Continental Greece.Andrena (Hoplandrena) najadana Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey; Taurus Range.Andrena (Micrandrena) nana (Kirby 1802)Recently recorded from Lesbos.Andrena (Didonia) nasuta Giraud 1863North Continental Greece. Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) negevana Gusenleitner & Scheuchl 2000Israel and Egypt in <strong>the</strong> Sinai.Andrena (Ulandrena) neocypriaca Mavromoustakis 1956Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Continental Greece. Lesbos, Rhodes and some o<strong>the</strong>r East Aegean islands. Turkey alongwest and sou<strong>the</strong>rn coast <strong>to</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>ast. Cyprus.Found during April on Cyprus, visiting An<strong>the</strong>mis arvensis.Andrena (Poecilandrena) neovirida Grünwaldt 2005Continental Greece.A spring bee <strong>of</strong> March and April.74


Andrena (Cnemidandrena) nigriceps (Kirby 1802)North Continental Greece.The subspecies A. n. comata Warncke 1975 found Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) nigroaenea (Kirby 1802)Found throughout Continental Greece and Aegean islands including Rhodes, Crete. Cyprus. InTurkey, through Lebanon and Israel as <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. n. candiae Strand 1915.North Egypt and Libya is populated by <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. n. aemula Alfken 1926.Emerges January <strong>to</strong> March on Cyprus, where visits early floral resources including Prunus dulcis(Almond), P. domestica, Erodium, Gagea chlorantha, Salix alba, Sinapis alba and Calendula persica.Mavromoustakis reported this bee <strong>to</strong> be bivoltine in Mainland Greece.Andrena (Chlorandrena) nigroolivacea Dours 1873Continental Greece.This species was discovered in Greece by Schmiedeknecht.Andrena (Parandrenella) nisoria Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Cyprus. Lebanon south through Israel.This bee probably also occurs in Libya and possibly in Egypt (Erwin Scheuchl pers comm.).Andrena (Melandrena) nitida (Müller 1776)Turkey.The subspecies A. n. batesiae Cockerell 1910 is distributed through Continental Greece. Aegeanislands including Lesbos <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cyclades. Crete. Parts <strong>of</strong> Turkey. Cyprus <strong>to</strong> Lebanon.Andrena (Notandrena) nitidiuscula Schenck 1853North Continental Greece. Turkey.In Lebanon and Israel <strong>to</strong> Nilotic Egypt <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. n. nigellata Pérez 1895 is found.Andrena (Micrandrena) niveata Friese 1887The subspecies A. n. bubulca Warncke 1975 Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) noacki Alfken 1935Turkey.Andrena (Nobandrena) nobilis Morawitz 1874Continental Greece. Lesbos and some o<strong>the</strong>r Aegean islands <strong>to</strong> Crete. Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May in Attica, Greece, recorded visiting Hirschfeldtia.Andrena (Carandrena) nubica Warncke 1975Central and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Simandrena) nucleola Warncke 1973A rarely recorded species <strong>of</strong> Continental Greece and north <strong>to</strong> far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Avandrena) ochropa Warncke 1974Libya; Al Jabal al Akhdar.75


Andrena (Micrandrena) oedicnema Warncke 1975Continental Greece. Central <strong>to</strong> far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) oenas Warncke 1975Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) olympica Grünwaldt 2005Continental Greece.A vernal Andrena <strong>of</strong> March and April.Andrena (Notandrena) optata Warncke 1975Continental Greece, some Aegean islands. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Lebanon <strong>to</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel.Andrena (Orandrena) oralis Morawitz 1876Continental Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) orientana Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Greek Aegean on Lesbos, Rhodes, Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Poliandrena) ornata Morawitz 1866Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) osychniukae Osytshnjuk 1977Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) oulskii Radoszkowski 1867<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Taeniandrena) ovatula (Kirby 1802)The nominate subspecies occurs in Continental Greece. Lesbos. South Aegean islands. Crete. Cyprus.Throughout Turkey. Israel. The subspecies A. o. heliopolis Friese 1914 is found in Egypt. Thesubspecies A. o. poupillieri Dours 1872 is present in Crete and Libya.Andrena (Micrandrena) paganettina Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. South Aegean. Turkey.Andrena (Cordandrena) pagophila Warncke 1975Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Pallandrena) pallidicincta Brullé 1832Continental Greece. Crete. North and eastern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Lepidandrena) pandellei Pérez 1895The subspecies A. p. europaea Warncke 1967 found Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean. Sou<strong>the</strong>rnand eastern Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Attica, Greece.76


Andrena (Fumandrena) pandosa Warncke 1968Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey <strong>to</strong> Lebanon. Israel. Egypt and Libya.Andrena (Chlorandrena) panurgimorpha Mavromoustakis 1957Continental Greece. Lesbos. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean islands. Crete. Cyprus. Throughout Turkey. Lebanon.Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late March <strong>to</strong> April on Cyprus.Andrena (Poecilandrena) paradisaea Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) paradoxa Friese 1921Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) paramy<strong>the</strong>nsis Mavromoustakis 1957Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) pareklisiae Mavromoustakis 1957Cyprus.On <strong>the</strong> wing in February <strong>to</strong> April visiting Sinapis alba and Alyssum campestre hirsutum.Andrena (Leucandrena) parviceps Kriechbaumer 1873Continental Greece. Western and east Turkey.Andrena (Lepidandrena) paucisquama Noskiewicz 1924Continental Greece. Lesbos. Samos. South Aegean. Turkey. Many examples may be referable <strong>to</strong>subspecies A. p. curonica Warncke 1975.Andrena (Aciandrena) pellucida Warncke 1974Egypt.Andrena (Graecandrena) pelopa Warncke 1975Continental Greece.Andrena (Carandrena) pesleria Gusenleitner 1998Coastal Egypt. Israel.Andrena (Taeniandrena) phoenicura Warncke 1975Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Plastandrena) pilipes Fabricius 1781Continental Greece. Lesbos. Aegean islands including Rhodes, Crete. Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Libya.Andrena (Chlorandrena) pinkeunia Warncke 1969Israel. Jordan.Andrena (Suandrena) planiventris Dours 1872Egypt.77


Andrena (Orandrena) platalea Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>ast and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) polemediana Mavromoustakis 1956Cyprus. Turkey.Andrena (Poliandrena) polita Smith 1847Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Lesbos and Rhodes. Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Egypt andLibya.Andrena (Notandrena) pontica Warncke 1972<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Andrena) praecox (Scopoli 1763)Rarely recorded in sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Aciandrena) pratincola Warncke 1974Egypt.Andrena (Nobandrena) probata Warncke 1973Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Taeniandrena) producta Warncke 1973Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) proxima (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece.Andrena (Campylogaster) pruinosa Erichson 1835Israel. Egypt.Andrena (Micrandrena) puffina Warncke 1975Turkey.Andrena (Aciandrena) pulicaria Warncke 1975Central Turkey.Andrena (Brachyandrena) punctatissima (Morawitz 1866 sensu Warncke)Throughout Turkey.Andrena (Carandrena) purpureomicans Alfken 1935Central, south and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) pyropygia Kriechbaumer 1873Continental Greece. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean islands. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria.Lebanon. Palestine. Israel.78


On <strong>the</strong> wing Cyprus from May <strong>to</strong> July. Flower visits recorded for Eryngium creticum, Cistus villosuscreticus, Ferula communis anatriches, Allium and Marrubium vulgare apolum.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing during April and May in Palestine and Israel, visitingTeucrium.Andrena (Poliandrena) pyrozonata Friese 1921South central and Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Cyprus.Andrena (Chlorandrena) pyrrhula Pérez 1895Nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Zonandrena) quadrimaculata Friese 1921Western continental Greece. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Fumandrena) querquedula Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>rn TurkeyAndrena (Melit<strong>to</strong>ides) ramlehiana Pérez 1903Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Thysandrena) ranunculorum Morawitz 1877Throughout central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Notandrena) recurvirostra Warncke 1975Central and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) regina Friese 1921<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Euandrena) robusta Warncke 1975Rarely recorded Continental Greece. Greek Aegean on Lesbos, Samos and Rhodes.aff. Andrena (Euandrena) robusta Warncke 1975Aegean Greece at Lesbos.Andrena (Hoplandrena) rosae Panzer 1801Greece on Crete. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) roseotincta Warncke 1975Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) rotundilabris Morawitz 1878Lesbos. South and eastern Turkey. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Distandrena) rubecula Warncke 1974Sinai and nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Euandrena) ruficrus Nylander 184879


Continental Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Euandrena) rufitibialis Friese 1899The subspecies A. r. limosa Warncke 1969 recorded Sou<strong>the</strong>ast and eastern Turkey. Syria. Lebanon.Israel.Andrena (Truncandrena) rufomaculata Friese 1921Continental Greece. Lesbos. Samos. South Aegean. Crete. Cyprus. Throughout Turkey. Lebanon.Israel.Andrena (Euandrena) rufula Schmiedeknecht 1883Continental Greece. South central Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) rugothorace Warncke 1965Continental Greece. Lesbos. South Aegean islands. Crete. Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Micrandrena) rugulosa S<strong>to</strong>eckhert 1935Continental Greece. Lesbos. Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) rusticola Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Melanapis) rutila Spinola 1838Turkey.Andrena (Troandrena) saettana Warncke 1975Aegean Greece on Samos and Rhodes. Cyprus. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Fumandrena) sandanskia Warncke 1973Continental Greece.Andrena (Poecilandrena) saturata Warncke 1975Central and south central Turkey.Andrena (Suandrena) savignyi Spinola 1838Egypt. Sinai. Israel.Andrena (Micrandrena) saxonica S<strong>to</strong>eckhert 1935Continental Greece. Western Turkey.Andrena (Opandrena) schencki Morawitz 1866Continental Greece. Lesbos. South Aegean islands. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Iran.Andrena (Carandrena) schlettereri Friese 1896Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) schmiedeknechti Magretti 1883Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. East Aegean islands. Turkey.80


This bee is on <strong>the</strong> wing during April and May in Attica, recorded visiting Erysimum pusillum <strong>the</strong>re byMavromoustakis.<strong>Bees</strong> in Turkey are referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies A. s. flavopilis Warncke 1965.Andrena (Hoplandrena) schonitzeri Gusenleitner 1998Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Hoplandrena) schuberthi Gusenleitner 1998Far Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) schulzi Strand 1921The nominate subspecies on Continental Greece; Attica. Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean islands includingRhodes.On Crete and Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A s. alba Warncke 1967 is found..Andrena (Graecandrena) schwarzi Warncke 1975South central Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) scirpacea Warncke 1975Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Lebanon.Andrena (Scitandrena) scita Eversmann 1852Continental Greece. Lesbos. O<strong>the</strong>r Aegean islands including Rhodes. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Andrena (Micrandrena) sedentaria Warncke 1975Central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) seitzi Alfken 1935Central and eastern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Notandrena) selcuki Scheuchl & Hazir 2008Turkey; Konya.Recorded from a steppic region <strong>of</strong> Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia with areas <strong>of</strong> arable cultivation.Andrena (Simandrena) selena Gusenleitner 1994Sinai.Andrena (Poecilandrena) seminuda Friese 1896Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) semirubra Morawitz 1876Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Larandrena) sericata Imh<strong>of</strong>f 1868Scarcely recorded from Continental Greece. South central Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) serraticornis Warncke 1965Continental Greece. West and Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel.81


Andrena (Taeniandrena) sexguttata Morawitz 1878Central Turkey.Andrena (Margandrena) sibthorpi Mavromoustakis 1952Cyprus.Frequent on <strong>the</strong> wing in December. An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> winter – flowering Colchicum hiemale whichbegins <strong>to</strong> flower in November on Cyprus.Andrena (Zonandrena) sigiella Gusenleitner 1998Syria. Israel. Jordan. Iraq.Andrena (Micrandrena) sillata Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean islands. West and south central Turkey.The subspecies A. s. histrionica Warncke 1975 also occurs in Turkey.Andrena (Taeniandrena) similis Smith 1849Continental Greece. Lesbos. East Aegean. Turkey. Cyprus. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Cnemidandrena) simillima Smith 1851Continental Greece; Mount Olympos.A summer bee found between 500 and 2000 mtrs.Andrena (Micrandrena) simon<strong>to</strong>rnyella Noskiewicz 1939Continental Greece. Lebanon. Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Chlorandrena) sinuata Pérez 1895Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel. Libya.Andrena (Campylogaster) skorikovi Popov 1940Iran.Andrena (Suandrena) sobrina Warncke 1975Central sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Andrena (Taeniandrena) solitaria Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Ulandrena) speciosa Friese 1899Israel. Nilotic Egypt. Libya.Andrena (Poecilandrena) sphecodimorpha Hedicke 1942Continental Greece. North Aegean at Lesbos. Israel.Andrena (Chlorandrena) spinaria Warncke 1974Egypt.Andrena (Aciandrena) spolata Warncke 196882


Israel. Nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Micrandrena) spreta Pérez 1895Libya. Egypt <strong>to</strong>wards Sinai and Israel.Subspecies A. s. scirpacea Warncke 1975 recorded Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Lebanon.The subspecies A. s. pseudasuniensis Strand 1921 is in Continental Greece.Andrena (Lepidandrena) statusa Gusenleitner 1998<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Notandrena) stellaris Warncke 1965North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Central Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) s<strong>to</strong>eckhertella Pittioni 1948Central Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) s<strong>to</strong>lida Warncke 1975Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) strepera Warncke 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) subopaca Nylander 1848Nor<strong>the</strong>rn and central Continental Greece.Andrena (Simandrena) susterai Alfken 1914Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece.Andrena (Euandrena) symphyti Schmiedeknecht 1883The nominate subspecies is found in Continental Greece.In Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. s. furcata Friese 1921 is present.Andrena (Andrena) synadelpha Perkins 1914Rarely recorded from western Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) tadauchii Gusenleitner 1998Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Micrandrena) taprobana Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Chlorandrena) taraxaci Giraud 1861Found in Continental Greece; Attica and more widely. Recorded from <strong>the</strong> North Aegean on Lesboswhere sometimes present alongside <strong>the</strong> closely related A. orientana Warncke.In Egypt and Libya <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. t. curtivalvis Morice 1899 occurs.Mavromoustakis reported this bee <strong>to</strong> be on <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Greece, recorded by his sonAn<strong>to</strong>nios Mavromoustakis whilst studying medicine in A<strong>the</strong>ns.83


Andrena (Tarsandrena) tarsata Nylander 1848Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Turkey.Andrena (Aciandrena) tenuiformis Pittioni 1950Cyprus. Turkey.Andrena (Aciandrena) tenuis Morawitz 1877Central sou<strong>the</strong>rn and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Margandrena) testaceipes Saunders 1908Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Libya.Andrena (Didonia) teunisseni Gusenleitner 1998Far eastern Turkey.Andrena (Simandrena) thomsoni Ducke 1898Continental Greece. Crete. Throughout Turkey.Andrena (Melandrena) thoracica (Fabricius 1775)Continental Greece. Lesbos and o<strong>the</strong>r Aegean islands <strong>to</strong> south Aegean and Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey.Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Jordan. Iran.The subspecies A. t. kotschyi Mavromoustakis 1953 is referable in some cases.On Cyprus a bivoltine bee with an early brood recorded at Asphodelus ramosus microcarpus, Oxaliscorniculata, Calendula persica and Sinapis alba from January <strong>to</strong> March. Mavromoustakis reported asecond brood on <strong>the</strong> wing during May, visiting Compositae. He reported <strong>the</strong> second brood active inLebanon from June <strong>to</strong> July.Andrena (Micrandrena) tiaretta Warncke 1974Lebanon. Israel. Sparsely recorded from Egypt <strong>to</strong> Libya.Andrena (Plastandrena) tibialis (Kirby 1802)Turkey.The subspecies A. t. porzana Warncke 1975 and A. t. concreta Warncke 1975 also occur in Turkey.The subspecies A. t. vindobonensis S<strong>to</strong>eckhert 1950 is recorded in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece.Andrena (Lepidandrena) tinariaGusenleitner 1998<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) tkalcui Gusenleitner & Schwarz 2002Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Poliandrena) <strong>to</strong>elgiana Friese 1921Recorded from <strong>the</strong> Greek Aegean on Lesbos. Local in western and extreme Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey <strong>to</strong>Syria. Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Fumandrena) <strong>to</strong>mora Warncke 197584


Scarcely recorded from Continental Greece. Lesbos. Samos. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean islands. Crete. <strong>Eastern</strong>Turkey.Andrena (Cordandrena) <strong>to</strong>rda Warncke 1965North Aegean Greece at Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. South Aegean. Turkey. Cyprus.Lebanon. Israel.Andrena (Simandrena) transi<strong>to</strong>ria Morawitz 1871Continental Greece; Attica. South Aegean islands. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel.This species was originally described from <strong>the</strong> Greek Island <strong>of</strong> Syra.Mavromoustakis reported this bee <strong>to</strong> be bivoltine in Attica, on <strong>the</strong> wing in May and a secondemergence in July.Andrena (Ulandrena) trikalensis Warncke 1965Scarcely recorded from central Continental Greece.Andrena (Hoplandrena) trimmerana (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. South central and eastern Turkey.Andrena (Micrandrena) tringa Warncke 1973Turkey.Although not recorded from Continental Greece it is present beyond <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn border and could belooked for.Andrena (Troandrena) troodica Warncke 1975Cyprus. Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Andrena (Truncandrena) truncatilabris Morawitz 1877Continental Greece. Lesbos. South Aegean islands. Crete. Cyprus. Throughout Turkey <strong>to</strong> Syria.Lebanon. Israel.A spring bee found on Cyprus during March and April and recorded at Sinapis alba, Calendulapersica and Erucaria hispanica.In Attica, Greece, Mavromoustakis noted this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing during May, visiting Hirschfeldtia.Andrena (Truncandrena) tscheki Morawitz 1872Subspecies A. t. tritica Warncke 1965 occurs through Continental Greece and Turkey. Israel. Jordan.Andrena (Lepidandrena) tuberculifera Pérez 1895Coastal Libya.Andrena (Truncandrena) ulula Warncke 1969South central and Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel.Andrena (Notandrena) ungeri Mavromoustakis 1952Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Mavromoustakis reported this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in May and June, visiting Ammi majus.Andrena (Notandrena) urdula Warncke 196585


Continental Greece. Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Aegean. Cyprus. Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.Andrena (Zonandrena) vachali Pérez 1895Israel. Palestine. Sinai. Egypt. Libya.Andrena (Melandrena) vaga Panzer 1799Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Holandrena) variabilis Smith 1853Continental Greece. Lesbos. South and east Aegean. Crete. Cyprus. Throughout Turkey. Lebanon.Israel.On Cyprus Mavromoustakis found this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing during June, visiting <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Eryngiumcreticum and Broteroa corymbosa.Andrena (Andrena) varians (Kirby 1802)Turkey.Andrena (Aciandrena) varicornis Pérez 1895Nilotic Egypt.Andrena (Simandrena) venerabilis Alfken 1935Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.Andrena (Larandrena) ventralis Central Continental Greece. North Turkey.Andrena (Cryptandrena) ventricosa Dours 1873Continental Greece. South and east Aegean. Crete. Throughout Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. One <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> species <strong>of</strong> Andrena originally described from <strong>the</strong> Greek islands by Dours who noted <strong>the</strong> bee <strong>to</strong> becommon on some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>m. Recorded from Rhodes by Mavromoustakis.The subspecies A. v. rubicunda Warncke 1975 is on <strong>the</strong> wing during March in Cyprus, visitingUmbelliferae, Scandix pecten – veneris and Calendula persica.Andrena (Ptilandrena) vetula Lepeletier 1841Continental Greece. Central <strong>to</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Cyprus. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine. Egypt.Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing March and April in Cyprus where recorded visiting Sinapis alba and Scandix pecten -veneris. However, Mavromoustakis reported this bee in Lebanon <strong>to</strong> be active in May and June.Possibly this species is <strong>the</strong>refor bivoltine.Andrena (Micrandrena) virgata Warncke 1975Recently recorded from North Aegean Greece at Lesbos. Scarcely recorded from central and far<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Poecilandrena) viridescens Viereck 1916North Continental Greece. Northwestern Turkey.Andrena (Graecandrena) volka Warncke 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel. Palestine.86


Andrena (Euandrena) vulpecula Kriechbaumer 1873Continental Greece. Israel.Andrena (Micrandrena) warnckei Gusenleitner & Schwarz 2000Central and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Andrena (Poliandrena) westensis Warncke 1965North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Andrena (Holandrena) wilhelmi Schuberth 1995Continental Greece. Aegean Greece at Lesbos, Samos. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Andrena (Taeniandrena) wilkella (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Turkey. Cyprus.Andrena (Parandrena) wolfi Gusenleitner & Scheuchl 2000Israel.Andrena (Aciandrena) yelkouan Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel. Jordan.Andrena (Carandrena) zostera Warncke 1975Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Israel.≈Subfamily PanurginaeTribe PanurginiCamp<strong>to</strong>poeum friesei Mocsáry 1894The subspecies C. f. densum (Warncke 1972) in Turkey.Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum (Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum) frontale (Fabricius 1804)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Specimens are referable <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies C. f. sacrum Alfken 1935 and C. f. triticum (Warncke1972).Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum negevensis (Warncke 1972)Israel. Egypt. present in <strong>the</strong> Sinai.Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum (Epime<strong>the</strong>a) nigrotum (Warncke 1987)Turkey. Israel.87


Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum (Epime<strong>the</strong>a) pictipes (Morawitz 1876)Turkey, Urfa, Nevsehir, Icel, Hakkari, Sirt.Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum rubrum (Warncke 1987)Turkey.Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum (Epime<strong>the</strong>a) subflavum (Warncke 1987)Turkey, Siirt, Elazig, Tunceli.Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum (Epime<strong>the</strong>a) variegatum (Morawitz 1876)Turkey.The subspecies C. v. kilikiae (Warncke 1972) in Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey.Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum (Epime<strong>the</strong>a) warnckei (Patiny 1999)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Panurginus ana<strong>to</strong>licus (Warncke 1972)Turkey.Panurginus brullei (Lepeletier 1841)The subspecies P. b. clarus (Warncke 1972) as well as P. b. lactipennis Friese 1897 and P. b.turcomanus Popov 1936 are all <strong>to</strong> be found in Turkey.Panurginus cavus (Warncke 1972)Turkey.Panurginus clavatus (Warncke 1972)Turkey.Panurginus corpanus (Warncke 1972)Turkey.Panurginus labiatus (Eversmann 1852)Turkey.Panurginus lactipennis Friese 1897Cyprus. Turkey. Jordan.In Cyprus found at montane habitat during May and June, visiting Alyssum troodi.Panurginus minutulus (Warncke 1987)Turkey.Panurginus montanus Giraud 1861Subspecies P. m. tyrolensis (Richards 1932)Continental Greece; Pindos and Olympos.Found from 1400 <strong>to</strong> 1700 mtrs montane slopes where both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing July.The subspecies P. m. ponticus (Warncke 1972) Turkey.88


Panurginus orientalicus (Warncke 1972)Turkey.Panurginus punctiventris Morawitz 1876Turkey.Panurginus sculpturatus Morawitz 1872Subspecies P. s. magnus (Warncke 1972) in Turkey.Panurginus stylus (Warncke 1987)Turkey.Clavipanurgus gusenleitneri Patiny 2004SyriaBoth sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in April.Gasparinahla megapalpae Patiny 2001Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Noted during May.Panurgus banksianus (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece; Mount Olympos. Turkey.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August at up <strong>to</strong> 2500 mtrs.Panurgus calcaratus (Scopoli 1763)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Panurgus (Panurgus) dentipes Latreille 1811Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Syria. Israel. Three subspecies are present. P. d. oblitus Warncke 1972. P. d.posticus Warncke 1972 and P. d. sidensis Warncke 1987.Panurgus nigriscopus Pérez 1895Palestine. Israel. Egypt, Sinai.Distributed only along <strong>the</strong> Jordan Valley within our region. This species is also found in NorthwestAfrica and eastern Arabia.≈Tribe MelitturginiMelitturga caucasica Morawitz 1878Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Melitturga clavicornis (Latreille 1806)Turkey. Iran, Azerbaijan, Elburz, Mazandaran, Teheran.89


Melitturga krausi Schwarz 2003Israel.Females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during <strong>the</strong> first half <strong>of</strong> April.Melitturga pictipes Morawitz 1892The subspecies M. p. heinrichi Tkalcu 1978 in Turkey.Melitturga praestans Giraud 1861North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Iran, Mazandaran, Elburz.Some examples are referable <strong>to</strong> M. p. syriaca Friese 1896.On <strong>the</strong> wing March through <strong>to</strong> May on Cyprus, recorded visiting Vicia cracca elegans, Trifoliumstellatum and species in <strong>the</strong> Family Lamiales.Melitturga spinosa Morawitz 1892Continental Greece. Turkey.Melitturga taurica Friese 1922Turkey.Plesiopanurgus cinerarius Cameron 1907Iran.Flies <strong>to</strong> Convolvulus leiocalycinus and Convolvulus spinosus.Plesiopanurgus (Zizopanurgus) ibex Baker 1972<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Plesiopanurgus richteri (Schwammberger 1971)South Iran.Plesiopanurgus (Zizopanurgus) zizus (Warncke 1987)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Flower visiting records for Convolvulus valentinus and Convolvulus trabutiensis from <strong>the</strong> full range<strong>of</strong> this bee.≈Family HalictidaeSubfamily RophitinaeSystropha curvicornis (Scopoli 1770)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.This bee is apparent in summer, nesting in aggregations. It is oligolectic on Convolvulaceae.Systropha hirsuta Spinola 1839Israel. Egypt.Males appear during mid April in Egypt and early May in Israel. <strong>Bees</strong> <strong>of</strong> this genus are markedlyprotandrous with <strong>the</strong> females emerging some weeks after <strong>the</strong> males first appear.90


Systropha iranica Popov 1967Iran; Kerman.Found at 2000 mtrs on <strong>the</strong> wing from May.Systropha planidens Giraud 1861Subspecies S. p. ana<strong>to</strong>lica (Warncke 1976) in Continental Greece. Turkey; Ankara, Bitlis, Tunceli.Palestine. Iran; Teheran, Central Alborz Mountains.Males are active at least <strong>to</strong> 1700 mtrs in Turkey during June and July and both sexes are found<strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>r during mid July in Iran up <strong>to</strong> an altitude <strong>of</strong> 2150 mtrs. Males noted visiting Convolvulus inIran.Nests in aggregations are in level or sloping ground with a south-facing element.Systropha villosa Ebmer 1978Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April.Rophi<strong>to</strong>ides ana<strong>to</strong>licus (Schwammberger 1975)Turkey.Rophi<strong>to</strong>ides canus (Eversmann 1852)Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Iran.A bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Eurasian steppes. Polylectic and visits Tamarix but with a strong preference forFabaceae.Rophi<strong>to</strong>ides epiroticus Schwammberger 1975Continental Greece.Rophites algirus Pérez 1895The subspecies R. a. trispinosus Pérez 1903 from sou<strong>the</strong>rn Europe occurs as a transitional form withR. a. graecus in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece.The subspecies R. a. graecus Warncke 1980 is found in sou<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece.The subspecies R. a. montanus Ebmer 1978 is present in Turkey.A univoltine summer bee oligolectic on Lamiaceae. A host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasite Biastes emarginatus.Rophites caucasicus Morawitz 1875Turkey.Rophites clypealis Schwammberger 1976Turkey.Rophites foveolatus Friese 1900Turkey.Rophites fuscescens Friese 1902Noted visiting Papaver.Rophites gusenleitneri Schwammberger 197391


Turkey.Rophites hartmanni Friese 1902Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Samothrace, Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel.A summer flying oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Lamiaceae.Rophites heinrichi Schwammberger 1976Turkey.Rophites hellenicus Ebmer 1984Continental Greece; Falakro south <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Katara Pass.A minute bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> high mountains where visits Lamiaceae, especially Acinos.Rophites leclercqi Schwammberger 1971Turkey.Rophites mandibularis Morawitz 1891Iran.Males, and <strong>the</strong> previously unknown females <strong>of</strong> this bee discovered on <strong>the</strong> wing Iran; Karaj duringMay at 1200 mtrs.Rophites montanus Ebmer 1978Iran.Active during June and July at elevations <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs and recorded flying <strong>to</strong> Ballota.Rophites morawitzia Friese 1902Turkey.Noted visiting Papaver.Rophites nigripes Friese 1902Turkey. Israel.Rophites quinquespinosus Spinola 1808Continental Greece. Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Lamiaceae although males visit flowers <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r families. Both sexes are apparent insummer <strong>of</strong>ten about xero<strong>the</strong>rmic swards such as meadows and forest clearings. This bee is a host <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic bee Biastes emarginatus.Rophites transi<strong>to</strong>rius Ebmer 1993Turkey; Hakkari.Dufourea (Alpinodufourea) alpina Morawitz 1865Continental Greece. Accidentally introduced <strong>to</strong> Crete.A mountain bee recorded at 2700 mtrs during November.Dufourea (Cyprirophites) armenia Ebmer 1987Turkey.Noted flying <strong>to</strong> Campanula in <strong>the</strong> mountains at 1900 mtrs during July.92


Dufourea (Afrodufourea) atrata (Warncke 1979)Turkey.Recorded at Veronica late May <strong>to</strong> mid JuneDufourea (Dentirophites) bytinskii Ebmer 1999Israel.Dufourea (Dufourea) caelestis Ebmer 1987<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during July at 2600 mtrs. An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Dufourea (Dufourea) chagrina (Warncke 1979)Israel.Recorded early in April.Dufourea (Dufourea) ciliata Ebmer 1993Egypt.Active on <strong>the</strong> wing during February and March.Dufourea (Cyprirophites) coeruleocephala Morawitz 1872Turkey; Agri.Dufourea (Cyprirophites) cypria Mavromoustakis 1952Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Jordan.Dufourea (Dufourea) goeleti Ebmer 1999Israel.Dufourea (Halic<strong>to</strong>ides) graeca Ebmer 1976The subspecies D. g. dubiosa (Warncke 1979) in Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece andPeleponessos. <strong>Eastern</strong>.Turkey.A summer bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> mountains at 2300 <strong>to</strong> 2500 mtrs.Dufourea (Halic<strong>to</strong>ides) inermis (Nylander 1848)Continental Greece.A very local bee in <strong>the</strong> Greek mountains at 1800-1900 mtrs.Dufourea (Cyprirophites) iris Ebmer 1987Northwestern Continental Greece; Thrace.A mountain bee found between 1500 <strong>to</strong> 1700 mtrs flying <strong>to</strong> Acinos alpinus during late July andAugustDufourea (Cyprirophites) longicornis (Warncke 1979)Turkey. Israel. Iran.Collects pollen from Salvia.Dufourea (Trilia) muoti Vachal 189993


Reported from Israel although this is a northwest African bee and <strong>the</strong> record may need confirmation.Dufourea (Dufourea) nodicornis (Warncke 1979)Egypt. Libya, Cyrenaica. Israel. Jordan. Syria. Iraq.A spring bee active during March and April.Dufourea (Cephalic<strong>to</strong>ides) paradoxa (Morawitz 1867)The subspecies D. p. zolotasi (Warncke 1988) only on Continental Greece at Olympos.This species is a midsummer and univoltine bee. Likely <strong>to</strong> be oligolectic, it exists in cool temperateregions inhabiting only montane areas in <strong>the</strong> south <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> range. In Russia this bee flies <strong>to</strong> Veronicaincana. There are a number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r subspecies in <strong>the</strong> Old World.The subspecies zolotasi is a summer bee found at 2500 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Greek Olympos Massif.Dufourea (Halic<strong>to</strong>ides) pontica (Warncke 1979)Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July in mountains at 2500 <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs when flying <strong>to</strong> Campanula.Dufourea (Dufourea) quadridentata (Warncke 1979)Turkey; Erzurum.Dufourea (Dufourea) rufiventris Friese 1898Israel. Egypt; Sinai.Dufourea (Cyprirophites) salviae Ebmer 2008Ebmer recorded this bee collecting pollen from Salvia amid tragacanthic ground flora within a grove<strong>of</strong> Populus.Dufourea (Halic<strong>to</strong>ides) schmiedeknechtii (Kohl 1905)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Found flying <strong>to</strong> Campanula and Asyneuma at 2100 mtrs during July.Dufourea (Cyprirophites) styx Ebmer 1976Widespread Continental Greece.Frequents <strong>the</strong> Mountains <strong>of</strong> Peloponnesos, Pindos and Olympos north <strong>to</strong> Macedonia.Dufourea (Dufourea) trigonellae Ebmer 1999Israel.Dufourea (Dufourea) wolfi Ebmer 1989Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos and Rhodes. Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April and May.≈Subfamily Nomiinae94


Nomia (Hoplonomia) callichlora (Cockerell 1911)Iran; Bandar Abbas.Nomia (Austronomia) clavicornis Warncke 1980Iran.Nomia (Curvinomia) lutea Warncke 1976Egypt.Nomia (Hoplonomia) zonaria (Walker 1871)Egypt.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) ana<strong>to</strong>lica (Warncke 1976)Turkey.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) bispinosa Brullé 1832Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios. Rhodes. Karpathos. Crete. Cyprus.Turkey. Iraq. Egypt.Greece; North Aegean on Lesbos. Iran. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August On Lesbos one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bee species visiting <strong>the</strong> invasive Solanumeleagnifolium during <strong>the</strong> hot dry summer. It also flies <strong>to</strong> Glaucium flavum and Malva sylvestris..Strongly associated with saline coastal environments. Often on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August,sometimes earlier, and polylectic.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) bytinski (Warncke 1976)Turkey. Israel. Egypt. Iran.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing <strong>to</strong> 700mtrs during June and July in Turkey. A summer bee in Iran.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) diversipes (Latreille 1806)Continental Greece. Corfu. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Thasos, Lesbos, Samos, Chios, Rhodes.Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iran. Egypt. Libya.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing by July in Ankara Province, Turkey.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus, Lesbos and in Iran from late May <strong>to</strong> September. Visits a goodvariety <strong>of</strong> flowers on Cyprus, including Medicago, Eryngium creticum, Allium, Statice, Echinopsspinosus, Crozophora verbascifolia, Polygonum equisetiforme, Heliotropium villosum, Menthalongifolia, Inula viscosa and Urginea maritima.Widely recorded Iran from spring through summer. Generally a univoltine summer steppic bee andra<strong>the</strong>r polylectic but with some preference for Legumes.The anthophorine bee Pasites maculatus is a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> this species. Epeolus variegatus hasalso been reported as a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite.For references <strong>to</strong> detailed biological studies see Pesenko et al 2000.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) dixica (Warncke 1976)Egypt; Central Sinai.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) edentata (Morawitz 1876)Turkey. Iraq. Iran. Egypt.95


On <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber widely in Iran.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) elegantissima (Popov 1949)Iran; ChuzistanNoted <strong>the</strong> wing late June and early July.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) equestris Gerstaecker 1872Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos. Cyprus. Turkey. Lebanon. Iran.A summer-flying bee on Lesbos with both sexes noted at Thymus capitatus, Teucrium divaricatum,Origanum vulgare and Coridothymus capitatus.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) fayumensis Baker 2002Egypt.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) femoralis (Pallas 1773)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Rhodes. Turkey.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) flavolobata (Cockerell 1911)Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) fugax (Morawitz 1878)Iran. Egypt, Cairo District.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) geddensis (Warncke 1976)Israel, En Gedi.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) inermis (Morawitz 1894)Egypt.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) innesi (Gribodo 1894)Iraq. Egypt; Cairo District. Aswan.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) lobata (Olivier 1811)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran; Schiraz, TeheranOn <strong>the</strong> wing later in June <strong>to</strong> August in Iran, up <strong>to</strong> 1300 mtrs..Pseudapis (Nomiapis) monstrosa (Costa 1861)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos, Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Mavromoustakis noted this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in May and June, visiting Teucrium poliummicropodioides and Marrubium vulgare apolum.The flight season extends from late May <strong>to</strong> early August in Greece with a few earlier appearances.Strongly polylectic on summer flowers on Lesbos including Origanum onites, Origanum vulgare,Teucrium divaricatum, Coridothymus capitatus, Ballota acetabulosa, Echinops spinosissimus, Cistuscreticus and Thymus capitatus.Pseudapis (Crocisaspidia) muscatensis Cockerell 1910Iran; Kirman.96


Pseudapis (Pseudapis) negevensis (Warncke 1976)Israel.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) nilotica (Smith 1875)Egypt.Subspecies P. n. latipes (Morawitz 1880) in Jordan. Israel. Iran..This bee is on <strong>the</strong> wing from April through <strong>to</strong> November.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) nubica (warncke 1976)Egypt, Heliopolis.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) platula (Warncke 1976)Turkey; Gaziantep. Iran; Kirman, Baluchistan, Churasan.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> August in Iran. Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during July in Turkey.Pseudapis (Pseudapis) rufescens (Morawitz 1876)Turkey.Recorded <strong>to</strong> 1700 mtrs in Van during mid July.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) squamata (Morawitz 1894)Iran.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) unidentata (Olivier 1811)Greece; North Aegean on Lesbos. Iran. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August On Lesbos one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bee species visiting <strong>the</strong> invasive Solanumeleagnifolium during <strong>the</strong> hot dry summer. It also flies <strong>to</strong> Glaucium flavum and Malva sylvestris.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) urfana (Warncke 1980)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Pseudapis (Nomiapis) valga (Gerstaecker 1872)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iran.Lipotriches parca (Kohl 1906)Egypt, Luxor.≈Subfamily NomioidinaeThe bees <strong>of</strong> this subfamily are found in desert and semi-desert regions <strong>of</strong> Africa and Asia where <strong>the</strong>yare ground-nesting and solitary, although sometimes in aggregations, <strong>of</strong>ten in s<strong>to</strong>ny and sandysurfaces during dry summer months. The bees are bivoltine or even polyvoltine and both sexes occur<strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>r on <strong>the</strong> wing.97


Ceylalictus (Meganomioides) deser<strong>to</strong>rum (Blüthgen 1925)Jordan. Egypt.Ceylalictus (Ceylalictus) punjabensis (Cameron 1907)Israel. Jordan. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran. Egypt. Libya.This bee is recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in many months <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> year.Ceylalictus (Ceylalictus) variegatus (Olivier 1789)Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos, Chios. Crete.Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iran. Egypt. Libya.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> November, at a wide range <strong>of</strong> flowers.These include Sinapis alba, An<strong>the</strong>mis, Centaurea hyalolepis, Teucrium polium micropodioides,Teucrium divaricatum, Thymus capitatus, Thymelaea hirsuta, Vitex agnus – castus, Salsola kali,Noaea mucronata, Foeniculum piperitum, Polygonum equisetiforme, Mentha longifolia, Satureiaincana, Scilla autumnalis, Zygophyllum album, Echium sericeum, Eryngium maritimum, Eryngiumcreticum, Urginea maritime, Inula crithmoides and Crozophora verbascifolia.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from Lesbos during May and June including many males about An<strong>the</strong>mis<strong>to</strong>men<strong>to</strong>sa.The biology <strong>of</strong> this bee was well studied in India by Batra (see Pesenko et al 2000).Nomioides (Nomioides) bluthgeni Pesenko 1979Syria. Jordan. Egypt.Nomioides (Nomioides) chalybeatus (Blüthgen 1934)Greece; North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.Recorded on Lesbos during June with females visiting Chrysan<strong>the</strong>mum segetum.Nomioides (Nomioides) decep<strong>to</strong>r Saunders 1908Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Nomioides (Nomioides) elbanus Blüthgen 1934Egypt.Nomioides (Nomioides) facilis (Smith 1853)Continental Greece; Delphi, Peloponnesos. Kefalonia. Thasos. Turkey. Israel. Iran.In <strong>the</strong> African part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> range this bee is noted as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Ammi visnaga, Reseda lutea, Resedaluteola and Ziziphus lotus.Nomioides (Nomioides) gussakovskiji Blüthgen 1933Turkey. Jordan.A bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Asian deserts.Nomioides (Nomioides) ino (Nurse 1904)Turkey. Jordan. Iraq. Iran.Nomioides (Nomioides) klausi Pesenko 1983Southwestern Iran.98


Nomioides (Nomioides) longiceps Blüthgen 1933Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Nomioides (Nomioides) minutissimus (Rossi 1790)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Karpathos, Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran.<strong>Bees</strong> <strong>of</strong> Turkey and o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Near East are referable <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies N. m. modestusPesenko 1977.On Cyprus on <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> August, recorded <strong>the</strong>re visiting Zygophyllum album, Teucriumpolium micropodioides, Thymus capitatus, Echium sericeum, Sinapis, Eryngium creticum,Polygonium equisetiforme, Tamarix and Mentha longifolia. In <strong>the</strong> Eurasian steppic range this bee hasa preference for Thymus but appears <strong>to</strong> have a much more diverse range <strong>of</strong> flower hosts in <strong>the</strong>Mediterranean.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in Ana<strong>to</strong>lia during July and early August where found <strong>to</strong> 1500 mtrs.This is a largely univoltine steppic bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> summer but occupying some mediterranean habitatswhere it is bivoltine or even polyvoltine with a long season.Males rarely recorded on Lesbos during June.Nomioides (Nomioides) modestus Pesenko 1977<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Nomioides (Nomioides) mucoreus Blüthgen 1933Libya.Nomioides (Nomioides) nigriceps Blüthgen 1933Iran.Nomioides (Nomioides) ornatus Pesenko 1983Egypt. Israel.Nomioides (Nomioides) parviceps Morawitz 1876<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Egypt.Nomioides (Nomioides) rotundiceps Handlirsch 1888Israel. Jordan. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran. Egypt.Nomioides (Nomioides) schwarzi Pesenko 1989Turkey; Karakurt.Nomioides (Nomioides) similis Pesenko 1983Turkey. Iran.Nomioides (Nomioides) squamiger Saunders 1908Turkey; Mut. Israel. Egypt.Nomioides (Paranomioides) steinbergi Pesenko 1983<strong>Eastern</strong> Iran.99


Nomioides (Nomioides) turanicus Morawitz 1876Turkey. Iraq. Iran. Egypt.≈Subfamily HalictinaeTribe HalictiniThe genus Halictus is most species diverse within <strong>the</strong> terri<strong>to</strong>ry <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ancient Mediterranean basin,encompassing West and Central Asia as well as <strong>the</strong> present Mediterranean. It is much more poorlyrepresented in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Palaearctic in comparison <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> genus Lasioglossum.Halictus (Halictus) aegypticola Strand 1909Turkey. Lebanon. Jordan. Israel. Egypt.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) aestuans Ebmer 1978Nor<strong>the</strong>ast Iran.Halictus (Halictus) alfkenellus Strand 1909The subspecies H. a. cedens Strand 1925 Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Turkey. Iran. Lebanon.Israel. Palestine.Halictus (Halictus) asperulus Pérez 1895Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Samos, Chios, Rhodes, Paros. Cyprus. Turkey.Syria. Israel. Iran.Reported in May <strong>to</strong> August and September from Cyprus, visiting Mentha longifolia, Teucriumcyprium, Nepeta troodi, Cistus villosus creticus, Pulicaria dysenterica, Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licusand Phlomis in montane habitat. Females rarely recorded on Lesbos during May.Halictus (Halictus) bagirensis Blüthgen 1936Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Ano<strong>the</strong>r example <strong>of</strong> a rare montane Central Asian Halictid bee. In Iran found in <strong>the</strong> Kopet Dag duringJuly up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs.Halictus (Halictus) berlandi Blüthgen 1936Turkey. Israel.Halictus (Halictus) beytueschebapensis Warncke 1984Turkey; Hakkari, Taurus.Halictus (Halictus) brunnescens (Eversmann 1852)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Paros. Greek Aegean at Lesbos, Rhodes, Karpathos. Crete. Cyprus.Turkey. Israel. Iran. Egypt. Libya100


A sou<strong>the</strong>rn Western Palaearctic species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> warm zones, <strong>of</strong>ten at lower montane elevations,recorded <strong>to</strong> 1000 mtrs in Iran during May <strong>to</strong> July. females on <strong>the</strong> wing from late April <strong>to</strong> early Julyand males during June. On Lesbos flies <strong>to</strong> Ballota acetabulosa, No<strong>to</strong>basis syriaca, Cardopatiumcorymbosum, Carduus species and some o<strong>the</strong>r flowers but probably is especially attracted <strong>to</strong> largefloweredsummer Asteraceae.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> July on Crete. Recorded at 2200 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Iranian mountainsfrom May <strong>to</strong> July.Halictus (Halictus) centaureae Ebmer 1982Continental Greece. Kefalonia.Halictus (Seladonia) cephalicus (Morawitz 1873)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Patmos, Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey.Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from April through <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber in Cyprus, can be found <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> year. Records <strong>of</strong>flowers visited includes Achillea san<strong>to</strong>lina, Carlina lanata, No<strong>to</strong>basis syriaca, Centaurea species,Inula viscosa, Colchicum hiemale, Asphodelus autumnalis and Statice virgata.Halictus (Seladonia) clangulus Warncke 1984<strong>Eastern</strong> TurkeyHalictus (Halictus) cochlearitarsis (Dours 1872)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Samos. Crete. Turkey. Israel.Females recorded active during July in Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Halictus (Seladonia) confusus Smith 1853The subspecies H. c. perkinsi Blüthgen 1926 recorded Turkey, Erzincan.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) cupidus Vachal 1902Israel. Egypt. Possibly present in Iran.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) cypricus Blüthgen 1937Cyprus. Israel. Jordan. Iran.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Israel and recorded in Iran during July.Halictus (Halictus) cyrenaicus Blüthgen 1930Libya, Cyrenaica.Halictus (Seladonia) deser<strong>to</strong>rum Morawitz 1876Turkey, Kars.Halictus (Halictus) dschulfensis Blüthgen 1936Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Iran.Halictus (Halictus) duplocinctus Vachal 1902A desert species found in Iran eastwards.Halictus (Halictus) eurygnathus Blüthgen 1930101


Continental Greece and much <strong>of</strong> Turkey.This bee occurs on semiarid steppelands and nests in sandy soils in warm dry and open places.Polylectic with a preference for composites.Halictus (Halictus) falcinellus Warncke 1982Iran.Halictus (Halictus) fatsensis Blüthgen 1936Cyprus. Turkey. Jordan. Iraq. Israel.Halictus (Halictus) funerarius Morawitz 1876A rare montane bee <strong>of</strong> Central Asia which may be present in Iran.Halictus (Seladonia) gavarnicus Pérez 1903Continental Greece, Parnassos, Timfi, Lakmos, Timfris<strong>to</strong>s, Chelmos and Killiki.Halictus (Seladonia) gemmeus Dours 1872Continental Greece. Corfu. Kefalonia. Crete.Females recorded on Crete during May.Halictus (Halictus) gordius Warncke 1975Turkey.Halictus (Halictus) graecus Blüthgen 1923Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Lesbos. Rhodes.A rare eastern Mediterranean bee.Halictus (Halictus) grossellus Ebmer 1978Continental Greece; Thessaly. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos.Halictus (Halictus) hermon Ebmer 1975Israel, Mount Hermon.Halictus (Halictus) holomelaenus Blüthgen 1936Greece on Mykonos, Karpathos, San<strong>to</strong>rini, Sifnos, Paros, Kithyra and Crete.Females active on <strong>the</strong> wing from late April on Crete with males appearing in <strong>the</strong> summer.Halictus (Halictus) humkalensis Blüthgen 1936Iran.A Central Asian montane halicid with both sexes recorded near Shandiz at 1600 mtrs during July.Halictus (Halictus) icarus Ebmer 1978Iran, Elburz Mountains.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during <strong>the</strong> summer between 2700 and 2800 mtrs.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) indefinitus Blüthgen 1923Syria.A Central Asian bee.102


Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) inpilosus Ebmer 1975Continental Greece, locally Peloponnesos at Sparta. Crete.Females on <strong>the</strong> wing from late April on Crete, joined by males during July and recorded up <strong>to</strong> 1900mtrs.Halictus (Seladonia) kessleri Bramson 1879Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Rare in Greece but found as far south as <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s.A bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Western Palaearctic steppes. A polylege attracted <strong>to</strong> composites with females on <strong>the</strong>wing from <strong>the</strong> spring and males emerging in high summer.Halictus (Seladonia) kusdasi Ebmer 1975Turkey.Halictus (Seladonia) laticephalus Warncke 1984<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Halictus (Seladonia) leucaheneus Ebmer 1972The subspecies H. l. occipitalis Ebmer 1972 is found in Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Halictus (Halictus) lobatus Ebmer 1978Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> Elburz Mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran during July.Halictus (Seladonia) lucidipennis Smith 1853Israel. Iraq. Egypt. Libya.Halictus (Halictus) luganicus Blüthgen 1936Turkey.The male recorded from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia, Ankara, during June.Halictus (Halictus) lunatus Warncke 1975Continental Greece.<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Northwestern Iran.Recorded <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs during July.Halictus (Halictus) lussinicus Blüthgen 1936Greece, Keramoti.Halictus (Halictus) maculatus Smith 1848Continental Greece. Kefalonia. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel. Iran.The nominate race is found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Mountains <strong>of</strong> Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran. There is a subspeciesH. m. priesneri Ebmer 1975 also recorded from Iran and in much <strong>of</strong> Turkey. Both subspecies areactive by May. Records from Ankara province are for both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during July and Augustat 1300 mtrs.Ra<strong>the</strong>r rarely recorded on Lesbos during late May and early June.It is a primitively eusocial steppic bee with two generations in <strong>the</strong> female and males emerging with<strong>the</strong> second brood <strong>of</strong> females.103


This bee is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic bees Sphecodes subovalis and Sphecodes divisus.Halictus (Halictus) minor Morawitz 1876Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.A Central Asian bee.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) morawitzi Vachal 1902Turkey, Agri. Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs during May <strong>to</strong> July.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) nasica Morawitz 1876Iran.both sexes found on <strong>the</strong> wing during July in Iran, visiting Artemisia.Halictus (Halictus) nicosiae Blüthgen 1923Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean Greece on Crete. Cyprus.Males active during July on Crete, a typical summer season for males <strong>of</strong> this genus.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) nigricutis Warncke 1975Turkey. Jordan. Iran.Halictus (Halictus) patellatus Morawitz 1874The western subspecies H. p. taorminicus Strand 1921in Continental Greece. Aegean at Lesbos,Chios, Samos. Turkey. North Iran.Both sexes active during July in Ankara Province <strong>to</strong> 900 mtrs.Widespread on Lesbos where females on <strong>the</strong> wing March <strong>to</strong> early June, visiting especially Cistuscreticus, Coridothymus capitatus, Origanum onites among a variety <strong>of</strong> flowers.In North Iran <strong>the</strong>re is a zone <strong>of</strong> introgression with <strong>the</strong> eastern nominate subspecies H. p. patellatusMorawitz 1874.Halictus (Halictus) pen<strong>the</strong>ri Blüthgen 1923Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Turkey.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) piciBlüthgen 1895Israel. Jordan.The subspecies H. p. falix Ebmer 2008 in Israel. EgyptHalictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) pollinosus Sichel 1860Subspecies H. p. cariniventris Morawitz 1876 found Continental Greece. Kefalonia, Mykonos.Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Chios, Patmos, Kos, Karpathos, Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine.Israel. Jordan. Iran.Recorded at Eryngium in September by Mavromoustakis. On <strong>the</strong> wing from June and also visitsMedicago, Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus, Polygonum equisetiforme, Teucrium cyprium and Menthalongifolia.Active during June and July in Ankara where found <strong>to</strong> 1100 mtrs.Recorded as a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> pollina<strong>to</strong>r community <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards in Jordan.In flight by May in Palestine, visiting Ballota.104


Recorded from May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran.Halictus (Halictus) ponticus Blüthgen 1933Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Rhodes. Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.A rare steppic species <strong>of</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Europe. Several records <strong>of</strong> males in Lesbos from late May and earlyJune when recorded at Anthyllis hermanniae and Cistus creticus.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) pseudomucoreus Ebmer 1975<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.Recorded during May <strong>to</strong> July from Iran up <strong>to</strong> 1500 mtrs.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) pulvereus Morawitz 1874Greece; North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Jordan. Israel. Iran. Egypt.Recorded from April <strong>to</strong> July in northwestern Iran.This bee is possibly an eastern subspecies <strong>of</strong> H. tectus.Halictus (Halictus) quadricinc<strong>to</strong>ides Blüthgen 1936Turkey, Taurus.Halictus (Halictus) quadricinctus (Fabricius 1776)Continental Greece. Corfu. Lesbos. Mykonos. Turkey. Jordan. Israel. Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs in Turkey and Iran during <strong>the</strong> summer.A <strong>the</strong>rmophilous transpalaearctic steppic bee nesting in exposed dry and warm ground and flyingduring <strong>the</strong> summer <strong>to</strong> large-flowered compositae such as Onopordon, Carduus, Knautia, Centaureaand Cirsium. This species is also a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> orchard fruit crops in highland Jordan.A large and spectacular bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hottest months in open countryside. As this bee is a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>steppic Central Asian fauna <strong>the</strong>re is an excellent bibliography available for this species - given inPesenko et al (2000).The Halictid clep<strong>to</strong>parasite Sphecodes gibbus attacks this bee.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) radoszkovskii Vachal 1902Iran.Females <strong>of</strong> this bee recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in Iran up <strong>to</strong> 2100 mtrs during JuneHalictus (Halictus) resurgens Nurse 1903Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Rhodes, Chios, Karpathos, Patmos, Samos,Paros, Naxos, Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Iran. Egypt.An eastern Mediterranean and Central Asian bee. Active on Crete at least from May <strong>to</strong> July. Commonon Continental Greece. On Lesbos quite succesful and females active during late April in<strong>to</strong> Julyrecorded visiting especially No<strong>to</strong>basis syriaca and Centaurea solstitialis but quite polylectic. Malesare found <strong>of</strong>ten in July at Carduus macrocephalus, Coridothymus capitatus and Origanum onites.This bee is rare in Egypt where it is on <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn border <strong>of</strong> its’ geographic range.Halictus (Halictus) rubicundus (Christ 1791)Continental Greece; Olympos and south <strong>to</strong> Timfris<strong>to</strong>s. Turkey; Istanbul, Bursa and Black Sea coast.A very successful Holarctic species. Most common in <strong>the</strong> forest zones in temperate and Continentalparts.105


Halictus (Halictus) sajoi Blüthgen 1923The subspecies H. s. bifidus Warncke. 1975Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.A steppic species <strong>of</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Europe and western Asia. In Iran found <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs during <strong>the</strong> summerand is recorded from Ankara at 900 mtrs during June.Halictus (Halictus) scabiosae (Rossi 1790)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Western Turkey.A large Mediterranean Halictid bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> summer months, on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> early Septemberin Ana<strong>to</strong>lia where found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs. rare on Continental Greece.Halictus (Halictus) scardicus Blüthgen 1936Continental Greece. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Halictus (Halictus) sefidicus Blüthgen 1936Southwestern Iran.A fur<strong>the</strong>r research is needed <strong>to</strong> determine <strong>the</strong> taxonomy <strong>of</strong> this bee which is not well recorded.Halictus (Seladonia) seladonius (Fabricius 1794)Continental Greece. Central and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Found as high as 2800 mtrs in western Iran during July. A eusocial species primarily steppic <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>north <strong>of</strong> our area. recently recorded from Ankara Province, Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) semiticus Blüthgen 1955Greece; Aegean on Chios, Samos, Rhodes. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Israel. Iran.A scarcely recorded bee appearing in <strong>the</strong> Iranian mountains <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs during July.Halictus (Halictus) senilis (Eversmann 1852)Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Iraq. Iran. Egypt. Libya.Recorded in <strong>the</strong> female during May at 1000 mtrs, Mashad, Iran. This bee is an inhabitant <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>deserts and semi-deserts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palaearctic.Halictus (Hexataenites) sexcinctus (Fabricius 1775)The nominate subspecies on Continental Greece and kefalonia. This form grades here in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> easternsubspecies H. s. albohispidus Blüthgen 1923 which occurs on Lesbos. Chios, Samos, Mykonos.Crete. Turkey. Iran. Israel. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late March <strong>to</strong> July on Lesbos, <strong>the</strong> males appearing in July.Noted as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards in highland Jordan.Recorded <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs in montane habitat at Chalus, Iran.Sphecodes gibbus is a parasite in <strong>the</strong> European range.Halictus (Halictus) simplex Blüthgen 1923Continental Greece. Turkey.In Ankara,Turkey, both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August up <strong>to</strong> 1300 mtrs.Halictus (Seladonia) smaragdulus Vachal 1895Continental Greece. Mykonos. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Chios, Samos, Karpathos, Rhodes. Crete.Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iran.106


A successful and sometimes numerous species.On <strong>the</strong> wing April <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber on Cyprus, visiting An<strong>the</strong>mis, Carlina lanata, Urginea maritima,Pulicaria dysenterica, Polygonum, Teucrium cyprium, Teucrium polium micropodioides,Heliotropium europeum, Gagea chlorantha, Linarea elatine, Inula viscosa and Marrubium vulgareapolum.The flight season is <strong>the</strong> same on Lesbos where <strong>the</strong> bee is found <strong>to</strong> be polylectic.Recorded widely in northwest Iran during <strong>the</strong> summer months. Males appear later in <strong>the</strong> summer. Thisis ano<strong>the</strong>r steppic species confined <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Western Palaearctic.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) solitudinis Ebmer 1975Turkey.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) solitudinis Ebmer 1975Turkey; Konya, Gürün.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June.Halictus (Halictus) squamosus Lebedev 1910Turkey. Iran; Kopet Dagh, Damavand, The Elburz.Recorded during July. A very rare bee in Turkey.Halictus (Seladonia) subauratus (Rossius 1792)Continental Greece, kefalonia, Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Turkey. Israel. Iran.Widespread on <strong>the</strong> wing in northwestern Iran during May <strong>to</strong> July. A bee <strong>of</strong> steppe and deciduousforest. Primitively eusocial, sometimes nesting in large aggregations in <strong>the</strong> Eurasian range. Nestsexcavated on sloping sandy ground. Females on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber and males emergingin <strong>the</strong> latter half <strong>of</strong> summer. Polylectic.Halictus (Halictus) submodernus Blüthgen 1936<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Found from May <strong>to</strong> July in western Iran.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) surabadensis Ebmer 1975Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs in montane regions <strong>of</strong> western Iran.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) tectus Radoszkowski 1875Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Rhodes.Recorded infrequently late April <strong>to</strong> early August on Lesbos where females noted visitingCoridothymus capitatus and Lythrum salicaria.This bee is very closely related <strong>to</strong> Halictus pulvereus. Morawitz (above) which is found <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> east <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> range <strong>of</strong> this species.Halictus (Halictus) tetrazonianellus (Strand 1909)Continental Greece. Corfu. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Rhodes. Crete.Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iran.In Cyprus recorded from March <strong>to</strong> September with flower visits <strong>to</strong> Medicago, Statice, Calendulapersica, Centaurea cilicica, Carlina lanata, Broteroa corymbosa, Onopordum insigne, Sinapis albaand Ammi.107


A long season also recorded from Lesbos where this bee is strongly polylectic.Females recorded during June in Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Widespread though infrequently recorded, Iran.Halictus (Halictus) tetrazonius (Klug 1817)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Lesbos, Samos. Turkey. Iran. Israel.Specimes in Turkey and Iran are referable <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies H. t. furcatus Blüthgen 1925.A rare north Mediterranean and Pontic bee. Found up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran duringJuly.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) <strong>the</strong>seus Ebmer 1975Crete.An island endemic bee.Halictus (Halictus) tibialis (Walker 1871)Jordan. Israel. Egypt.Halictus (Vesti<strong>to</strong>halictus) tuberculatus Blüthgen 1925<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Syria. Israel. Jordan. Iran.Halictus (Seladonia) tumulorum (Linnaeus 1758)Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.The subspecies H. t. oros Ebmer 1988 in Continental Greece.Halictus (Seladonia) verticalis Blüthgen 1931Central and parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. An endemic species. .Thrincohalictus prognathus (Pérez 1912)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios. Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Iran.Rarely recorded in Iran during May and found <strong>to</strong> 2100 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) ablenum (Blüthgen 1934)Egypt.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) acephaloides (Blüthgen 1931)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Turkey. Northwestern Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) adaliae (Blüthgen 1923)Turkey. Israel. Jordan.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) aegyptiellum (Strand 1909)Continental Greece; Aegean on Lesbos, Samos. Crete. Turkey. Jordan. Israel. Iran. Possibly Egypt.Recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2100 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran.Flies from March <strong>to</strong> June <strong>to</strong> Centaurea, Scabiosa, Succisa, Achillea, Daucus, Hieracleum, Angelicaand Aster amellus among a number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r flowers.This bee is one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> subgenus Lasioglossum that is thought <strong>to</strong> be eusocial <strong>to</strong> somedegree ra<strong>the</strong>r than strictly solitary.108


Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) aeratum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Karpathos. Crete. Turkey.Iran.Specimens from Crete are referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies L. a. caudatum (Warncke 1982).Widespread from April <strong>to</strong> July in Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) aglyphum (Pérez 1895)Israel. Iran. Egypt.A little-known species recorded Iran from April <strong>to</strong> August.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) ahroundicum (Blüthgen 1937)Cyprus.An endemic bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cyprus mountains.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) albipes (Fabricius 1781)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Rhodes. Turkey; Rize. Iran.Active during June and July in Iran, recorded up <strong>to</strong> 1900 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) albocinctum (Lucas 1879)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece; Thessaly.An isolated population here <strong>of</strong> this Western Mediterranean bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) alec<strong>to</strong>re (Warncke 1984)Turkey; Hakkari. Iran; Elburz.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) algirum (Blüthgen 1923)Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Confined <strong>to</strong> some high mountains such as <strong>the</strong> Greek Chelmos. Widely recorded in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong>Iran during July up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) alpigenum (Dalla Torre 1877)Continental Greece.Present in some mountain areas <strong>of</strong> Greece including Timfris<strong>to</strong>s and Timfi.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) andromeda Ebmer 1978Iran.Both sexes recorded active during July in <strong>the</strong> Elburz Mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) anellum (Vachal 1905)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos, Patmos, Karpathos. Rhodes. Crete.Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Jordan. Iran.A summer flying bee recorded at Statice. On <strong>the</strong> wing in Crete from May in<strong>to</strong> August. Noted on <strong>the</strong>wing in Iran during May at 2100 mtrs and probably also has a summer-long flight season <strong>the</strong>re.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) angusticeps (Perkins 1895)Continental Greece. Corfu. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Karpathos. Crete. Turkey. Israel.Iran.An Ana<strong>to</strong>lian species but with a distribution extending <strong>to</strong> Crete where found on <strong>the</strong> wing during July.109


Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) angustipes Ebmer 1972Greek Aegean on Samos, Crete. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) annulipes (Morawitz 1876)Turkey. Iran.Recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2700 mtrs in Iran from May <strong>to</strong> July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) apos<strong>to</strong>li Ebmer 1970Turkey.The subspecies L. a. pistis Ebmer 1985 occurs in Continental Greece in <strong>the</strong> mountains from Vermion<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) apricarium (Warncke 1982)Turkey; Kalikeri, Artvin, Alanya.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) araxanum (Blüthgen 1923)Turkey; Kars.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) argaeum (Blüthgen 1931)Central Turkey.Subspecies L. a. ragusanum (Blüthgen 1931) Continental Greece; Pangaion <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) ariadne Ebmer 1981Crete; Lefka Ori.An endemic bee probably confined <strong>to</strong> just this one mountain area. It is a member <strong>of</strong> a complex <strong>of</strong>Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Mountain halictid species.The halictid bee Sphecodes miniatus Hagens appears <strong>to</strong> be a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> this bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) articulare (Pérez 1895)Israel. Jordan. Egypt.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) asteria Ebmer 1978Iran.Both sexes found in Iran at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) atrovirens (Pérez 1903)Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs in Iran during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) bavaricum (Blüthgen 1930)The subspecies L. b. olympicum (Warncke 1982) is found in Continental Greece; mountains fromFalakro <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s..Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) be<strong>to</strong>marium (Blüthgen 1925)Iran.Recorded from May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran.110


Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) bicallosum (Morawitz 1873)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Aegean; Chios. Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Iran.Noted during May in Iran at elevations <strong>of</strong> up <strong>to</strong> 2100 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) bisch<strong>of</strong>fi (Blüthgen 1931)Continental Greece, North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.A very rare bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) bluethgeni (Ebmer 1971)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Samos. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) brevicorne (Schenck 1868)Continental Greece. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos. Rhodes. Crete. Turkey.Males on <strong>the</strong> wing during July on Crete.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) breviventre (Schenck 1853)Montane areas <strong>of</strong> Continental Greece; Falakro, Olympos..A rare and little-known European bee.Lasioglossum buccale (Pérez 1903)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Samothraki. Turkey.Recorded during late July on Olympos at 2500 mtrs. On Samothrace during late June <strong>to</strong> 1000 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) calceatum (Scopoli 1763)Continental Greece. Turkey. Jordan.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) cannabinum (Warncke 1989)Egypt; Sinai.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) caspicum (Morawitz 1873)Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iran.Active from May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran where recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Ctenonomia) cavernifrons (Blüthgen 1926)Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) chloropus (Morawitz 1893)The subspecies L. c. tungusicum Ebmer 1978 Turkey; Artvin. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> Elburz Mountains during July up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) cilicium Ebmer 1972Turkey. Iran.Recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) cinclum (Warncke 1984)Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) ciscapum (Blüthgen 1931)111


Turkey.A very rare bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) clypeare (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece. kefalonia. Turkey. Iran.Females rarely noted from Iran at 1500 mtrs during July. A steppic bee and an oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Lamiaceae.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) clypeiferellum (Strand 1909)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Crete. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Jordan. Iran.A spring bee recorded March and April on Cyprus, visiting Asteraceae. females on <strong>the</strong> wing by Mayon Crete.Females rarely recorded Iran during May.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) convexiusculum (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Samos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran.Recorded from May <strong>to</strong> July on Crete and in <strong>the</strong> same months from Iran, where found up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Lamiaceae.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) corvinum (Morawitz 1876)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) costulatum (Kriechbaumer 1873)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Samos. Crete. Turkey. Israel; Mount Hermon. Iran.Females appear from May on Crete and <strong>the</strong> males are recorded from early August. This bee isrecorded during May and June in Iran.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Campanulaceae.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) crassepunctatum (Blüthgen 1923)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Cyprus. Turkey. Jordan. Israel. Iran.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> July in Iran.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) cristulam (Pérez 1895)Subspecies L. c. donatum (Warncke 1975) found in Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos,Chios, Samos. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iran.In Iran active from late April in<strong>to</strong> summer and recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2100 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) croceipes (Morawitz 1876)The form semicroceipes Ebmer 1972 Turkey; Gürün. Iran; Kopet Dag.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) cucullatum (Warncke 1984)Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) cupromicans (Pérez 1903)A mountain bee present in Highland Continental Greece as <strong>the</strong> subspecies L. c. pangaeum (Warncke1982) and found also in <strong>the</strong> Sat Mountains <strong>of</strong> Turkey as <strong>the</strong> subspecies L. c. gevriense (Warncke1984)112


Lasiogossum (Evylaeus) daglariense (Warncke 1984)Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.A mountain bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) damascenum (Pérez 1910)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Skopelos, Rhodes. Cyprus.Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus March <strong>to</strong> June. Recorded at Erodium gruinum.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) danubium (Blüthgen 1944)Continental Greece.Recorded from Rhodopi.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) daphne Ebmer 1978Iran.Active during July up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs in Iran where recorded flying <strong>to</strong> Salvia.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) decolor (Pérez 1895)Egypt.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) denislucum (Strand 1909)Continental Greece; Drama. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria.A very rare bee.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) discum (Smith 1853)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Naxos, Poros. Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Iran.Recorded from May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran at altitudes up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs. Noted visiting Carduus, Cirsium andCentaurea.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) dolichocephalum (Blüthgen 1923)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey.On Cyprus Mavromoustakis recorded <strong>the</strong> form hierosolymae Blüthgen visiting Ballota integrifolia inJune. This form also occurs in Israel.The subspecies L. d. minos Ebmer 1972 is an endemic island form <strong>of</strong> Crete where found in <strong>the</strong>female in <strong>the</strong> vicinity <strong>of</strong> Hieraklion during late May.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) duckei (Alfken 1909)Continental Greece, Voïo <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s. Kefalonia. .North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. West andCentral Turkey.The subspecies L. d. hakkariense (Warncke 1984) present in Turkey; Hakkari.The subspecies L. d. psiloritum Ebmer 1981 is found ra<strong>the</strong>r locally in <strong>the</strong> Highlands <strong>of</strong> Crete.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) edessae Ebmer 1974Turkey. Syria. Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) elegans (Lepeletier 1841)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Paros, Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iran.113


Mavromoustakis recorded this be on <strong>the</strong> wing in May and June, visiting Ballota integrifolia and Vitexagnus-castus.A scarcely recorded species from Iran where noted during July up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) enslini Ebmer 1972Lebanon. Israel.An endemic species.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) epipygiale (Blüthgen 1924)Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iran.Scarcely recorded in Iran at Karaj.A subspecies, L. e. ben<strong>to</strong>ni (Cockerell 1919), is recorded from sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) equinum Ebmer 1978<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Israel; Mount Hermon. Iran.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during May from Khorramabad, Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) erraticum (Blüthgen 1931)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Syros, Chios, Samos, Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey.On Crete females found on <strong>the</strong> wing during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) euboeense (Strand 1909)Continental Greece. Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey. Lebanon. Iran.Very scarcely and locally recorded in Iran; Hamadan at 2100 mtrs, during May.The subspecies L. e. ana<strong>to</strong>licum (Blüthgen 1931) found in Central Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) eurydikae Ebmer 1974<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs in Iran where females on <strong>the</strong> wing from May and males appearing duringJuly.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) euxanthopus Pesenko 1986North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Iran.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) euxinicum Ebmer 1972Turkey; Taurus. Iran.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in Iran from May <strong>to</strong> July.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) fahringeri (Friese 1921)Turkey. Iran.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) fallax (Morawitz 1873)Turkey. Iran.Recorded during May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran where found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs. rare and local in Turkey fromAnkara <strong>to</strong> kalikeri.Lasioglossum (Ctenomia) fasciger (Strand 1909)Israel. Egypt.114


Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) faustum Ebmer 1978Iran.Both sexes recorded in <strong>the</strong> Elburz Mountains <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) filipes Ebmer 1972Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Egypt; Sinai.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) fratellum (Pérez 1903)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) fulvicorne (Kirby 1802)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece and Turkey; central Black Sea coast.The subspecies L. f. antelicum (Warncke 1975) recorded Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey, also Iran up <strong>to</strong> 1400mtrs during May and June.A transpalaearctic solitary Evylaeus <strong>of</strong> open grasslands. This solitary mode <strong>of</strong> nesting ecology may bea reversion from a former state <strong>of</strong> eusociality when taking regard <strong>of</strong> mode <strong>of</strong> nest establishment andarchitecture (see Pesenko et al 2000 and references <strong>the</strong>rein). The flight phenology however appearsclassical for Evylaeus, with a very long season for females and a latter emergence <strong>of</strong> males in<strong>to</strong> latesummer.Lasioglossum (Ctenonomia) gibber (Vachal 1892)Israel. Egypt.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) gilanum (Blüthgen 1931)Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) glabriusculum (Morawitz 1872)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Rhodes. Turkey. Israel. Iran.Very scarcely recorded Iran during May. An uncommon steppic bee.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) glaciegenitum Ebmer 1972Continental Greece, Mount Chelmos. Aegean, Samos; Mount Kerkis. Iran; Elburz.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing in Iran in montane areas up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) griseolum (Morawitz 1872)Continental Greece, Kefalonia. Crete. Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Iran.On Crete females have been recorded active during May.Noted from April <strong>to</strong> July in Iran up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) haesitans (Blüthgen 1931)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on lesbos. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) harputicum Ebmer 1972Turkey. Iran.Rarely recorded from Iran, Shiraz; where <strong>the</strong> female recorded during May.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) hecate Ebmer 1986115


Turkey.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during July in TurkeyLasioglossum (Evylaeus) hethiticum Ebmer 1970Greece; Aegean on Samos. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) hilare Ebmer 1972Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey. Jordan. Iran.In <strong>the</strong> Pindos Range <strong>of</strong> Central Greece recorded at 1400 mtrs.Females <strong>of</strong> this bee have been recorded on Crete during late April. The species is found on <strong>the</strong> wingfrom May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran at up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) hyalinipenne (Morawitz 1876)Iran.Noted during July in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) hyrkanium Ebmer 1978Iran.Both sexes recorede in Iran during <strong>the</strong> summer up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs in montane habitat.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) imbecillum (Ebmer 1974)Continental Greece. kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel. Jordan.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) intermedium (Schenck 1869)Continental Greece; Livadikion.The subspecies L. i. scirpaceum (Warncke 1975) <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran; Elburz..Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) interruptum (Panzer 1798)Continental Greece. Corfu. kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Crete. Turkey. Iran. Mostperhaps all are referable <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies L. i. trispinosum (Alfken 1907).Found in Iran during May <strong>to</strong> July at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs. A bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> temperate steppelands. Asometimes very common polylectic bee, <strong>the</strong> females with a long flight season. Primitively eusocialreproductive ecology.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) iranicum Ebmer 1975Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) israeleuse Ebmer 1974Israel.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) ituraeum Ebmer 1972Sou<strong>the</strong>ast Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Jordan. Iran.local in Iran where found up <strong>to</strong> 1700 mtrs during July.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) josefi Ebmer 2009Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) kappadokium Ebmer 1974116


Central Turkey.A very rare endemic bee.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) korbi (Blüthgen 1929)Turkey. Iran.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) kotschyi Ebmer 1981Cyprus. An island endemic bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mountains.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) kussariense (Blüthgen 1925)Continental Greece; Li<strong>to</strong>choron south <strong>to</strong> Mistra. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Crete. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) laeve (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece south <strong>to</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s. Aegean on Lesbos, Samos. Israel; nor<strong>the</strong>rn Mountains. Iran.Recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2700 mtrs in Iran during May <strong>to</strong> July. Uncommon and attached <strong>to</strong> upland forests.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) laevidorsum (Blüthgen 1923)Aegean Greece on Samos, Rhodes. Turkey.The subspecies L. l. priesneriellum (Warncke 1981) on Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Crete.The subspecies L. l. troodicum (Blüthgen 1937) on Cyprus.The subspecies L. l. katharinae Ebmer 1974 on Jordan. Israel. Egypt.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) laevigatum (Kirby 1802)Widespread Continental Greece including <strong>the</strong> north and Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos.Turkey. Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran from April <strong>to</strong> July. Noted at 1900 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Greekmountains.A polylectic species with a long flight season. The main distribution is in <strong>the</strong> temperate WesternPalaearctic.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) laterale (Brullé 1832)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Crete. Turkey.Noted flying <strong>to</strong> Verbascum phoenicum, Campanula and Sisymbrium.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) laticeps Schenck 1870Continental Greece.The subspecies L. l. hellenicum (Blüthgen 1937) found Continental Greece (where <strong>the</strong>re is atransition zone between <strong>the</strong> two subspecies). Aegean on Lesbos, Chios. Samos. Crete. Cyprus.Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Iran.This successful steppic bee is primitively eusocial with a long flight season for females and malesappearing in late May in Greece. Polylectic.It is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasite Sphecodes ferruginatus.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) lativentre (Schenk 1853)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during late May from Crete. Females on <strong>the</strong> wing through <strong>the</strong> season inGreece.117


Found up <strong>to</strong> 1400 mtrs in Iran where on <strong>the</strong> wing from late April. Ebmer notes Trifolium, Tussilagoand Solidago as floral hosts.In Greece females visit a variety <strong>of</strong> flowers especially Asteraceae although is polylectic and visitso<strong>the</strong>r families including legumes such as Trifolium angustifolium, Trifolium nigrescens and Trifoliumscabrum.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) lep<strong>to</strong>cephalum (Blüthgen 1923)The subspecies L. l. sinaiticum Ebmer 1974 Israel. Jordan. Egypt.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) lep<strong>to</strong>rhynchum (Blüthgen 1931)Israel. Egypt including Sinai.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) leucomontanum Ebmer 1981Crete.An island endemic, confined <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Lefka Ori, Ida and Dikti.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) leucopus (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece, Peloponnesos. Turkey.A boreo-Alpine bee mainly found <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> north <strong>of</strong> our region.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) leucozonium (Schrank 1781)The nominate subspecies found in Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Karpathos,San<strong>to</strong>rini. Western Turkey. In Western Turkey this nominate subspecies intergrades with <strong>the</strong>subspecies L. l. clusium listed below.The subspecies L. l. xylopedis Ebmer 1978 Iran; Elburz where on <strong>the</strong> wing during June and July.The subspecies L. l. cedri Ebmer 1976 present on Lesbos, Crete and Cyprus.Females recorded as active from April <strong>to</strong> June on Crete.On <strong>the</strong> wing February <strong>to</strong> June in Cyprus, recorded at Calendula persica and Prunus dulcis. Can befound in winter, at Colchicum hiemale.Ebmer gives Centaurea, Achillea, Calluna, Carduus, Origanum, Taraxacum, Salix, Angelica,Scabiosa, Senecio and Solidago all as floral hosts. On Greece a variety <strong>of</strong> floral associa<strong>to</strong>ns arerecorded and among <strong>the</strong> asteraceae Leon<strong>to</strong>don tuberosus, Crepis sancta, Crepis commutata, Crepisse<strong>to</strong>sa, Taraxacum sp. and Hedypnois cretica are favoured.A fur<strong>the</strong>r subspecies, L. l. clusium (Warncke 1975), occurs in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.This bee nests on sparsely vegetated open sandy soil in aggregations where <strong>the</strong> nest sites seemsometimes <strong>to</strong> be positioned <strong>to</strong> collect <strong>the</strong> rays <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> early morning sun at certain days in spring. An<strong>of</strong>ten steppic bee but also found in o<strong>the</strong>r grasslands. The young females mate in <strong>the</strong> summer <strong>the</strong>nhibernate before making nests at new sites <strong>the</strong> following spring. Although widely polylectic <strong>the</strong>re isan affinity with <strong>the</strong> asteraceae but also flies <strong>to</strong> legumes and <strong>the</strong> bee is reported as an importantpollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Lucerne.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) limbelloides (Blüthgen 1931)Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Kefalonia, Paros, Poros. Crete. Rhodes. Turkey. Northwest andsouthwest Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) limbellum (Morawitz 1876)Continental Greece. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Palestine. Iran.118


females recorded from Crete during May and on <strong>the</strong> wing in Iran in <strong>the</strong> same month.The subspecies L. l. troodicum (Blüthgen 1937) an endemic <strong>of</strong> Cyprus.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) lineare (Schenck 1869)Continental Greece. Crete. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey.Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing February <strong>to</strong> June in Cyprus where visiting flowers <strong>of</strong> Teucrium polium micropodioides,ballota integrifolia, Gagea chlorantha, Mandragora <strong>of</strong>ficinarum and Tamarix.Females appear from late April on Crete, mainly during May, in<strong>to</strong> July when males emerge.Noted between May and July in Iran at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs.A succesful polylectic bee. Primitively eusocial.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) lissonatum (Noskiewicz 1925)Continental Greece; Mountains <strong>of</strong> Rhodopi and <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) lit<strong>to</strong>rale (Blüthgen 1923)This species is recorded from Continental Greece and Mykonos.The subspecies L. l. colchicum (Ebmer 1972) recorded from Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos, Kos.Turkey..The endemic island subspecies L. l. midas Ebmer 1972 is found on Crete. Both sexes noted activeduring May.On <strong>the</strong> Island <strong>of</strong> Karpathos an intermediate form occurs between <strong>the</strong> two subspecies.Seemingly weakly polylectic in Greece.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) longirostre (Morawitz 1876)Greece; Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos. Turkey. Israel; Mount Hermon. Iran.A mountain bee <strong>of</strong> Iran where active <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs during July, visiting Salvia.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) lucidulum (Schenck 1861)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran.Females recorded during May on Crete.Rarely recorded from Iran where females active during May.Lasioglossum (Ctenonomia) luridipes (Vachal 1897)Egypt.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) maculipes (Morawitz 1876)Turkey. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Females noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) malachurum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Mykonos. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Chios, Samos,Karpathos, Patmos, Kos, Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Palestine. Jordan. Iran. Egypt.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from February and March <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber, visiting Oxaliscorniculata, Gagea chlorantha, Erodium, Sinapis alba, Inula viscosa and Calendula persica. Apolylectic species. In Greece flower visits are also <strong>to</strong> many different plant species.Reported from Palestine visiting Mandragora in February.119


Females haves been recorded emerging in huge numbers on Crete during late May and in June. Theyremain on <strong>the</strong> wing in<strong>to</strong> August. Males begin <strong>to</strong> appear during July.A small number <strong>of</strong> records from Iran between June and July.This bee is common or even numerous at times in some steppe and desert and is strongly eusocialwith a defined worker caste which in this species originally led <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> recognition <strong>of</strong> sociality in <strong>the</strong>halictidae. Females have a long flight season and males appear later, <strong>of</strong>ten with <strong>the</strong> second generation<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> worker caste. The bee is an important member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> pollina<strong>to</strong>r community <strong>of</strong> Legumes in <strong>the</strong>steppe areas.Sphecodes monilicornis is recorded as a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) mandibulare (Morawitz 1866)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine.Israel.<strong>Bees</strong> found in Cyprus, Israel and Egypt may be referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies L. m. carneivendre (Dours1872)Females recorded on Crete during May.Found from May <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber on Cyprus, with flower visit records for Statice virgata, Inulacrithmoides, Inula viscosa and Nerium oleander.Recorded at Polygonum in Palestine in Oc<strong>to</strong>ber.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) marginatum (Brullé 1832)Continental Greece. Corfu. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Andros, Karpathos, Rhodes..Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Jordan. Iran.On Cyprus recorded at Erodium. Papaver rhoeas, Sinapis alba, Chrysan<strong>the</strong>mum segetum, Calendulapersica. Cistus villosus, Cistus salviifolius, Sinapis alba. Quercus infec<strong>to</strong>ria, Quercus alnifolia,Quercus coccifera, Pistacia lentiscus and Crocus. The bee is found active <strong>the</strong>re during March <strong>to</strong>May. There are also some records in winter, at Colchicum hiemale.On <strong>the</strong> wing by May on Continental Greece.An abundant bee on Crete and throughout Continental Greece from <strong>the</strong> first emergence in spring.Hugely abundant on Lesbos in comparison <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> entire Haictid fauna. Many flowers are visited byfemales and especially An<strong>the</strong>mis arvensis, Smyrnium perfoliatum, Crepis sancta, Crepis commutata,Crepis se<strong>to</strong>sa, Brassica nigra and Leon<strong>to</strong>don tuberosum.This bee has a perennial life-cycle <strong>of</strong> colonies and is primitively eusocial. (Pesenko et al 2000).Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) masculum (Pérez 1895)Syria. Israel. Iran. Egypt.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) mesosclerum (Pérez 1903)Continental Greece. Corfu. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria.Jordan. Iran. Egypt. Libya.Recorded during April and May in Iran where on <strong>the</strong> wing up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mts. Rarely recorded on Lesbosduring May.The form L. m. balneorum Ebmer 1974 occurs Israel, in <strong>the</strong> Negev desert.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) minutissimum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey; Alanya. Israel. Egypt.The female <strong>of</strong> this bee found on <strong>the</strong> wing in Crete during May. A solitary univoltine bee <strong>of</strong> sandysoils. Reported as rare in Egypt.120


Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) minutulum (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece. Turkey; Bolu.A rare bee in Greece.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) montifringillum (Warncke 1984)Turkey.An endemic bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) montivolans Ebmer 1975Continental Greece; Timfris<strong>to</strong>s, Parnassos and mountains south <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s. Turkey. Iran, Elburz.On <strong>the</strong> wing up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) morio (Fabricius 1793)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iran.A eurybiontic eusocial polylege with a very wide distribution in <strong>the</strong> Western Palaearctic. One <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>commonest Evylaeus, perhaps especially in warm steppic Continental areas where females have along flight season. Less common on Lesbos though found at a variety <strong>of</strong> plants <strong>the</strong>re.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) mose Ebmer 1974Israel.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) muganicum Ebmer 1972<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.males recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during July ra<strong>the</strong>r locally in Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) nabardicum (Blüthgen 1931)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel; En Gedi <strong>to</strong> Eilat. Egypt, Sinai.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) nigrilabre (Morawitz 1876)Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs during <strong>the</strong> summer in <strong>the</strong> Iranian mountains.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) nigripes (Lepeletier 1841)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos, Karpathos. Crete. Rhodes. Turkey.Iran.The subspecies L. n. pharaone (Strand 1909) found Israel, Jordan, Egypt.Females recorded active during May <strong>to</strong> July on Crete. The same flight phenology recorded in Iranwhere found up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs in montane regions.In Greece <strong>of</strong>ten recorded during July although some appear from late April.A eusocial bee with a caste system. For references see (Pesenko et al 2000) an invaluable resource forinformation and references on <strong>the</strong> nesting biology <strong>of</strong> this and some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r related speciesoccuring in our regions.This bee is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasite Sphecodes alternatus.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) nitidiusculum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Crete. Turkey. Iran.121


Females recorded on Crete between May and July. The same phenology is noted for Iran where <strong>the</strong>bee is recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs. This bee is not primarily a mediterranean taxon and is found above1000 mtrs locally in mountain Crete and <strong>the</strong> Peloponnesos and in <strong>the</strong> Kopet Dag <strong>of</strong> Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) nitidulum (Fabricius 1804)Continental Greece; Samolikas, Pindos, Pana<strong>to</strong>liko.The subspecies L. n. fudakowskii (Noskiewicz 1925) occurs in Continental Greece, Pangäonsouthwards. Kefalonia. Mykonos. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Patmos, Karpathos.Crete. Turkey.Often flying <strong>to</strong> small-fowered lamiales, especially Mentha.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing on Crete from May in<strong>to</strong> July. There is also a fur<strong>the</strong>r subspecies recorded onCrete; L. n. cretense (Warncke 1975). A similar phenology is recorded on Lesbos although <strong>the</strong> beehas not been frequently found <strong>the</strong>re it may well be common but overlooked.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) obscuratum (Morawitz 1875)The subspecies L. o. acerbum (Warncke 1975) Continental Greece. Kefalonia.The nominate subspecies on Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Kos, Samos, Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria.Israel. Jordan. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing February <strong>to</strong> August on Cyprus, visiting a wide range <strong>of</strong> flowers including Thymelaeahirsuta, Mentha longifolia, Nepeta troodi, Lithospermum hispidulum, Berberis cretica, Gageachlorantha and Calendula persica.A successful bee on Lesbos with a large early emergence <strong>of</strong> females during March visiting Cistus,An<strong>the</strong>mis and o<strong>the</strong>rs.Records from May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran where found up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs. A Eurasian mainly steppicand desertbee with females on <strong>the</strong> wing through <strong>the</strong> summer and males appearing later in <strong>the</strong> season.A polylege with a preference for Asteraceae.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) opaconitens (Blüthgen 1931)Iran.A rarely recorded bee found in Iran at up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) ordubadense (Friese 1916)Turkey, Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Iran up <strong>to</strong> 1500 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) orpheopse (Blüthgen 1931)Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) osiris Ebmer 1986Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Iran;, Khash.The female noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during late April.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) paleae Ebmer 1972Southwestern coastal Turkey.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) pallens (Brullé 1832)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Iran.122


A visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards in highland Jordan. Ebmer notes floral hosts as Salix,Potentilla and Prunus spinosa.Ra<strong>the</strong>r scarcely recorded on Lesbos during late April and May with flower visits by females <strong>to</strong>Asphodelus ramosus, Smyrnium perfoliatum and Geranium lucidum.The subspecies L. p. kantarae Warncke 1982 is in Cyprus.A Pontic-Mediterranean bee. It is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic halictid Sphecodes majalis.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) panagaeum Ebmer 1978Iran.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing during July in mountains up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) parvulum (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece. Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.In Greece found in Montane areas. Local in Iran where recorded between April and July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pauperatum (Brullé 1832)Continental Greece; Peloponnesos <strong>to</strong> Alexandroupolis. Crete. Greek Aegean also on Lesbos, Chios,Andros, Paros, Samos, Patmos. Mediterranean Turkey.Active on Crete during April and May. On Lesbos not <strong>of</strong>ten recorded during May when noted visitingEchium plantagineum and Centaurium tenuiflorum.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pauxillum (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Paros, Karpathos, Rhodes. Crete. Turkey.Syria. Israel. Jordan. Iran.Females recorded during May on Crete.In Iran recorded from May <strong>to</strong> July up <strong>to</strong> 1500 mtrs.A eusocial bee <strong>of</strong> steppelands, <strong>the</strong> females have a long flight season and are polylectic with apreference for compositae. males tend <strong>to</strong> emerge in summer. Both Sphecodes crassus and Sphecodesferruginatus are recorded as clep<strong>to</strong>parasites.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) perclavipes (Blüthgen 1934)Continental Greece. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios. Crete. Turkey.Rare in Continental Greece.Females recorded from late April, mainly during May, on Crete. A similar phenology on Lesbos withrecords from late March but mostly during May. Females seem <strong>to</strong> be polylectic noted visiting Genistaacanthoclada, Medicago sativa, Asphodelus ramosus and Calendula arvensis.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) peregrinum (Blüthgen 1923)Continental Greece. Samos. Turkey. Iran.Males rarely recorded from <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran at 2200 mtrs during July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) persicum (Cockerell 1919)Iran.Recorded in Iran during May <strong>to</strong> July at up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) picipes (Morawitz 1876)Israel. Iraq. Iran.A very rare bee. Recorded from Khorramabad, Iran, where females on <strong>the</strong> wing during May.123


Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pis<strong>to</strong>rium (Vachal 1902)Turkey; Kars. Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) podolicum (Noskiewicz 1924)Continental Greece; from Rhodopi <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s. Turkey.Subspecies L. p. canum Warncke 1982 Iran.Active during July up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) politum Schenck 1853Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos.Subspecies L. p. a<strong>to</strong>marius (Morawitz 1876) in Turkey, Israel, Jordan, Iraq. Iran. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs in Iran.Eusocial with monogynous nest establishment but a strongly differentiated worker caste. Bivoltine,workers probably reponsible for <strong>the</strong> rearing <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> male auxilliary sexual caste in <strong>the</strong> summergeneration as well as young queens.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) prasinum (Smith 1848)Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Zakinthos.A scarce European univoltine summer bee <strong>of</strong> sandy habitats.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pressithorax Ebmer 1974Continental Greece. Aegean on Samos. Turkey. Israel.A very rare bee on Continental Greece.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) prunellum Warncke 1975Continental Greece, from Falakro <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) pseudocaspicum (Blüthgen 1923)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Samos, Rhodes. Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing from March but mainly May on Lesbos where found <strong>to</strong> be polylectic.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pseudolep<strong>to</strong>rhynchum (Blüthgen 1931)Turkey. Iran.Emerges during May in this range and found at least <strong>to</strong> July in montane areas <strong>of</strong> Iran <strong>to</strong> 2100 mtrs. Aseemingly very local and sporadic species.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pseudolit<strong>to</strong>rale (Blüthgen 1923)Israel.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pseudonigripes (Blüthgen 1934)The subspecies L. p. bassanum (Warncke 1982) found Turkey. Iran.A very rare bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pseudosphecodimorphum (Blüthgen 1923)South and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Syria. Israel. Jordan.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) punctatissimum (Schenck 1853)124


Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Karpathos, Rhodes. Crete. Turkey.Israel. Jordan. Iran.Recorded on Crete from late April <strong>to</strong> July.Active from April <strong>to</strong> July in Iran at altitudes up <strong>to</strong> 2100 mtrs.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Lamiaceae.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) pulicarium (Warncke 1975)Central Turkey.An endemic bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) puncticolle (Morawitz 1872)Continental Greece. Aegean on Lesbos, Samos, Karpathos. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Females recorded during May from Crete. Infrequently noted from Iran during June and July. Abivoltine polylege attracted <strong>to</strong> Asteraceae.Rarely recorded on Lesbos in spring in <strong>the</strong> female sex but also a rare record <strong>of</strong> a male visitingEryngium campestre in JulyLasioglossum (Evylaeus) pygmaeum Schenck 1853Subspecies L. p. patulum (Vachal 1905) in Continental Greece. Corfu. Aegean on Chios, Karpathos,Samos, Patmos, Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Jordan. Iran.In Iran females found on <strong>the</strong> wing during May at altitudes <strong>to</strong> 1500 mtrs.Both sexes are recorded on Lesbos from March <strong>to</strong> July.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) quadrinotatum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece south <strong>to</strong> Parnassas. Turkey; Arfin.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) quadrisignatus (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.A very rare western palaearctic steppic bee.Lassioglossum (Evylaeus) reinigi Ebmer 1978Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing locally between May and July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) rhynchites (Morawitz 1876)Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) rufitarse (Zetterstedt 1838)Northwestern Iran.Scarcely recorded in Iran where noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during May at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 1300 mtrs. Verywidely distributed in Holarctic upland forest bio<strong>to</strong>pes <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> north <strong>of</strong> our region.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) rupestre (Warncke 1984)Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) rusticolum (Warncke 1982)Turkey. Iran.125


Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) samaricum (Blüthgen 1935)Turkey.A very rare bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) salinum (Morawitz 1875)Aegean Greece on Samos. Turkey. Iran.A very rare bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) saxatile (Warncke 1984)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Hakkari.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing in late June in eastern Turkey up <strong>to</strong> 1700 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) schachti (Warncke 1984)Turkey; Hakkari.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) scheherezade Ebmer 2000Iraq.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) schwarzi Ebmer 1985Turkey; Hakkari.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) semilucens (Alfken 1914)Continental Greece; Vermion, Rhodopi. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) setulellum (Strand 1909)Continental Greece. Andros. Turkey. Syria. Iran.Active during July in Iran where recorded up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs. A ra<strong>the</strong>r rare bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> steppe.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) sexnotatum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece.North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.Females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from Iran during May up <strong>to</strong> 600 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) siistense (Warncke 1984)Turkey. Syria. Iran.A very rare bee.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) sinistrum (Blüthgen 1934)Iran.Females noted <strong>of</strong>ten at lower levels, below 800 mtrs, in Iran during May <strong>to</strong> July where observedflying <strong>to</strong> Dipsacus.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) sobrinum (Warncke 1982)Turkey; Hakkari. Iran.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) sociorum (Blüthgen 1924)Turkey. Iran.Females recorded rarely during July in Iran at altitude up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs during July.126


Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) solitarium (Warncke 1975)Turkey; Western Taurus Range.Lasioglossum (Evlaeus) soror (Saunders 1901)Continental Greece. Kefalonia.Subspecies L. s. livium (Warncke 1982) Crete.Subspecies L. s. elatum (Warncke 1975) Aegean Greece on Chios, Samos. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) stelidum (Warncke 1982)Turkey. Jordan.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) subaenescens (Pérez 1896)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Karpathos, Rhodes. Crete.Turkey. Jordan. Iran. Egypt. These populations are referable <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies L. s. asiaticum (DallaTorre 1896).In Iran this bee occurs <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs from May <strong>to</strong> July.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) subbuteo (Warncke 1982)Turkey.A local endemic bee found in <strong>the</strong> Province <strong>of</strong> Hakkari.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) subequestre (Blüthgen 1931)Iran.Females recorded in nor<strong>the</strong>astern Iran at Surabad.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) subfasciatum (Imh<strong>of</strong>f 1832)Widespread Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> July up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs in Iran. At 2350 mtrs on Chelmos, Greece.Ebmer lists Tussilago, Salix and Gentiana cruciata as floral hosts.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) subfulvicorne austriacum Ebmer 1974Continental Greece.Found locally.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) tadschicum (Blüthgen 1929)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erçis. Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs in Iran during May <strong>to</strong> July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) talyschense (Blüthgen 1925)Iran.Both sexes recorded during July flying up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) taninense (Warncke 1984)Turkey; Hakkari.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) tarsatum (Schenck 1868)Greece; Aegean on Samos. Turkey.127


Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) tauricum Ebmer 1972Turkey.A rare bee.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) tenuiceps (Vachal 1905)Central Turkey.An endemic bee.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) transi<strong>to</strong>rium (Schenck 1870)The nominate race on Continental Greece. Ionian Islands. Libya.Subspecies L. t. uncinum (Vachal 1905) Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Karpathos,Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Western Syria. Jordan. Israel. Egypt.Both sexes found on Crete during May <strong>to</strong> July.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) trichopygum (Blüthgen 1923)Continental Greece. Turkey.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) tricinctum (Schenck 1874)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Karpathos, Mikonos. Crete.Subspecies L. t. muganicum Ebmer 1972 on Turkey. Iran.An undescribed subspecies occurs on Cyprus.A rare mainly steppic bee. Females on <strong>the</strong> wing from Late March in<strong>to</strong> June on Lesbos.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) tripolitanum (Blüthgen 1924)Cyrenaica.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) truncaticolle (Morawitz 1877)Continental Greece. Kefalonia. Aegean on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey.Syria. Israel. Iran.Females on <strong>the</strong> wing by May on Crete. On <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> July in Iran at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 1600mtrs.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) tschibuklinum (Blüthgen 1931)Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Scarcely recorded in Iran where females are on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> June at altitudes up <strong>to</strong> 1400mtrs.Lasoglossum (Ctenonomia) vagans (Smith 1858)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey. Lebanon. Jordan. Israel. Egypt.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) villosulum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Karpathos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey.Iran.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in February, visiting Asteraceae and also in Oc<strong>to</strong>ber,at Satureia incana. A preference for Asteraceae is also recorded from Lesbos.On Crete females are found active from May in<strong>to</strong> August.Infrequently recorded Iran from May <strong>to</strong> July, <strong>of</strong>ten at height; up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs.128


The Halictid bee Sphecodes villosulus Schwarz 2010, described from UAE, is considered veryprobably <strong>to</strong> be a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> L. villosulum.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) xanthopum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey.The subspecies L. x. lativalve (Warncke 1984) in Iran.Recorded active on <strong>the</strong> wing in western Iran from May <strong>to</strong> July. Noted on <strong>the</strong> wing in June at Ankara.Most records <strong>of</strong> females from Lesbos are for April and <strong>the</strong>re is a series <strong>of</strong> males recorded during <strong>the</strong>spring <strong>the</strong>re.Ebmer notes that this bee has been recorded making visits <strong>to</strong> Salvia pratensis, Lamium, Potentilla,Hieraceum, Taraxacum and Raphanus.A widespread bee <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> north <strong>of</strong> our region. It is recorded as a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasite Sphecodesspinulosus.Lasioglossum (Lasioglossum) zonulum (Smith 1848)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Rare on mainland Greece. Scarce or rare on Lesbos with females recorded visiting Cistus creticus andCephalaria transylvanica. Generally known in Europe as a polylege with a long flight season.Lasioglossum (Evylaeus) zostaceum (Warncke 1982)Turkey; Hakkari.Sphecodes albilabris (Fabricius 1793)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Jordan.Sphecodes alternatus Smith 1853Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.Mavromoustakis reports this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> September, with flower records on Cyprusfor Mentha longifolia, Eryngium, Tamarix and Broteroa corymbosa.Sphecodes ana<strong>to</strong>licus Warncke 1992Turkey.Sphecodes armeniacus Warncke 1992Turkey.Sphecodes crassanus Warncke 1992Continental Greece.Sphecodes crassus Thomson 1870Continental Greece. Turkey.Sphecodes cristatus Hagens 1882Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Sphecodes croaticus Meyer 1922Continental Greece. Turkey.129


Subspecies S. c. cypricus Blüthgen 1938 occurs on Cyprus, on <strong>the</strong> wing March <strong>to</strong> May and notedvisiting Ballota.Sphecodes dusmeti Blüthgen 1924Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.females on <strong>the</strong> wing during June.Sphecodes ephippius Linnaeus 1767Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.The female recorded about Smyrnium perfoliatum during June on Lesbos.Sphecodes ferruginatus Hagens 1882Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.The female noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August on Mount Olympos, Greece.Sphecodes ge<strong>of</strong>frellus (Kirby 1802)Turkey.Subspecies S. g. hakkariensis Warncke 1992 also present in Turkey.Sphecodes gibbus (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Subspecies S. g. rufispinosus Meyer 1920 on Cyprus where Mavromoustakis reports it on <strong>the</strong> wingfrom April <strong>to</strong> September, visiting <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Mentha longifolia, Ballota, Tamarix and Eryngium.On Lesbos females are on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> early June and have been noted attending Crepissancta and Origanum onites.Sphecodes intermedius Blüthgen 1923Turkey.Sphecodes longulus Hagens 1882Continental Greece. Turkey.Sphecodes majalis Pérez 1903Subspecies. S. m. barbatus Blüthgen 1923 on Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Sphecodes marginatus Hagens 1882Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. A subspecies is reported from Crete. Possiblypresent in Turkey.Subspecies S. m. biskrensis Pérez 1903 found in Turkey.Sphecodes miniatus Hagens 1882Continental Greece. Lesbos.Sphecodes monilicornis (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Jordan.Appears active from late May through June on Lesbos.On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies S. m. cephalotes Meyer 1920 is reported where on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong>July <strong>of</strong>ten at montane levels, visiting Alyssum troodi, An<strong>the</strong>mis arvensis and o<strong>the</strong>r flowers.130


Sphecodes olivieri Lepeletier 1825Turkey. Israel. North Africa.Sphecodes pellucidus Smith 1845Cyprus. Turkey.Recorded by Mavromoustakis on <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus from March <strong>to</strong> June. visiting Prunus domesticain March and also recorded at Ballota.Sphecodes pinguiculus Pérez 1903Turkey. Israel. North Africa.<strong>Bees</strong> in Turkey are referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies S. p. sareptensis Meyer 1922.Sphecodes puncticeps Thomson 1870Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing March <strong>to</strong> August in Cyprus, recorded visiting Ammi and Mentha longifolia.Sphecodes reticulatus Thomson 1870Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Sphecodes rubicundus Hagens 1875Greece; North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Sphecodes ruficrus Erichson 1835North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.A single record <strong>of</strong> a male at Anthyllis hermanniae in early May.Sphecodes rufiventris (Panzer 1798)Cyprus.Subspecies S. r. hethiticus Warncke 1992 Greek Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.On Cyprus flying in May and June, visiting Ballota.Sphecodes scabricollis Wesmael 1835Continental Greece.Sphecodes schencki Hagens 1882Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Females recorded durig late March and April on Lesbos with an interesting record <strong>of</strong> a male at Ammimajus in late June.Sphecodes spinulosus Hagens 1875Continental Greece.Sphecodes zangherii Noskiewicz 1931Turkey.≈131


Family MelittidaeSubfamily DasypodainaeDasypoda albipila Spinola 1838Israel. Egypt.The range is mainly within <strong>the</strong> Arabian Peninsula.Dasypoda argentata Panzer 1809Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.132


An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dipsacaceae; visiting primarily Scabiosa columbaria and S. Atropurpurea. Thisbee also visits Carduus spp. Centaurea jacea, Knautia arvensis, Echium vulgare, Cephalarialeucantha and Armeria maritima.On <strong>the</strong> wing from <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> May <strong>to</strong> late August.Dasypoda braccata Eversmann 1852Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Turkey.<strong>Bees</strong> in Turkey may be referable <strong>to</strong> subspecies D. b. ana<strong>to</strong>lica Warncke 1973.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dipsacaceae, especially Scabiosa rotata. Also in Europe visits Scabiosaochroleuca.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late June in<strong>to</strong> August.Dasypoda cingulataContinental Greece; Peloponnesos.Primarily a Western Mediterranean bee.Dasypoda frieseana Schletterer 1890Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Central Aegean islands. Turkey.A scarcely recorded bee.Dasypoda gusenleitneri Michez 2004Jordan.Dasypoda hirtipes (Fabricius 1793)Widespread Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran. Egypt. Libya.Subspecies D. h. graeca Lepeletier 1841 is present in parts <strong>of</strong> this range.Broadly oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Asteraceae.Dasypoda (Megadasypoda) intermedia Michez 2005Northwestern Iran.The male noted on <strong>the</strong> wing in montane habitat during late July at 2000 <strong>to</strong> 2500 mtrs.Dasypoda litiga<strong>to</strong>r Baker 2002Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.An endemic species, found in <strong>the</strong> Central Alborz Mountains up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs during July and August.Dasypoda longigena Schletterer 1890<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzurum.Dasypoda patinyi Michez 2002<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Urfa. Syria.Dasypoda pyriformis Radoszkowski 1887Widespread Continental Greece. Widely recorded on Aegean Greece including Lesbos. SouthwesternTurkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing late May <strong>to</strong> late July.On Lesbos this is a local psammophilous bee attracted <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Onopordum.133


Dasypoda pyrotrichia Foerster 1855Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Syria.On <strong>the</strong> wing mid May <strong>to</strong> late August.Dasypoda sinuata Pérez 1895Nilotic Egypt. Western Libya.Active from mid February in<strong>to</strong> April.Dasypoda spinigera Kohl 1905Local on Continental Greece. Widespread Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dipsacaceae. A typical high-summer flight season for such a bee, from mid June<strong>to</strong> late AugustDasypoda suripes (Christ 1791)Widespread Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Central Aegean. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegeanon Rhodes. Cyprus. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn coastal Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dipsacaceae. In Europe very attracted <strong>to</strong> Knautia arvensis.On <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> July.Dasypoda syriensis Michez 2004Syria.Dasypoda <strong>to</strong>roki Michez 2004Israel. Syria.Recorded at Centaurea hispanica and C. iberica.Dasypoda tubera Warncke 1973Turkey. Coastal Syria.Dasypoda visnaga Rossi 1790Throughout Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean. Turkey.Records <strong>of</strong> flowers visited are Eryngium maritimum, Centaurea seridis maritima, Scolymushispanicus and Tolpis altissima.Dasypoda warnckei Michez 2004Central and eastern Turkey.Eremophanta (Eremophanta) iranica Schwammberger 1971Iran.Found in <strong>the</strong> extreme south <strong>of</strong> Iran.The eight Species <strong>of</strong> this Genus are largely found in <strong>the</strong> Central Asian deserts.Tribe PromelittiniPromelitta alboclypeata (Friese 1900)Recorded from nor<strong>the</strong>rn Sudan close <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> border with Egypt.This rare species is <strong>the</strong> only member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tribe Promelittini. Species such as this, inhabiting <strong>the</strong>Palaearctic deserts, may sometimes represent archaic forms.134


≈Subfamily MelittinaeMacropis europaea Warncke 1973Continental Greece. Turkey.Macropis frivaldszkyi Mocsáry 1878Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria.Oligolectic on Lysimachia.Macropis fulvipes (Fabricius 1804)Turkey.The preferred pollen source <strong>of</strong> this oligolectic bee is Lysimachia nummularia but it is also hosted byL. punctata and L. vulgaris.The bee is <strong>the</strong> host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic bee Epeoloides coecutiens.Melitta aegyptiaca (Radoszkowski 1891)Israel. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing from early February <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> beginning <strong>of</strong> May.Melitta bicollaris Warncke 1973<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. An endemic species. Flower visits are mainly <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Fabaceae;- Astragalusxerophyllus, Medicago sativa, Onobrychis cf stenostachya, O. transcaucasia, Trifolium ambiguumand Vicia cracca ssp. stenophylla.On <strong>the</strong> wing June and July.Melitta budensis (Mocsáry 1878)Turkey; Black Sea Regions.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Campanulaceae. A summer bee on <strong>the</strong> wing July and August.Melitta dimidiata Morawitz 1875Turkey.This bee is associated with xeric calacareous steppelands. It is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> Onobrychis viciifolia,O. supina and O. arenaria. Males on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> mid August and <strong>the</strong> females appearingsome time later than <strong>the</strong> first males.Melitta haemorrhoidalis (Fabricius 1775)Continental Greece. Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Campanulaceae. Flower species recorded are Campanula latifolia, C. persicifolia,C. rapunculoides, C. rotundifolia and C. trachelium. However this bee also has an affinity for Malvamoschata, and o<strong>the</strong>r flower visits may be for nectar resources. Both sexes <strong>of</strong> this bee are on <strong>the</strong> wingfrom early July <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> beginning <strong>of</strong> September. The Nomad bees Nomada emarginata and N.Flavopicta are clep<strong>to</strong>parasites.135


Melitta leporina (Panzer 1799)Turkey. Iran.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Fabaceae. This bee is a major pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Medicago sativa but frequently visitsrelated species.On <strong>the</strong> wing early June <strong>to</strong> late August.The bee Nomada flavopicta is a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite.Melitta maura (Pérez 1895)Israel. Libya.A scarcely recorded bee. It flies very early, from January <strong>to</strong> April.Melitta nigricans Alfken 1905Turkey.A species <strong>of</strong> meadows, pastures and steppe where <strong>the</strong>re is a good floral community within <strong>the</strong>grassland, and Lythrum salicaria is present.Melitta rasmonti Michez 2007<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Hakkari, Erzurum.An endemic species. Found on <strong>the</strong> wing during AugustMelitta schmiedeknechti Friese 1896Israel. Jordan. Egypt. Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing early February <strong>to</strong> April.Melitta wankowiczi Radoszkowski 1891Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.An affinity with <strong>the</strong> Campanulaceae. This bee appears from early June in<strong>to</strong> late August.≈136


Family MegachilidaeSubfamily FideliinaeTribe PararhophitiniPararhophites quadratus Friese 1898Egypt. Sinai.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Zygophyllum album. Noted active during March.Pararhophites orobinus (Morawitz 1876)Iran, Isfahan. Fars, Samnan.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Zygophyllaceae upon <strong>the</strong> Iranian steppes at 1500 mtrs.Subfamily MegachilinaeTribe LithurginiLithurgus chrysurus Fonscolombe 1834Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Corfu. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria.Lebanon. Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June and July in Continental Greece and Corfu, recorded visiting Centaureasolstitialis. This bee is widespread through Continental Greece, from Thessaly south through <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>Peloponnesos. It occurs up <strong>to</strong> 1400 mtrs in Boetia.Flower visit records in Turkey, where this species is widespread and especially prevalent during July,are for flowers in <strong>the</strong> genera Onopordum, Carduus, Cirsium, Centaurea and Trifolium.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee in June and July on Cyprus, visiting Centaurea hyalolepis,Carthamus creticus and Centaurea cilicica.Out during July in Syria, up <strong>to</strong> 1200 mtrs and in Iran <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> August, flying <strong>to</strong> Medicago sativa.Flies in June and July in Lebanon where attracted <strong>to</strong> Centaurea iberica meryonis.Both sexes are reported active during May from Israel, (Van der Zanden 1986), suggesting a muchearlier appearance in <strong>the</strong> south <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> range.This bee is <strong>the</strong> host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic Anthidiine bee Stelis simillima.137


Lithurgus cornutus (Fabricius 1787)Continental Greece. Western Turkey.This bee is on <strong>the</strong> wing in July in Greece, noted visiting in sou<strong>the</strong>rn Europe. Onopordon acanthiumand Carduus crispusSubspecies Lithurgus cornutus maximus Radoszkowski 1872 found Turkey; common in easternAna<strong>to</strong>lia. Iran.A summer bee apparent during June and <strong>to</strong> late August. Noted visiting Medicago sativa in Iran.Lithurgus tibialis Morawitz 1875Continental Greece; Morea, Thrace. Naxos. Paros. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Iran. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> early September. On Cyprus Mavromoustakis recorded this bee nesting in beetleborings in <strong>the</strong> dried trunk <strong>of</strong> Opontia in a village garden, and flying <strong>to</strong> Crozophora verbascifolia.In Turkey both sexes recorded from Dyarbakir during August.A visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards <strong>of</strong> highland Jordan. Noted flying <strong>to</strong> Alhagi in Iran.All <strong>the</strong> species <strong>of</strong> Lithurgus reported from eastern Turkey are recorded at Centaurea, Carduus,Cirsium, Onopordum and Arctium. (Ozbek and Zanden 1994) note that L. chrysurus and L. cornutusmaximus also visit Onobrychis. Michener (2000) notes that floral associations vary between speciesin <strong>the</strong> subgenus Lithurgus and that those species with shorter proboscids and sometimes three instead<strong>of</strong> four labial palpi are associated with <strong>the</strong> collection <strong>of</strong> fine pollen from members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Asteraceae.These comments apply <strong>to</strong> L. fuscipennis and L. chrysurus among o<strong>the</strong>rs.≈Tribe OsmiiniMost species in <strong>the</strong> genus Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma are oligolectic and where species do have a broad flower-hostrange <strong>the</strong>re is an evolutionary inference that floral host choice is neurologically or o<strong>the</strong>rwisephysiologically constrained.. See Sedivy et al (2008) and <strong>the</strong> works cited <strong>the</strong>rein. These constraintscan be overcome ei<strong>the</strong>r through preadaptation or expansion <strong>to</strong> new pollen hosts exhibiting similarfeatures <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> original host plant. This is followed by an increasing tendency <strong>to</strong>wards specialisationon <strong>the</strong> new plant resulting in <strong>the</strong> evolution <strong>of</strong> a fur<strong>the</strong>r phase <strong>of</strong> oligolecty.Floral associations and much more biological information can be found on <strong>the</strong> website <strong>of</strong>Andreas Müller at <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Zurich http://blogs.ethz.ch/osmiini/ This site contains<strong>the</strong> most up <strong>to</strong> date information on all <strong>the</strong> species <strong>of</strong> Osmiines recorded in <strong>the</strong> WesternPalaearctic and an excellent resource for this region.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma appendiculatum (Morawitz 1872)OzbekTurkey. On <strong>the</strong> wing in June.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma brevifurca (Benoist 1935)138


Ozbek.Turkey, Taurus Mountains. On <strong>the</strong> wing late May.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) bytinskii (Mavromoustakis 1948)Turkey; Hatay, Maras. Lebanon. Israel, Palestine. Jordan.Discovered on <strong>the</strong> wing in Jerusalem in late April by Dr Bytinski-Salz.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) campanularum (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) diodon Schletterer 1889The nomínate subspecies in Continental Greece. North Aegean at Lesbos. Samos. Turkey, Jordan,Israel, Palestine. Syria.Both sexes recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from Samos during April.Recorded as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards in Jordan.On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies C. d. cypriacum Mavromoustakis occurs. On Cyprus this bee was recordednesting in old wood on village houses and visiting <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> An<strong>the</strong>mis libanotica and Bellisperennis..Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) distinctum (S<strong>to</strong>eckert 1929)Continental Greece. Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) dolosum (Benoist 1935)Turkey; Bursa.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) emarginatum (Nylander 1856)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Ranunculus.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) florisomne (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece. Turkey; Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia and Erzurum.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during July from Ankara.This bee is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> Ranunculus.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) forcipatum (Benoist 1928)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn and central Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey; Mugla, Antalya, Maras,Icel. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) foveolatum (Morawitz 1868)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Chios. Widespread Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) galeridum (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Icel, Antalya.139


Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) garrulum (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Kars, Bitlis, Rize, Erzurum, Hakkari.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) grande (Nylander 1852)Continental Greece; Pindos Range close <strong>to</strong> Ioannina. Turkey, reported Amanus Mountains by Friese1921 per Ozbek.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dipsacaceae.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Gyrodromella) handlirschi Schletterer 1889Continental Greece. Turkey.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Gyrodromella) hebraeum (Benoist 1935)Turkey. Israel. Palestine.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) hellenicum (Benoist 1938)Continental Greece.Mavromoustakis noted that this bee was on <strong>the</strong> wing at Mount Parnes, Attica, in late may and earlyJune. The species was originally described from Greece but without a locality given, a not unusualform <strong>of</strong> treatment for a new species in earlier periods.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) isabellinum (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Hatay, Mardin, Maras.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) josefi Schwarz & Gusenleitner 2000Turkey; Hakkari.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) laticaudum (Benoist 1938)South and central Continental Greece.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) lucens (Benoist 1928)Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey, Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.In Turkey; Icel, females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in late May and early June. However, Mavromoustakisdiscovered <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> this species and reported it <strong>to</strong> be on <strong>the</strong> wing during March on Cyprus. Nestswere in <strong>the</strong> wooden fence posts <strong>of</strong> village gardens and <strong>the</strong> bees flew <strong>to</strong> Calendula persica andAn<strong>the</strong>mis libanotica. Bytinski – Salz noted <strong>the</strong> occurrence <strong>of</strong> this bee in Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May in Lebanon, recorded visiting Ranunculus.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) maidli (Benoist 1935)Turkey, Bursa, Kars, Hakkari, Van.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) Mocsaryi Schletterer 1889Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey; Artvin, Amasya.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June in Attica.This bee is oligolectic on Ornithogalum.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) nasutum Pérez 1895140


Continental Greece.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Gyrodromella) orientale Schletterer 1890<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) palaestinum (Benoist 1935)Turkey; Hatay. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.The female described from Lebanon by Mavromoustakis where recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Gyrodromella) proximum Schletterer 1889Turkey; Erzurum, Bursa. Iran.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Gyrodromella) rapunculi (Lepeletier 1841)Continental Greece. Turkey.Recorded during July from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia..This bee is oligolectic on Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) schlettereri (Friese 1899)Greece, Aegean on Samos. Turkey; Mugla, Sivas, Aydin, Antalya, Icel, Maras. Palestine. Israel.Syria.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) seidenstückeri Mavromoustakis 1954Syria; Homs.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) styriacum Schwarz & Gusenleitner 1999Continental Greece; Mount Ossa and The Tayge<strong>to</strong>s. Turkey.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Campanula.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) subnitidum (Benoist 1935)Turkey; Taurus.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) <strong>to</strong>rquillum (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Kayseri, Kars, Bitlis, Hakkari, Van.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma) transversum (Friese 1897)Continental Greece. Turkey; Taurus Mountains.This bee is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dipsacaceae.Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma (Foveosmia) ventrale Schletterer 1889Turkey; Bursa.Hae<strong>to</strong>smia circumventa (Peters 1974)Egypt. Libya.The female reorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Libya.Hae<strong>to</strong>smia vechti (Peters 1974)141


Continental Greece. Turkey; Izmir, Kayseri, Icel. Israel. Palestine. Iran.Heriades (Rhopaloheriades) clavicornis Morawitz 1875The nomínate subspecies Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Syria. Atranscaspian and eastern Mediterranean bee.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> environs <strong>of</strong> Jerusalem during May, attracted <strong>to</strong> Tolpis.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in May and June in Lebanon. Males reported on <strong>the</strong> wing during July fromTurkey, at 1300 mtrs. Males recorded during August at 1600 mtrs in Continental Greece. The flightseason is affected strongly by <strong>the</strong> latitude within <strong>the</strong> distribution range.Heriades (Heriades) crenulatus Nylander 1856Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Widespread Turkey.Both sexes recorded flying <strong>to</strong> Centaurea solstitialis in Greece during July. This is also <strong>the</strong> favouredmonth for records from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Heriades (Michenerella) dalmaticus Maidl 1922The nomínate subspecies on Continental Greece. Corfu. Greek Aegean on Lesbos, Rhodes. Turkey.Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Syria.On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies H. d. troodicus Mavromoustakis occurs.From Attica, Greece, Mavromoustakis was able <strong>to</strong> describe <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> this species and noted bothsexes flying <strong>to</strong> Allium hymettium in June.Mavromoustakis found this bee at high elevations on Cyprus, on <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August andvisiting <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Teucrium cyprium.In Lebanon both sexes recorded at Teucrium polium during July.Heriades (Heriades) hierosolomitus Benoist 1935Israel. Palestine.Heriades (Michenerella) hissaricus Popov 1955Turkey; Urfa.Females on <strong>the</strong> wing in early AugustHeriades (Michenerella) punctuliferus Schletterer 1889Continental Greece. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Jordan.One <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bee species noted as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards in Jordan.Heriades (Heriades) rubicolus Pérez 1890Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. Israel.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> September on Cyprus, by Mavromoustakis. The bee recordedvisiting Inula viscosa, Inula crithmoides, Linaria elatine. Pulicaria dysenterica, Carthamus boissieri,Statice and Eryngium creticum.Heriades (Heriades) truncorum (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Syria.In Turkey recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from July through September with flower visit records for Salvia,Centaurea solstitialis, Arctium lappa and Onopordum. On Cyprus this species has been recorded fromApril in<strong>to</strong> September, visiting Pulicaria dysenterica, Inula viscosa and Inula crithmoides.142


This bee is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic bee Stelis minuta.H<strong>of</strong>feria schmiedeknechti (Schletterer 1889)Continental Greece, including Thrace and The Tayge<strong>to</strong>s. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Syria. Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) abnormis Van der Zanden 1992Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece, Peloponnesos. Palestine. Israel.Found in montane areas <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs in Greece and Israel with males on <strong>the</strong> wing during May andJune. <strong>the</strong> flight season begins slightly earlier in <strong>the</strong> levant than in Greece.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) acanthophora (Morawitz 1875)Turkey; Malatya, Hakkari.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) acuticornis (Dufour and Perris 1840)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Widespread Turkey.Jordan. Israel. Palestine.In Turkey recorded at Onobrychis viciifolia and Lathyrus sp.On <strong>the</strong> wing in March and April on Cyprus, recorded at Faba. Mavromoustakis reported nestsconstructed within <strong>the</strong> dried stems <strong>of</strong> Scilla.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) adunca (Panzer 1798)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey; Istanbul, Ankara, Erzurum. Libya.Reported as rare in Turkey.Hoplitis (Pla<strong>to</strong>smia) africana (Warncke 1990)Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) agis (Benoist 1929)Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Hoplitis (Pla<strong>to</strong>smia) alchata (Warncke 1990)Turkey, Urfa.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) alexandrina Warncke 1991Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) anipuncta (Alfken 1935)Continental Greece. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey; Erzurum, Bitlis, Tunceli, Konya, Van. Jordan. Israel.Palestine. Syria.Recorded visiting Onopordum, Centaurea iberica and C. solstitialis in Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April in Palestine and Israel. However, records for Crete and from Turkey andSyria are for May <strong>to</strong> August.Hoplitis (Annosmia) annulata (Morawitz 1871)Subspecies H. a. crenulata (Latreille 1811) occurs Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus.Widespread Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.143


Recorded in April and May from Cyprus, visiting Echium sericeum, and on <strong>the</strong> wing during May inPalestine. Noted as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> orchards in highland Jordan.Hoplitis (Micreriades) antalyae Tkalcü 2000North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Antalya.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) antennata (Morawitz 1876)Turkey; Kars. A Caucasian bee.Hoplitis (Annosmia) aqabaensis (Warncke 1991)Jordan.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) arenivaga Van der Zanden 1996Jordan. Israel.The male recorded active during April. An inhabitant <strong>of</strong> desertic areas.Hoplitis asiae Tkalcu 1979Continental Greece, Thrace.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) batyamae (Van der Zanden 1986)Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) bicallosa (Morawitz 1876)Continental Greece. Turkey; Antalya, Kars, Konya.Males recorded during May in <strong>the</strong> Peloponnesos at 900 mtrs.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) bidentata (Morawitz 1876)Widespread Turkey. Egypt.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) bifoveolata (Alfken 1935)Turkey. Jordan. Palestine. Israel. Syria.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) bipartita (Friese 1899)Turkey; Erzurum, Hakkari.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) bispinosa Van der Zanden 1992Continental Greece. Turkey.Males active on <strong>the</strong> wing at 1700 mtrs during July and August in <strong>the</strong> Tayge<strong>to</strong>s Range <strong>of</strong> Greece.Males noted during June in Turkey at 2250 mtrs.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) bisulca (Gerstaecker1869)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Rhodes. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Israel. Palestine.Libya.Mavromoustakis reported this bee <strong>to</strong> be active during May in Israel and Palestine. In flight during Julyand August on Continental Greece. Females recorded Turkey; Urfa, during July.Hoplitis (Annosmia) bohdenheimeri (Mavromoustakis 1949)Palestine. Israel.144


Hoplitis (Hoplitis) bombiformis Van der Zanden 1991Turkey; Hakkari, Van.The females <strong>of</strong> this large Hoplitis discovered on <strong>the</strong> wing at up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs during July in TurkeyHoplitis (Prionohoplitis) brachypogon (Pérez 1879)Subspecies H. b. carsophile Ducke 1899 occurs Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey. Israel.Both sexes noted active in late May in Greece.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) brevispina (Tkalcu 2000)Turkey; Erzurum.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) bytinskii (Mavromoustakis 1948)Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Hoplitis (Prionohoplitis) campanularis (Morawitz 1877)Continental Greece, Peloponnesos. Turkey, Mardin, Kars, Hakkari, Sivas.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) carinata (Stanek 1969)Continental Greece. Cyclades. Turkey. Syria. Jordan.Very common in eastern Turkey. Flower visits recorded for Onobrychis viciifolia, Medicago sativa,Melilotus <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Lotus corniculatus, Also flower species in <strong>the</strong> genera Vicia, Astragalus andConvolvulus.females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during June in Syria.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) carsophila (Ducke 1900)Continental Greece, Peloponnesos. Crete. Widespread Turkey. Israel.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) caucasica (Friese 1920)Turkey; Erzurum, Gümüshane.Females reported at O. viciifolia and M.<strong>of</strong>ficinalis. Found on <strong>the</strong> wing during July.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) caularis (Morawitz 1875)Turkey; Van, Erzurum.Females reported on <strong>the</strong> wing during June.Hoplitis (Annosmia) cercomela Warncke 1991Jordan; Aqaba.Hoplitis (Bytinskia) christae (Warncke 1991)Israel. Palestine.Hoplitis (Annosmia) chukar (Warncke 1991)Turkey, Hakkari, Konya. Israel. Palestine.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) ciliaris (Pérez 1902)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece; Peleponessos. Turkey; Erzincan, Konya, Hakkari. Israel, Hula.145


Hoplitis (Alcidamea) claviventris (Thomson 1872)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Northwestern Turkey; Bolu.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) contracta (Walker 1871)Egypt. A southwest Asian and Afrotropical species.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) cretaea (Tkalcu 1992)Continental Greece. Crete.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) curtula (Pérez 1895)Widespread Turkey.Hoplitis (Prionohoplitis) curvipes (Morawitz 1871)Continental Greece; Sterea Hellas. Corfu. Turkey; Konya, Erzurum. Syria.Males reported on <strong>the</strong> wing during late June.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) cypriaca (Mavromoustakis 1938)Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Israel. Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing in April and May on Cyprus, visiting Centaurea hyalolepis.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in June in Palestine, visiting Centaurea.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) dalmatica (Morawitz 1871)Continental Greece. Turkey.Recorded at Cirsium in eastern Turkey.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) daniana (Mavromoustakis 1949)Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) decaocta (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Kirsehir, Van.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) duckeana (Kohl 1905)Turkey; Kayseri, Urfa. Syria.Males active in June and July.Hoplitis (Prionohoplitis) eburnea (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Hakkari, Sivas. Syria. Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Annosmia) elaziga Warncke 1991Turkey, Ankara.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) enslini (Alfken 1936)Israel, Jericho. A scarcely recorded bee.Hoplitis (Prionohoplitis) epeoliformis (Ducke 1899)Jordan.146


Hoplitis (Annosmia) eremophila (Warncke 1991)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Crete. Turkey; Erzurum, Hakkari, Bitlis. Syria.Hoplitis (Bytinskia) erythrogastra (Mavromoustakis 1954)Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.Mavromoustakis found this species on <strong>the</strong> wing in May and June, numerous in mid-June.Clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic on <strong>the</strong> ground nesting Hoplitis sordida.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) erzurumensis Tkalcu 2000Turkey; Erzurum.On <strong>the</strong> wing from <strong>the</strong> second decade <strong>of</strong> June in<strong>to</strong> early July. Flowers visit records are for O. sativa, M.sativa and T. pratense.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) fabrei Van der Zanden 1987Continental Greece, Corfu.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in May and early June in Greece where widespread.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) fer<strong>to</strong>ni (Pérez 1890)Israel. Palestine. Egypt.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) flabellifera(Morice 1901)Turkey; Icel, Erzurum. Syria. Jordan. Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) fossulata(Mocsáry 1883)Iran. A rarely recorded bee. The only specimen, male, originally placed in Stelis.Hoplitis (Annosmia) fulica (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Van.Hoplitis (Megalosmia) fulva (Eversmann 1852)Central and eastern Turkey. Syria. Jordan.Active in June and July in Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) furcula (Morawitz 1875)Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey; Amasya.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) galbula (Warncke 1991)Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Turkey, Hakkari.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) gallinula (Warncke 1991)Central and eastern Turkey. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing late July and August above 2000 mtrs.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) garzetta (Warncke 1991)Continental Greece. Turkey; Adiyaman, Hakkari, Konya, Bitlis.147


Hoplitis (Annosmia) gentilis (Warncke 1991)Turkey, Konya.Hoplitis (Pla<strong>to</strong>smia) ger<strong>of</strong>ita (Warncke 1990)Israel. Palestine.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) graeca (Tkalcu 2000)Central Continental Greece; Attica.Subspecies H. g. ionica on Turkey.Hoplitis (Prionohoplitis) grossepunctata (Kohl 1905)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Nevsehir.Both sexes are on <strong>the</strong> wing in July at elevations <strong>of</strong> up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs in eastern Turkey.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) grumi (Morawitz 1894)Turkey; Erzurum, Gürün, Urgüp..A visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Onobrychis viciifolia which is a well – studied important forage legume. Females on <strong>the</strong>wing in June.Hoplitis (Micreriades) haemi Tkalcu 2000Hoplitis (Chlidoplitis) heinrichi Van der Zanden 1980Turkey; Urfa, Birecik.A rarely recorded species. In eastern Turkey both sexes are on <strong>the</strong> wing during June.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) helouanensis (Friese 1899)Jordan. Palestine. Israel. Egypt; Sinai.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) hemisphaerica (Alfken 1935)Syria. Jordan. Israel. Palestine.In flight during April and May in Syria.Hoplitis (Annosmia) hierichonica (Mavromoustakis 1949)Israel. Palestine. Jordan.An endemic bee found from <strong>the</strong> Lower Jordan Valley <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Sea.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) holmboei (Mavromoustakis 1948)Continental Greece. Cyprus.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April on Cyprus, recorded visiting Onosma fruticosum.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) homalocera Van der Zanden 1991Israel. Jordan. Palestine.Hoplitis (Annosmia) idaensis (Warncke 1991)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean Greece on Crete. Turkey; Adiyaman.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) idalia (Mavromoustakis 1948)Continental Greece. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey; Izmir, Erzurum, Van.148


Recorded at Centaurea iberica in Turkey. Females on <strong>the</strong> wing during July in Izmir.On Cyprus recorded at Centaurea hyalolepis and Scolymus hispanicus.Hoplitis (Chlidoplitis) illustris Van der Zanden 1980Turkey.Both sexes recorded up <strong>to</strong> 1900 mtrs during June and July.Hoplitis (Micreriades) illyrica (Noskiewicz 1926)Continental Greece. Lesbos.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) improceros Van der Zanden 1998Palestine. Israel.Males noted in <strong>the</strong> Red Sea Region and Arava during March.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) iranica (Warncke 1991)Iran, Fars.Hoplitis (Annosmia) israelica (Warncke 1991)Israel. Palestine. Jordan. Iran.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) jakovlevi (Radoszkowski 1874)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzurum. Iran.Flower record visits for Carduus and Cirsium spp.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) jejuna Popov 1952Subspecies H. j. argentea Van der Zanden in Iran; Khuzestan.Females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in late July.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) jerichoensis (Van der Zanden 1996)Palestine. Israel.Males active in <strong>the</strong> Jordan Valley during March and mid April.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) jheringi (Ducke 1898)Egypt.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) karakalensis (Popov 1936)Iran.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) laevifrons (Morawitz 1872)Turkey; Erzurum, Kars. A Continental European species.On <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> July. Recorded visiting flowers in <strong>the</strong> genera Salix, Cirsium, Anchusa andCarduus.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) laeviscutum (Alfken 1935)Turkey; Mersin, Urfa, Konya, Nevsehir, Erzurum, Hakkari. Palestine. Israel. A Central Asian bee.Mavromoustakis reported this species active during May in <strong>the</strong> Levant.149


Hoplitis (Hoplitis) lapidaria (Morawitz 1877)Turkey; Icel, Nevsehir.Hoplitis (Micreriades) lebanotica (Mavromoustakis 1955)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Lebanon.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May and June.Hoplitis (Annosmia) leiocephala (Mavromoustakis 1954)Israel. Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing March and April.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) leucomelana (Kirby 1802)Central and eastern Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late May <strong>to</strong> early July. Flower visits reported include Lotus corniculatus, Melilotus<strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Latyrus sp and Convolvulus sp.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) libanensis (Morice 1901)Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) ligurica (Morawitz 1876)Continental Greece, Thrace. Corfu. Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey; Erzincan, Icel, Konya. Syria. Palestine.Israel. Iran. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing in April and May on Cyprus, where Mavromoustakis gives flower records for An<strong>the</strong>misarvensis, Calendula persica and Achillea san<strong>to</strong>lina.Nests within <strong>the</strong> dried stems <strong>of</strong> Rubus.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) limassolica (Mavromoustakis 1937)Cyprus. Sou<strong>the</strong>asternTurkey. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.This bee is abroad from March <strong>to</strong> May on Cyprus, recorded visiting Onosma fruticosum, Echium,Anchusa hybrida and Hyacinthus trifoliatus. Makes a nest <strong>of</strong> four cells, separated by doublepartitions, in a dried stem <strong>of</strong> Asphodelus, recorded by Mavromoustakis, and considered by him <strong>to</strong> be arare species.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April in Palestine and Israel.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) linguaria (Morawitz 1876)Turkey; Nevsehir.Both sexes found upon <strong>the</strong> wing during July <strong>to</strong> 1050mtrs.Hoplitis (Chlidoplitis) lysholmi Friese 1899Continental Greece. Aegean islands on Lesbos and Rhodes. Turkey; Antalya, Sivas. Syria. Lebanon.Israel. Palestine.In <strong>the</strong> Levant found on <strong>the</strong> wing during April.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) manicata (Morice 1901)Continental Greece. Corfu.Crete. North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey; Isparta, Amasya. Morerecently well recorded from Ankara.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June and July in Ankara and o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong> Turkey..150


Hoplitis (Micreriades) mazzuccoi (Schwarz & Gusenleitner 2005)Turkey.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>sia) meyeri (Benoist 1934)Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) minor (Morawitz 1877)Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Syria. A scarcely recorded Caucasian bee.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) mitis (Nylander 1852)Continental Greece.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) Mocsaryi (Friese 1895)Continental Greece. Turkey. Recorded from Turkey by Friese and Kohl during <strong>the</strong> early 20 th Century,but appears <strong>to</strong> be little recorded generally.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) mollis Tkalcu 2000Turkey; Erzurum. Jordan.Flight period early May in<strong>to</strong> July. Flower visits recorded for Turkey are O. viciifolia and M. sativa.The species is common at Erzurum and an important pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se two plant species (Ozbek1979).Hoplitis (Hoplitis) monstrabilis Tkalcu 2000Turkey; Erzurum.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) moricei (Friese 1899)Jordan. Israel. Palestine.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) mucida (Dours 1873)Israel. Palestine.Hoplitis (Annosmia) mutica Warncke 1991Central and eastern Turkey.Hoplitis (Bytinskia) negevensis (Warncke 1991)Israel.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) nigrocolor (Van der Zanden 1991)Egypt. Libya.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) nitidula (Morawitz 1877)Iran.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) obtusa (Friese 1899)Continental Greece; Attica, Thrace. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Rhodes. Crete. Turkey; Konya.Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Recorded visiting Knautia integrifolia in Greece.151


Hoplitis (Chlidoplitis) onychophora (Mavromoustakis 1939)Turkey. Palestine. Israel.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Palestine.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) ozbeki Tkalcu 2000Turkey; Erzurum.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) pallicornis (Friese 1895)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Samos. Rhodes. Patmos. Lindos. Crete. Widespread Turkey. Palestine.Israel. Jordan.Active during May and June.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) papaveris (Latreille 1799)Continental Greece, North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey; Erzurum.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May in Greece.Hoplitis (Microhoplitis) paralias (Mavromoustakis 1954)Palestine. Israel.Appears from mid April in<strong>to</strong> May.Hoplitis (Annosmia) parana (Warncke 1991)Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Bytinskia) parasitica (Warncke 1991)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Hoplitis (Micreriades) parnesica (Mavromoustakis 1958)Continental Greece.Mavromoustakis reported that both sexes <strong>of</strong> this bee flew in June at Mount Parnes Greece, visiting alow-growing Lamiale with violet flowers.Hoplitis (Annosmia) peralba Van der Zanden 1992Egypt.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) Perezi (Fer<strong>to</strong>n 1895)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey; Sivas, Kars, Nevsehir.On <strong>the</strong> wing from June in<strong>to</strong> August. Visits recorded <strong>to</strong> O. sativa, M. sativa, M. <strong>of</strong>ficinalis andLythrum.Hoplitis (Coloplitis) persica (Warncke 1991)Iran; Tehran.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) pici (Friese 1899)Continental Greece. Greek Aegean on Lesbos and Rhodes. Crete. Turkey. Syria.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April and May.The females <strong>of</strong> this bee have hooked bristles on <strong>the</strong> galea <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> proboscis which enable <strong>the</strong>m <strong>to</strong>extract pollen from <strong>the</strong>ir floral host Muscari, a genus which has an<strong>the</strong>rs hidden within a narrowmou<strong>the</strong>dcorolla. On Rhodes <strong>the</strong> host flower is specifically Muscari comosum. (Müller 2006).152


Hoplitis (Anthocopa) picicornis (Morawitz 1895)Turkey; Erzincan. Iran.Males on <strong>the</strong> wing during mid June in eastern Turkey.Hoplitis (Micreriades) pisidiae Tkalcu 2000Turkey.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) pomarina (Warncke 1991)Continental Greece; Stavros. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) praestans (Morawitz 1894)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Widespread Turkey. Jordan. Israel. Palestine. Egypt.Males recorded during June in Turkey.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) pulchella (Pérez 1895)Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Both sexes active during March and April.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) quadrispina (Tkalcu 1992)Libya.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) quinquespinosa (Friese 1899)Israel, En Gedi, Bersheva, Jericho.Hoplitis (Pla<strong>to</strong>smia) recticauda (Stanek 1969)Turkey, Antalya, Icel, Erzurum, Hakkari.On <strong>the</strong> wing in early and mid June..Hoplitis rhodoensis ferina Warncke 1988Continental Greece, Thrace.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) ridibunda (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Antalya, Elazig, Mus,.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) scutellaris (Morawitz 1868)Continental Greece, Thrace. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing April and May in Cyprus, visiting Marrubium vulgare apolum and An<strong>the</strong>mis. Active inApril in Palestine and Israel, recorded visiting Pallenis.Hoplitis (Annosmia) segura (Warncke 1991)Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) semilinguaria Tkalcu 1992Southwestern Iran.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) semirubra (Friese 1899)Syria. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.153


Endemic <strong>to</strong> this part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Middle East and reported by Mavromoustakis as widespread in <strong>the</strong> LowerJordan Valley <strong>to</strong> Jerusalem. On <strong>the</strong> wing during May and recorded visiting Centaurea.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) serrilabris (Morawitz 1875)Turkey; Erzurum. Iran; Isfahan.Zanden reported males on <strong>the</strong> wing in Iran during September.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) singularis (Morawitz 1875)Turkey; Konya. Israel. Palestine.Hoplitis (Annosmia) sordida (Benoist 1929)Israel. Palestine. Egypt.Mavromoustakis found females <strong>of</strong> this bee <strong>to</strong> be widespread and common in parts <strong>of</strong> Israel, nesting inhard sandy soil close <strong>to</strong> stands <strong>of</strong> Echium. This bee is an oligolege, possibly <strong>of</strong> Echium sericeum.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) stellaris Warncke 1991Continental Greece, Corinth. Western and eastern Turkey; Denizli, Van.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) subbutea (Warncke 1991)Continental Greece, Peloponnesos. Turkey, Adiyaman eastwards. Palestine. Israel, Mount Hermon.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) tenuispina (Alfken 1937)Continental Greece. Turkey; Konya.Males recorded during June from both Greece and Turkey, up <strong>to</strong> 950 mtrs in Attica.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) tergestensis (Ducke 1897)Continental Greece, Thrace. Egypt.Subspecies H. t. remota Tkalcu in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Hoplitis (Hoplitis) testaceozonata (Alfken 1935)Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Megahoplitis) tigrina (Morawitz 1871)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) tricolor (Saunders 1908)Jordan.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) tridentata (Dufour & Perris 1840)Continental Greece. Central and eastern Turkey. Iran. Egypt.Males on <strong>the</strong> wing from June in Sparta, Greece. Recorded late June <strong>to</strong> Late July in Turkey, visitingflowers <strong>of</strong> Onobrychis viciifolia, Medicago sativa, Anchusa, Echium italicum, Carduus, Carthamuslanatus and Cirsium.Hoplitis (Pentaden<strong>to</strong>smia) tringa (Warncke 1991)Central and eastern Turkey.Hoplitis (Annosmia) uncaticornis (Stanek 1969)154


Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Syria.Warncke describes subspecies H. u. cursoria from Turkey; Sanliurfa. Syria.Males abroad during June in Turkey.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) unispina (Alfken 1935)Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Palestine. Israel.Mavromoustakis reported this bee active in April from Palestine and Israel. On <strong>the</strong> wing during Apriland May in Greece.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) urfensis (Van der Zanden 1984)Turkey; Urfa. Syria.A scarcely recorded bee. Both sexes active during June in Turkey.Hoplitis (Annosmia) verhoeffi (Mavromoustakis 1954)Jordan. Israel. Palestine.Both sexes found on <strong>the</strong> wing from mid April <strong>to</strong> mid May.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) verruciventris (Morawitz 1886)Turkey, Kirsehir.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) villosa (Schenck 1853)Continental Greece; Attica. Turkey; Erzurum. Lebanon.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Greece.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) wadicola (Alfken 1935)Turkey. Palestine. Israel.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) wahrmani (Mavromoustakis 1948)Palestine. Israel.From April <strong>to</strong> June common, an oligolege <strong>of</strong> Centaurea. Mavromoustakis records this fossorial beemaking shallow gallery nests in hard red sands<strong>to</strong>ne soils. The cells lined with fragments <strong>of</strong> Oeno<strong>the</strong>rapetals. The species is figured in Mavromoustakis (1948) p218.Hoplitis (Alcidamea) xanthoprymna (Warncke 1991)Turkey, Konya.Hoplitis (Anthocopa) yermasoyiae (Mavromoustakis 1938)Subspecies H. y. corcyracaea Tkalcu on Continental Greece; Attica and Peloponnesos. Corfu, NorthAegean on Thassos, Lesbos. The nominate subspecies H. y. yermasoyiae Mavromoustakis 1938 ison Cyprus. Lebanon and also Turkey; Konya, Sivas..Subspecies H. y. asiae Tkalcu reported in Turkey; Antalya, Erzurum.Subspecies asiae on <strong>the</strong> wing in June and July in eastern Turkey where recorded visiting O. sativa andM. <strong>of</strong>ficinalis.Recorded visiting Scabiosa brachiata during late June on Continental Greece.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on Cyprus from March <strong>to</strong> May, nesting on <strong>the</strong> ground with <strong>the</strong>irmines lined with fragments <strong>of</strong> Cistus petals. Flower visits recorded <strong>the</strong>re for Cistus villosus creticus,An<strong>the</strong>mis, Convolvulus and Vicia cracca elegans.155


Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) bidentata (Morawitz 1876)The nomínate H. b. bidentata in Greece, Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Lesbos.Subspecies H. b. pallens (Tkalcu) Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Jordan. Egypt.In <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey pallens on <strong>the</strong> wing during August in Provinces Erzurum, Antalya, Aydin, Agri,Erzurum, Van and Kars where flower genus records are Carduus, Onopordum and Centaurea iberica,C. glastifolia, C. solstitialis, Eryngium billardieri, Echium vulgare and Arctium lappa.Found <strong>to</strong> be widespread on <strong>the</strong> wing in Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia during July and August.Hoplosmia (Hoplosmia) croatica (Friese 1893)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Females recorded during late August in eastern Turkey and both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in Istanbul duringJuly. This species is also a summer bee in Greece.Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) distinguenda (Tkalcu 1974)Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.Recorded visiting Onopordum in eastern Turkey.Hoplosmia (Hoplosmia) elegans Tkalcü 1992Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) hermonensis Tkalcu 1992Palestine. Israel.Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) ligurica (Morawitz 1868)Continental Greece and Corfu. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Palestine. Israel.Jordan. Iran.Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) olgae (Tkalcu 1978)Turkey; Nevsehir. Syria.Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) padri (Tkalcü 1974)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Hoplosmia (Paranthocopa) pinguis (Pérez 1895)Subspecies H. p. carbo Zanden 1994 occurs Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) scutellaris (Morawitz 1868)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey; Icel. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.Hoplosmia (Hoplosmia) spinigera (Latreille 1811)Continental Greece. Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes.Subspecies H. s. pallens Tkalcu Turkey, Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April in <strong>the</strong> Levant.Hoplosmia (Hoplosmia) spinulosa (Kirby 1802)Turkey; Agri, Aydin, Erzurum.A summer bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in<strong>to</strong> mid September. Recorded at Carduus and Onopordum in Turkey.156


Hoplosmia (Odontanthocopa) warnckei Tkalcu 1992<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Ochreriades fasciatus (Friese 1899)Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Described in <strong>the</strong> male sex from Jericho, The male reported active during May in Syria.Mavromoustakis discovered <strong>the</strong> female on <strong>the</strong> wing in Damascus in July. Present in Jerusalem. A raregenus <strong>of</strong> two species with a fur<strong>the</strong>r species in Namibia.Osmia (Helicosmia) aeruginosa Warncke 1988Continental Greece. Turkey; Konya, Hakkari.Osmia (Helicosmia) alfkenii Ducke 1899Israel; En Gedi. Jordan; Petra. Egypt; Wadi Um Assad.A desertic bee apparent from <strong>the</strong> early season flight period, both sexes apparent from late January in<strong>to</strong>March.Osmia (Pyrosmia) amathusica Mavromoustakis 1937Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey, Syria. Jordan. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in June and reported at Salix in Turkey.The flight time appears <strong>to</strong> be earlier south <strong>of</strong> Turkey in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Mediterranean islands and <strong>the</strong>Levant. In Cyprus females emerge during March and Mavromoustakis reported this bee nesting inApril, cells constructed from tiny fragments <strong>of</strong> s<strong>to</strong>ne mixed with masticated leaf fragments and asecreted material were placed in crevices in a s<strong>to</strong>ne. Females are active on Rhodes also during Apriland early May and in Syria during April.Osmia (Hemiosmia) anceps Pérez 1895Libya.Osmia (Erythrosmia) andrenoides Spinola 1808Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey; Aydin, Erzurum. Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing with early individuals in March and <strong>the</strong>n <strong>to</strong> July on Cyprus, recorded at Teucrium poliummicropodioides, Echium, Medicago, Calendula persica and Linaria elatine.In Palestine and Israel recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in March and in June, flying <strong>to</strong> Ballota saxatalis.Osmia (Monosmia) apicata Smith 1853Continental Greece. Turkey. Jordan. Palestine. Israel. Iran.In eastern Turkey recorded from early June, visiting Centaurea.Osmia (Annosmia) aqabaensis Warncke 1991Jordan.Osmia (Helicosmia) aquila Warncke 1988<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Konya. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.Osmia (Osmia) ariadne Peters 1978Continental Greece. Crete.157


Osmia (Helicosmia) aurulenta (Panzer 1799)Continental Greece. Widespread Turkey. Lebanon. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May and June in Central and eastern Turkey, reported at Salix and Sinapisarvensis.In Lebanon both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in June, flying <strong>to</strong> Vicia tenuifolia.Osmia (Pyrosmia) avedata Warncke 1992Jordan. Israel.Osmia (Ozbekosmia) avosetta Warncke 1988Turkey; Antalya, Van. Jordan.A frequent visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> Onobrychis viciifolia in Turkey.Osmia (Osmia) bicornis (Linnaeus 1758)Subspecies O. b. globosa (Scopoli 1763) on Continental Greece; Thrace. Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Iran.The nominate subspecies also found in Iran.Osmia (Allosmia) bisch<strong>of</strong>fi Atanassov 1938Continental Greece. Turkey.A little known species.Osmia (Annosmia) bohdenheimeri Mavromoustakis 1949.Israel.Osmia (Helicosmia) breviata Warncke 1988Turkey, Konya, Sivas, Kars, Icel, Hakkari.Osmia (Metallinella) brevicornis (Fabricius 1798)Continental Greece. Lesbos.Cyprus. Turkey. Iran.Osmia (Helicosmia) brevipes Van der Zanden 1994Turkey; Sivas.Osmia (Melanosmia) bulgarica Friese 1922Continental Greece.Osmia (Helicosmia) caerulescens (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Iran.In Egypt <strong>the</strong> subspecies O. c. cyanea (Fabricius) occurs.In Turkey reported visiting Sisymbrium sophia, Sinapis arvensis and flowers in <strong>the</strong> genera Prunus,Carduus, Ajuga and Salvia.On <strong>the</strong> wing April and May <strong>to</strong> August on Cyprus, visiting Calendula persica, Onosmafruticosum,Vicia cracca elegans, Onobrychis venosa, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Salvia grandiflorawilleana, Nepeta troodi and Ballota nigra. Mavromoustakis reports this bee nesting in <strong>the</strong> dry stems<strong>of</strong> Carob trees.Recorded from June <strong>to</strong> August in Turkey and widely polylectic.Osmia (Pyrosmia) cephalotes Latreille 1811158


Libya.Subspecies O. c. longiceps Morawitz 1876 Continental Greece, North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes.Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.In flight from March <strong>to</strong> June on Cyprus, where recorded visiting Calendula persica, Bellis perennis,Echium sericeum, Salvia, Trifolium physodes and Hyacinthus trifoliatus.Osmia (Annosmia) cercomela Warncke 1991Jordan.Osmia (Osmia) cerinthidis Morawitz 1876Continental Greece. Widespread Turkey. Iran.Recorded visiting Onobrychis viciifolia, Sinapis arvensis, Salix, Prunus and Malus.Osmia (Helicosmia) chrysae<strong>to</strong>s Warncke 1988Turkey, Icel, Kars, Hakkari.Osmia (Hemiosmia) chrysolepta Haeseler 2005Israel. Palestine. Jordan.Osmia (Annosmia) chukar Warncke 1991Turkey at Hakkari.Osmia (Helicosmia) cinctella Dours 1873Continental Greece. Crete.Osmia (Helicosmia) cinerea Warncke 1988Turkey, Adiyaman, Nevsehir, Hakkari.Osmia (Neosmia) cinnabarina Pérez 1895Palestine. Israel.Osmia (Helicosmia) clypearis Morawitz 1871Continental Greece and Corfu.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April and May in Greece.Subspecies O. c. acuta Warncke 1988 Turkey; Sivas, Kars. Hakkari. Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Osmia (Osmia) cornuta (Latreille 1805)The nominate subspecies on Continental Greece.In <strong>the</strong> North Aegean on Lesbos and on Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies O. c. neoregaena Mavromoustakisoccurs.Mavromoustakis reports this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in March, visiting Prunus dulcis blossom and nesting inholes in old walls.Subspecies O. c. divergens Friese in Iran.In Turkey, Iran and possibly Crete <strong>the</strong> fur<strong>the</strong>r subspecies, O. c. quasirufa Peters 1978 is found,widespread through Turkey.Osmia (Helicosmia) cyanescens Morawitz 1875Continental Greece.159


Osmia (Pyrosmia) cyanoxantha Pérez 1879Widespread through Continental Greece. Lesbos, Rhodes. Samos. Skiathos, Kalymnos, Chios.Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Jordan. Palestine. Israel.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> Peloponnesos from Late April in<strong>to</strong> May at 1900 mtrs or higher. Asimilar appearance on <strong>the</strong> Aegean islands, from April in<strong>to</strong> June.Females appear during April in Jordan and Israel, May in Syria and in eastern Turkey both sexes areapparent in June.Visits Onobrychis viciifolia in Turkey.Mavromoustakis noted this species having a strong affinity with leguminosae.The bee makes a nest on <strong>to</strong>p <strong>of</strong> s<strong>to</strong>nes, a group <strong>of</strong> two or three cells created from a glandular adhesivesecretion mixed with s<strong>to</strong>ne fragments and masticated petal pieces. The cells are <strong>the</strong>n covered with anadditional seal made <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> same material.Osmia (Pyrosmia) cypricola Mavromoustakis 1937Continental Greece. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey.Flower visit records for Salix, Carduus and Onobrychis viciifolia In Turkey.In Cyprus Mavromoustakis reported this bee nesting during April, <strong>the</strong> nests being placed in cavitiesformed between a rock and <strong>the</strong> underlying soil surface. In Cyprus <strong>the</strong> nesting habitat is s<strong>to</strong>ny hillsideswith abundant stands <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> host plant Onobrychis venosa.Also recorded visiting Astragalus cyprius, Salvia and Hyacinthus trifoliatus.Males are reported on <strong>the</strong> wing in Turkey during June. This disjunction in <strong>the</strong> flight phenology <strong>of</strong>Megachilidae between Cyprus and Turkey is apparent from accounts <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> bee species andmay be caused by <strong>the</strong> montane wider distribution and more nor<strong>the</strong>rn latitudes <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> main Continentalpopulations. In much <strong>of</strong> this range <strong>the</strong> habitat occupied is above 1000 mtrs.Osmia (Osmia) cyrenaica Peters 1978Libya.Osmia (Helicosmia) damascena Pérez 1911Syria, Damascus.Osmia (Pyrosmia) derasa Pérez 1895Libya.The female <strong>of</strong> this bee noted from Cyrenaica during April.Osmia (Hemiosmia) difficilis Morawitz 1875Central and eastern Turkey. Israel. Palestine. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Reported visiting Centaurea solstitialis, Onobrychis viciifolia and Medicago sativa in Turkey.Osmia (Pyrosmia) dilaticornis Morawitz 1875Greece at eastern Aegean on Rhodes. Central and eastern Turkey. Jordan. Israel. Palestine.Females recorded during May from Greece.Osmia (Helicosmia) dimidiata Morawitz 1870Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Central and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Iran.Subspecies O. d. assoma<strong>to</strong>sana Le G<strong>of</strong>f occurs on Crete. A fur<strong>the</strong>r subspecies, O. d. rossica Friese1899 is reported from <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Van.160


This bee is found on <strong>the</strong> wing from March, mainly from April <strong>to</strong> June on Cyprus, visiting Cirsiumsyriacum, Calendula persica, Centaurea hyalolepis, Statice sinuata, Echium sericeum, Scolymushispanicus and Marrubium vulgare apolum.Recorded in April from Palestine and Israel.In Turkey recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in June and July where found in Ankara and many Provinceseastwards.Osmia (Helicosmia) diomedia Warncke 1988Turkey, Hakkari.Osmia (Helicosmia) dives Mocsáry 1877Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.A fossorial species, on <strong>the</strong> wing March and April throughout much <strong>of</strong> this range although in<strong>to</strong> Mayon Crete and reported females on <strong>the</strong> wing from June in Turkey, presumably at altitude. This moreextensive phenology in such a bee for a widespread distribution in our region can be related <strong>to</strong> a<strong>to</strong>lerance <strong>of</strong> wide altitudinal conditions across <strong>the</strong> latitudinal gradient.Visits noted <strong>to</strong> Chrysan<strong>the</strong>mum coronaria in Upper Galilee and flies up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs at <strong>the</strong> CarmelMassif beyond Haifa. Flower visits on Cyprus recorded for Cirsium syriacum, Centaurea hyalolepis,Scolymus hispanicus and Marrubium vulgare apolum.Osmia (Pyrosmia) dlabolae Tkalcu 1978Continental Greece. Rhodes. Lindos. Turkey; Malatya, Sivas. Syria; Homs. Israel.Females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from April in<strong>to</strong> June. Noted visiting Salvia fruticosa in Israel duringlate April.Osmia (Annosmia) elaziga Warncke 1991Turkey, Ankara.Osmia (Erythrosmia) erythrogastra Fer<strong>to</strong>n 1905Continental Greece; Sterea Hellas and Thessaly. Cyprus. Turkey.Males appear on <strong>the</strong> wing from mid March.Osmia (Helicosmia) fasciata Latreille 1811Syria. Israel; Sinai. Jordan.Males on <strong>the</strong> wing during June in Turkey.Osmia (Pyrosmia) ferruginea Latreille 1811Cyprus. Jordan. Palestine. Israel. Egypt. Libya.First males appear in February but mainly flies in March <strong>to</strong> May on Cyprus, visiting Onobrychisvenosa, Vicia, Medicago marina, Hymenocarpus and Teucrium polium micropodioides. Foundnesting in <strong>the</strong> empty snail shells <strong>of</strong> Helicella protea larnacensis, Helix cincta chassyana andEobania vermiculata.This bee is out by February in Palestine.Osmia (Pyrosmia) forticornis Van der Zanden 1989Continental Greece; Sterea Hellas and Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos. Widespread Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Turkey from April <strong>to</strong> June.161


Osmia (Helicosmia) frieseana Ducke 1899Turkey. Libya.This species is reported from one site in Turkey,Osmia (Annosmia) fulica Warncke 1991Turkey.Osmia (Pyrosmia) gallarum Spinola 1808Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey.Recorded at Salix in early May in Turkey.In Greece recorded from montane habitat above 1800 mtrs during May <strong>to</strong> July.Osmia (Pyrosmia) gemmea Pérez 1895Syria. Palestine. Israel. Egypt. Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing in March.Active on <strong>the</strong> wing during March <strong>to</strong> mid April. This bee has been recorded nesting in <strong>the</strong> empty shell<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> snail Trochoidea cretica syrtica in Cyrenaica.Osmia (Annosmia) gentilis Warncke 1991Turkey, Konya.Osmia (Tergosmia) glareola Warncke 1988<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Van.Osmia (Neosmia) gracilicornis Pérez 1895Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in March.Osmia (Helicosmia) gutturalis Warncke 1988<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Hakkari. Israel. Palestine. Iran.Osmia (Pyrosmia) hebraea Benoist 1934Widespread Turkey. Cyprus. Jordan. Israel.Osmia (Helicosmia) heliaca Warncke 1988Turkey, Hakkari.Osmia (Pyrosmia) hellados Van der Zanden 1984Continental Greece, Corfu. North Aegean on Lesbos. Samos. Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. WidespreadTurkey. Jordan. Palestine. Israel.Appears during March in sou<strong>the</strong>rn parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> range such as Israel and <strong>the</strong> Peloponnesos and activein<strong>to</strong> June.Osmia (Pyrosmia) hermona Warncke 1992Turkey; Hakkari. Syria; Homs. Israel. Palestine.Osmia (Annosmia) hierichonica Mavromoustakis 1949Israel.162


Osmia (Hemiosmia) iberica Van der Zanden 1987Continental Greece.Osmia (Annosmia) idaensis Warncke 1991Greece on Crete. Turkey.Osmia (Helicosmia) indigotea Morawitz 1875Iraq.Osmia (Melanosmia) inermis (Zetterstedt 1838)Subspecies O. i. bulgarica Friese 1922 on Continental Greece.Active during <strong>the</strong> summer months if <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greek mountains.Osmia (Neosmia) jason Benoist 1929Continental Greece. Palestine. Israel.The male recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing at Mount Hermon, Israel, during May.Osmia (Pyrosmia) laticauda Stanek 1969Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey at Burdur, Icel, Hakkari.Recorded active from May <strong>to</strong> July.Osmia (Helicosmia) laticella Van der Zanden 1986Palestine. Israel. Egypt; Sinai.Schmiedeknecht collected examples from Wadi H<strong>of</strong>, Egypt and Priesner recorded both sexes fromWadi Digla. Friese noted that this bee visited Echium in Egypt.The peak flight period in Sinai and Israel is during April.Osmia (Helicosmia) latreillei Spinola 1806The nomínate subspecies in Continental Greece and Rhodes. The species is present on Lesbos andmay <strong>the</strong>re belong <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies given below.In Cyprus. Turkey; Aydin. Syria, Jordan. Israel. Palestine. Egypt. Libya subspecies O. l.iberoafricana Peters occurs.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from February <strong>to</strong> May on Cyprus, visiting Malva,Chrysan<strong>the</strong>mum segetum, Achillea, An<strong>the</strong>mis and Calendula persica. Males are abroad from lateFebruary in Jordan and <strong>the</strong> female flight season in Libya and <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean extends from Marchin<strong>to</strong> May.Osmia (Helicosmia) lazulina Benoist 1928Palestine. Israel. Libya.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in May.Osmia (Helicosmia) leaiana (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Turkey; Erzurum, Tunceli, Kars.In Turkey on <strong>the</strong> wing from early August <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> second half <strong>of</strong> September, visiting Cirsium,Onopordum, Eryngium and Salvia.Osmia (Annosmia) leiocephala Mavromoustakis 1954163


Israel.Osmia (Allosmia) lhotelleriei Pérez 1887Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Osmia (Helicosmia) livida Tkalcu 1978Widespread Turkey.Reported on <strong>the</strong> wing from early June <strong>to</strong> mid July. Flower records are for Onobrychis viciifolia andCentaurea solstitialis.Osmia (Pyrosmia) lobata Friese 1899Palestine. Israel.females recorded active during May.Osmia longiceps Morawitz 1876Continental Greece, Thrace.Osmia (Orien<strong>to</strong>smia) maxillaris Morawitz 1875Subspecies O. m. scheherazade Peters 1978 on Turkey,In Iran <strong>the</strong> subspecies O. m. dinazade Peters occurs.Both sexes recorded at Medicago sativa in Turkey and males active in June.Osmia (Helicosmia) mediana Engel 2006Iran.Found at 1200 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Alborz Mountains.Osmia (Helicosmia) melanogaster Spinola 1808Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran. Jordan.Subspecies O. m. subaenea Pérez occurs Egypt. Libya.Subspecies O. m. carniolica Morawitz 1872 recorded from Cyprus and Nor<strong>the</strong>rn and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey;Zonguldak, Beysehir, Icel.Flower visits <strong>to</strong> Cirsium arvense and Centaurea glastifolia recorded from Turkey where a summerbee active in June and July. In Jordan recorded visiting Almond and Cherry orchards.Osmia (Allosmia) melanura Morawitz 1872Continental Greece; Thrace. Turkey; Antalya.Osmia (Helicosmia) milenae Tkalcu 1992Turkey; Mus.Osmia (Helicosmia) mirhiji Mavromoustakis 1957Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon.Osmia (Pyrosmia) moreensis Van der Zanden 1984Continental Greece. Lesbos. Chios. Kos. Lindos. Samos. Rhodes. Crete. Turkey. Syria. Palestine.Israel.Males first appear during February in Israel but in general both sexes are active during April and Mayin much <strong>of</strong> this range.164


Osmia (Osmia) mustelina Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey (Eskisehir, Bursa, Baysehir). Lebanon. Palestine. Israel.Subspecies O. m. griseohirta in Turkey (Icel, Kars, Gumushane, Mut) and Iran.Reported visiting Anchusa sp. in June when females are on <strong>the</strong> wing <strong>to</strong> 2300 mtrs.Males noted during late March from Israel, Mount Meron.Osmia (Osmia) mutensis Peters 1978<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Icel.Osmia (Annosmia) mutica Warncke 1991Turkey.Osmia (Pyrosmia) nana Morawitz 1874Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Widespread in Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Jordan. Israel.Palestine.Mostly recorded during April and May. On <strong>the</strong> wing in May on Cyprus, visiting Compositae.Osmia (Pyrosmia) nicosiana Mavromoustakis 1939Cyprus.On <strong>the</strong> wing from February <strong>to</strong> May on Cyprus, recorded visiting Onobrychis venosa, Hymenocarpuscircinnatus and o<strong>the</strong>r flowers in <strong>the</strong> Leguminosae.A snail shell nesting bee using <strong>the</strong> empty shells <strong>of</strong> Eobania vermiculata, Helicella proteamavromoustakisi and Helicella cyparissias.Osmia (Pyrosmia) nigricollis Warncke 1992Turkey, Hakkari.Osmia (Osmia) nigrohirta Friese 1899Continental Greece. Widespread Turkey. Lebanon. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in early July at least.Recorded at Centaurea spp. in Turkey.Osmia (Helicosmia) niveata (Fabricius 1804)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Widespread through Turkey including Istanbul, Ankara <strong>to</strong>Hakkari. Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Iran. Egypt. Libya.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing during April and May on Cyprus.Reported July and August from Turkey.Osmia (Helicosmia) niveocincta Pérez 1879Continental Greece.Osmia (Helicosmia) notata (Fabricius 1804)Israel. Palestine. Egypt. Libya.Osmia (Allosmia) nuda Friese 1899Turkey; Bursa.165


Osmia (Helicosmia) ocularis Warncke 1988Turkey, Hakkari.Osmia (Helicosmia) onocrotala Warncke 1988Turkey; Hatay, Kars, Hakkari.Osmia (Tergosmia) ononidis Fer<strong>to</strong>n 1897Turkey, Ankara, Konya, Erzurum. Egypt.Osmia (Pyrosmia) oramara Warncke 1992Turkey; Hakkari. Iran; Fars.Osmia (Helicosmia) palmyrae Van der Zanden 1998Syria; PalmyraRecorded at 400 mtrs during April.Osmia (Annosmia) parana Warncke 1991Israel.Osmia (Melanosmia) parietina Curtis 1828Continental Greece. Turkey; Erzurum.Osmia (Helicosmia) pennata Warncke 1988Turkey, Icel, Hakkari.Osmia (Helicosmia) peregrina Warncke 1988Turkey, Urfa.Osmia (Pyrosmia) polkruga Warncke 1992Jordan.Osmia (Tergosmia) pratincola Warncke 1988Turkey; Agri, Ankara, Sivas, Elazig.Osmia (Pyrosmia) punica Pérez 1895Egypt. Libya.Osmia (Pyrosmia) ramona Warncke 1992Israel. Palestine.Osmia (Tergosmia) rhodoensis (Van der Zanden 1983)Continental Greece; Delphi. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Samos. Rhodes. Widespread Turkey.Found <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs in Greece and Turkey from April in<strong>to</strong> August.Warncke describes subspecies O. r. ferina from Continental Greece, Delphi. The subspecies O. r.arquata Warncke is widespread Turkey as well as <strong>the</strong> nominate subspecies.Present in Jordan.Osmia (Osmia) rufa (Linnaeus 1758)166


Continental Greece. Cyprus.O. rufa cornigera (Rossi 1790) is reported from Turkey; Bursa, Erzurum, Adana, Antalya.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee during March <strong>to</strong> June on Cyprus, found up <strong>to</strong> 2,500 ft, visitingViccia, Fabia, Prunus domestica, Prunus dulcis, Pyrus communis, Sinapis alba, Calendula persica,Quercus infec<strong>to</strong>ria, Hyacinthus trifoliatus, Anagyrus foetida and Asphodelus in various habitats,including montane open hillsides.A member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Almond and Cherry pollina<strong>to</strong>r community in Jordan.Osmia (Allosmia) rufohirta Latrielle 1811Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey; Antalya, Aydin, Denizli.Subspecies O. r. soror Pérez in Palestine. Israel. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April in Palestine and Israel.Osmia (Allosmia) rufotibialis Friese 1920Israel. Palestine. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April, noted visiting Centaurea and Lepidium.Osmia (Helicosmia) saxatilis Warncke 1988Central and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Osmia (Pyrosmia) saxicola Ducke 1899Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes. (On Crete, as subspecies O. s. riemanniWarncke). Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Israel during March and April. Recorded during May from Lebanon.Osmia (Annosmia) segura Warncke 1991Israel.Osmia (Helicosmia) sieversi Morawitz 1886Turkey. Syria. Iran.Females recorded from Syria during May and Turkey in early July.Osmia (Helicosmia) signata Erichson 1835Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Palestine. Israel.Jordan. Iran. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April. Mavromoustakis noted this bee nesting in <strong>the</strong> dry stems <strong>of</strong>Arundo donax.Both sexes active on <strong>the</strong> wing during July in Turkey.Osmia (Helicosmia) sogdiana Morawitz 1875Continental Greece. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Syria.females <strong>of</strong> this bee noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during April in Israel.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during June and July in Turkey, <strong>to</strong> 2550 mtrs.Osmia (Annosmia) sordida Benoist 1929Israel.Osmia (Helicosmia) subaenea Pérez 1895167


Egypt. Turkey.Osmia (Helicosmia) subcornuta Morawitz 1875Continental Greece, North Aegean on Lesbos. Chelmos. Samos. Crete. Turkey; Isparta, Adiyaman,Nevsehir, Hakkari. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Osmia (Pyrosmia) submicans Morawitz 1870Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Samos. Crete.Mostly on <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> Greek Aegean islands during April and May.Subspecies O. s. hebraea Benoist on Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Mavromoustakis noted this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing primarily during April and May on Cyprus, recorded atVicia cracca elegans, Hymenocarpus and Lithospermum hispidulum. However, Van der Zanden(1991) recorded males appearing <strong>the</strong>re in late February. On <strong>the</strong> wing in April in Palestine andgenerally this subspecies has a very scattered temporal distribution, recorded from late January in<strong>to</strong>June.Osmia (Allosmia) sybarita Smith 1853Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey; Icel. Palestine. Israel.Subspecies O. s. fossoria Pérez in Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during February <strong>to</strong> April on Cyprus, visiting Hymenocarpus, Vicia and o<strong>the</strong>r flowers in<strong>the</strong> Leguminosae.Recorded by Mavromoustakis nesting in empty snail shells <strong>of</strong> Helicella cretica sitiensis Malz.,Helicella protea mavromoustakisi Haas, Helicella larnacensis Kob., Helicella syrensiscarina<strong>to</strong>globosa Haas and Helicella candiota Mousson. The nest is sealed with a mixture containingleaf and shell fragments.Females on <strong>the</strong> wing during June in Turkey.The Chrysid wasp Chrysis dichroa Dahlbohm is recorded as a parasite <strong>of</strong> this bee.Osmia (Pyrosmia) tawildara Warncke 1992Turkey; Hakkari.Osmia (Tergosmia) tergestensis Ducke 1897Continental Greece.Subspecies O. t. ononidis Fer<strong>to</strong>n in Turkey. Egypt. A fur<strong>the</strong>r subspecies O.t. remota Tkalcu 1979 isrecorded for Turkey; Erzurum.Flower visits recorded for Onobrychis viciifolia, Centaurea solstitialis and Astragalus.Osmia (Pyrosmia) teunisseni Van der Zanden 1981Greek Aegean on Lesbos, Kos, Samos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.The male active during late April on Samos, when discovered <strong>the</strong>re by Teunissen. From March inIsrael and generally active during April widely in <strong>the</strong> range, in<strong>to</strong> May in Turkey. Noted at 1200 mtrsin Syria.Osmia (Melanosmia) thoracica Radoszkowski 1874Turkey; Erzurum.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing at from 1700 <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs during June.Osmia (Pyrosmia) tichodroma Tkalcu & 1992168


Continental Greece.Osmia (Neosmia) tingitana Benoist 1969Egypt and Libya. The subspecies O. t. secunda Peters also occurs in Libya.Osmia (Helicosmia) <strong>to</strong>rquata Warncke 1988Turkey; Hakkari.Osmia (Osmia) tricornis Latreille 1811Libya.Osmia (Helicosmia) tunensis (Fabricius 1787)Egypt. Libya.Osmia (Annosmia) uncaticornis Stanek 1969Turkey; Icel, Nevsehir, Konya, Sivas.Osmia (Helicosmia) ventralis (Panzer 1798)Turkey, Rize, Erzincan, Kars, Erzurum.Osmia (Annosmia) verhoeffi Mavromoustakis 1954Israel.Osmia (Pyrosmia) versicolor Latreille 1811Continental Greece. Lesbos. Kos. Lefkas. Lindos. Rhodes. Corfu. Crete.Subspecies O. v. viricephalica Warncke from Turkey eastwards <strong>to</strong> Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel.In Libya <strong>the</strong> subspecies O. v. corrusca occurs.Emergence begins in February and in<strong>to</strong> April in <strong>the</strong> Middle East. On <strong>the</strong> wing by March in Israelwhereas mainly during May and June in Greece and Turkey.In Greece recorded at up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs from Chelmos during June.Osmia (Pyrosmia) viridana Morawitz 1874Continental Greece; Zaklourou, Olympia. Corfu. North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes. Kos. Crete.Cyprus. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.A subspecies, O. v. mulleolus Van der Zanden 1984 is reported from eastern Turkey; Nevsehir,Erzurum. This subspecies is also in Central Continental Greece, females in <strong>the</strong> Pindos Range at 1850mtrs during August.On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> endemic subspecies O. v. nicosiana Mavromoustakis 1939 occurs, adults out duringMarch <strong>to</strong> May. Mavromoustakis recorded this bee as a snail shell nester, inhabiting <strong>the</strong> empty shells<strong>of</strong> Helicella cretica sitiensis Maltzan. The chrysid wasp Chrysis dichroa is a parasite <strong>of</strong> this bee.Flight times are from March and early April in Israel and Jordan and tending <strong>to</strong> be active in<strong>to</strong> June inGreece where probably <strong>the</strong> emergence times are later.Osmia (Melanosmia) xanthomelana (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece; Mount Olympos and montane nor<strong>the</strong>rn Peloponnesos.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) exenterata (Pérez 1895)Ozbek169


Turkey.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) glutinosa (Giraud 1871)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey; Artvin, Erzurum.Mavromoustakis noted this as a summer bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> open montane phrygana on Cyprus, visitingNepeta troodi and Salvia grandiflora willeana.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) humeralis (Pérez 1895)Turkey; Urfa. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia judaica (Mavromoustakis 1948)Palestine. Israel.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in late April.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Nanosmia) limbata (Benoist 1935)Turkey; Hakkari. Syria. Lebanon.An eastern Mediterranean bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> July at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 2300 mtrs.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Chelos<strong>to</strong>mopsis) longiceps (Friese 1899)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Mavromoustakis (1955) described and figured <strong>the</strong> male from Lebanon where it was recorded visitingCarduus in May.In Turkey females recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from late May <strong>to</strong> early July.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) magnicapitis (Stanek 1969)Turkey; Birecik, Urfa.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) mirabilis (Friese 1899)OzbekTurkey; Isparta, Aydin.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) monstrosa (Pérez 1895)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.On Cyprus both sexes active during March and April. Flowers visited are in <strong>the</strong> Family Leguminosaeand nests are constructed in small fissures in large s<strong>to</strong>nes.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) paradoxa (Friese 1899)Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing during March <strong>to</strong> May in Cyprus, visiting Sideritis curvidens, Hymenocarpus, and Echiumsericeum. Nests are constructed in <strong>the</strong> empty snail shells <strong>of</strong> Helicella protea mavromoustakisi Haasand Eobania vermiculata Müller.. Van der Zanden reported <strong>the</strong> female <strong>of</strong> this species on <strong>the</strong> wingduring June and July in Turkey; Konya.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Nanosmia) pulex (Benoist 1935)Palestine. Israel.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) sideritis Tkalcu 1978Continental Greece. Turkey; Sivas.170


The male noted on <strong>the</strong> wing in Greece during late April. The female noted in Turkey during Julywhen recorded at 1650 mtrs.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) stigmatica (Pérez 1895)Continental Greece. Corfu. Turkey.The female noted during May in Corfu.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) tauricola Popov 1961Turkey; Hakkari.Pro<strong>to</strong>smia (Pro<strong>to</strong>smia) tiflensis (Morawitz 1876)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Mavromoustakis reported this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in Greece during June and considered it <strong>to</strong> be a ra<strong>the</strong>rrare species.Pseudoheriades grandiceps Peters 1988Iran.Pseudoheriades moricei (Friese 1897)Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Egypt.Stenoheriades asiaticus (Friese 1921)Continental Greece, including Peleponessos, Attica, Mount Parnis and Thrace. North Aegean onLesbos. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing April <strong>to</strong> early June in Turkey and Greece..Stenoheriades eingeddicus Griswold 1994Israel. Jordan.Stenoheriades h<strong>of</strong>feri (Tkalcu 1983)Turkey; Icel.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing in mid May. Present in <strong>the</strong> Taurus Range.Stenosmia aravensis Van der Zanden 1992Syria. Israel. Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> Levant from mid February <strong>to</strong> mid April when both sexes have been noted flying <strong>to</strong>Tamarix.Stenosmia denticulata Van der Zanden 1992Palestine. Israel.Apparent during April and May.Stenosmia flavicornis (Morawitz 1877)Jordan; Fidan. A Caucasian bee.Stenosmia hartliebi (Friese 1899)Palestine. Israel. Egypt; Fayum, Helouan. Libya; Benghazi.171


Stenosmia jordanica (Warncke 1991)Jordan. Egypt.Stenosmia kotschisa (Warncke 1991)Turkey; Ankara.Wainia (Caposmia) eremoplana (Mavromoustakis 1949)Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Egypt.Recorded active during March and April.≈Tribe AnthidiiniNests are placed in <strong>the</strong> ground or in natural cavities such as hollow plant stems, fissures in rocks andsometimes nests are attached freely <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> surfaces <strong>of</strong> plants or rocks. Snail-shell nesting is recordedfor some species. Nest structures are comprised <strong>of</strong> plant resins, leaf fragments and fibres, plant hairsfrom stems and leaves and sometimes soil particles. Species can be ei<strong>the</strong>r oligolectic <strong>to</strong> family orgenus level or polylectic. The pattern <strong>of</strong> pollen and host plant preference and its relationship with <strong>the</strong>evolution <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Anthidini is given in Müller, A. (1996).Trachusa (Archianthidium) butea (Warncke 1980)Turkey; Siirt.Trachusa (Trachusa) byssina (Panzer 1798)Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Turkey. From Istanbul and Ankara <strong>to</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>asternProvinces. A montane species <strong>of</strong> high summer, on <strong>the</strong> wing up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs during July at MountOlympos.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Legumes; Papilionoideae.Trachusa (Paraanthidium) dumerlei (Warncke 1980)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Recorded visiting Onopordum, Centaurea and Cephalaria.Trachusa (Archianthidium) forcipata (Morawitz 1875)Turkey; Hatay, Erzurum.Trachusa (Paraanthidium) interrupta (Fabricius 1781)Central Continental Greece. Turkey. Syria.In Attica, Greece, recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in July, both sexes in numbers visiting Scabiosa maritima.This bee is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> Dipsacaceae.Recorded from many Turkish Provinces and flower records given for Vitex, Cirsium, Onopordum,Centaurea solstitialis, Melilotus <strong>of</strong>ficinalis and Cephalaria alpina. Many flower visiting records willrefer <strong>to</strong> nectar feeding.Trachusa (Archianthidium) laticeps (Morawitz 1873)172


Continental Greece; Epirus, Attica. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos, some smaller Greek islandsincluding Andros and Methoni. Widespread Turkey.Mavromoustakis recorded <strong>the</strong> subspecies T. l. ana<strong>to</strong>licum from Syria.A summer bee especially attracted <strong>to</strong> Legumes but also recorded visiting Vitex, Centaurea solstitialisand Cephalaria alpina.In Greece Mavromoustakis reports this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in June and July with all flower records <strong>the</strong>refor Acanthus spinosus.This bee is <strong>the</strong> host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> large Stelidine clep<strong>to</strong>parasite Stelis gigantea.Trachusa (Archianthidium) maxima (Friese 1931)Turkey; Taurus Mountains.Trachusa (Archianthidium) pubescens Morawitz 1872Nor<strong>the</strong>rn and Central Continental Greece. Widespread Turkey. Jordan. Iran.Subspecies T. p. verhoeffi Mavromoustakis occurs in Syria and Lebanon.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July in Turkey and in Iran where active up <strong>to</strong> 2800 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Elburz Range.This bee is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> Labiatae and <strong>the</strong>refore flower visit records <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Asteraceae, includingCarduus and Centaurea will refer <strong>to</strong> nectar ga<strong>the</strong>ring by ei<strong>the</strong>r sex.Trachusa (Archianthidium) superbum (Radoszkowski 1876)Turkey. Recorded from Ankara eastwards.It can be discovered on <strong>the</strong> wing from early May in<strong>to</strong> July. An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Legumes in <strong>the</strong>Papilionoideae.Anthidiellum crenulatum (Warncke 1981)Iran.The female noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during March.Anthidiellum judaeense (Mavromoustakis 1945)The nominate subspecies in Lebanon and Israel.The subspecies A. j. anale Pasteels 1969 occurs on Lesbos. Widespread Turkey.Females recorded from eastern Turkey in Mut, Pannukale and Kusadasi during <strong>the</strong> first half <strong>of</strong> Junewhere discovered by Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Josef Gusenleitner.Anthidiellum strigatum (Panzer 1805)Throughout Continental Greece. North Aegean on Samothrace and Lesbos. Crete. WidespreadTurkey. Iran.The subspecies A. s. crassepunctatum Popov 1935 occurs Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Iraq,Northwestern Iran and on <strong>the</strong> island <strong>of</strong> Cyprus.In Libya a fur<strong>the</strong>r form, A. s. rubellum (Friese 1917) occurs.Generally a species <strong>of</strong> high summer in<strong>to</strong> September. Flower association records gleaned from <strong>the</strong>entire range are Hypericum prolificum, Onobrychis, Lotus corniculatus, Centaurea solstitialis andMelilotus <strong>of</strong>ficinalis.The range <strong>of</strong> flowers visited is much greater than for <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r members <strong>of</strong> Anthidiellum in our regionalthough <strong>the</strong> Legume family is preferred..This bee is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic bee Stelis signata.Anthidiellum troodicum Mavromoustakis 1949173


Central Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Cyprus. Found ra<strong>the</strong>r widely in Turkey. Lebanon. Israel.Iran.A summer bee recorded in June <strong>to</strong> August.On <strong>the</strong> wing in June in Attica, visiting Satureia thymbra.On Cyprus up <strong>to</strong> 5,000 ft in <strong>the</strong> Troodos Mountains. Recorded visiting Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Salvia,Nepeta troodi and Teucrium cyprium amid open phryganic montane slopes between stands <strong>of</strong> Pinusnigra forest.Found during May in Lebanon with flower visits recorded <strong>to</strong> Lavandula s<strong>to</strong>echas.This bee is oligolectgic on Labiatae.Eoanthidium (Eoanthidium) clypeare (Morawitz 1874)Central Continental Greece. Rhodes. Lesbos. Turkey.Subspecies E. c. hoplos<strong>to</strong>mum Mavromoustakis 1945 occurs Syria, Palestine and Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing from May in Syria, Palestine and Israel.Mavromoustakis reported this bee common locally in Attica during June, strongly associated withAllium hymettium. Elsewhere in Mediterranean Europe Müller recorded this bee flying about hot xericslopes amongst stands <strong>of</strong> Allium sphaerocephalon.Eoanthidium (Eoanthidium) insulare (Morawitz 1873)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn and Central Continental Greece. Syra, Aegean islands <strong>of</strong> Lesbos and Rhodes. Turkey.Subspecies E. i. persicolum Mavromoustakis (1937) is found on Cyprus, south – western Iran,Palestine and Israel.A summer bee abroad mainly during June <strong>to</strong> August. On <strong>the</strong> Magnesia Peninsula <strong>of</strong> ContinentalGreece this species is active from May <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber when <strong>the</strong> last females <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> season may berecorded. There is a bivoltine phenology.In Palestine recorded visiting Ballota undulata, Lavandula, Carthamus, Centaurea, Cephalaria andCarlina involucrata.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June in Attica, Greece, where associated with Satureia thymbra.Eoanthidium (Clisanthidium) nasicum (Friese 1917)Greece on <strong>the</strong> North Aegean island <strong>of</strong> Lesbos. Turkey. Widespread Syria. Israel.Subspecies E. n. nasiculum Pasteels 1969 widespread Turkey. Collected from Mut during June byDoc<strong>to</strong>r Maximilian Schwarz.Noted in Iran from mid May <strong>to</strong> late July quite widely.Mavromoustakis discovered <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> this species in Palestine. On <strong>the</strong> wing <strong>the</strong>re in June and Julyand recorded visiting Ballota undulata.Afranthidium (Mesanthidium) alaemon (Warncke 1981)Iran.Afranthidium (Mesanthidium) alternans Klug 1832Israel at En Gedi and one or two o<strong>the</strong>r sites. Egypt.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Asteroideae within <strong>the</strong> Composites.Afranthidium (Mesanthidium) carduele Morawitz 1876North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iran. Oligolectic on Compositae with a strongpreference for <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.174


Afranthidium (Mesanthidium) lebanense Mavromoustakis 1955Cyprus. Recorded Israel by Pasteels. Turkey; reported from Tokat by Warncke. Lebanon.Mavromoustakis (1955) figures <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> this species which is abroad in May.Afranthidium (Mesanthidium) malacopygum (Gribodo 1894)Greece on <strong>the</strong> north Aegean at Lesbos. Turkey; Bursa, Erzurum.Afranthidium (Mesanthidium) pusillum (Morawitz 1895)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey near Hakkari. Western Syria. Lebanon. Iran. Israel. Egypt.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing Egypt late June. early <strong>to</strong> mid July in Iran.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus from late April through May.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Asteroideae within <strong>the</strong> Composites.Rhodanthidium (Asianthidium) aculeatum (Klug 1832)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzurum, Artvin, also recorded from Western Turkey in Bursa. Syria. Lebanon. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> August.This bee was originaly described from Syria. Mavromoustakis reported many <strong>of</strong> both sexes flyingabout Salvia microstegia. As with some o<strong>the</strong>r Anthidiines this may involve resource defencepolygyny and with mating at <strong>the</strong> floral terri<strong>to</strong>ries. The bee is classified as an oligolege <strong>of</strong> Labiatae.Nepeta is ano<strong>the</strong>r one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> flower genera visited.Plant resin is used for nest construction, Resin from Cedrus libanoticus has ben recorded.Found during <strong>the</strong> summer at 2000 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Elburz Mountains, Iran.Rhodanthidium (Rhodanthidium) acuminatum (Mocsáry 1884)Central Continental Greece. Western Turkey; Bursa, Konya. Recorded from Greece by Friese, butgenerally a scarcely recorded bee.Rhodanthidium (Asianthidium) caturigense (Giraud 1863)Subspecies R. c. ducale (Morawitz 1876) in south Continental Greece. Turkey.In <strong>the</strong> Peloponnesos <strong>of</strong> Greece females are on <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Subspecies R. c. jerusalemicum Mavromoustakis is present in Lebanon, Palestine and Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> July, thought <strong>to</strong> be strongly oligolectic on Leguminosae. Males recorded atOnonis natrix.Rhodanthidium (Rhodanthidium) exsectum (Pasteels 1969)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzincam. Lebanon. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in montane habitat during high summer in eastern Turkey and <strong>the</strong> Elburz <strong>of</strong> Iran.Considered <strong>to</strong> be oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Leguminosae.Rhodanthidium (Rhodanthidium) septemdentatum (Latreille 1809)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Pylos. West, Central and highland Turkey.The endemic subspecies R. s. rufocinctum Alfken is on Crete.In <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey, <strong>the</strong> Greek island <strong>of</strong> Rhodes. Cyprus, Lebanon and Israel a subspecies or perhaps aform R. s. faciale (Friese 1917) occurs.In Attica appears from May, flying <strong>to</strong> Marrubium and Stachys italica.On Cyprus noted flying <strong>to</strong>Vitex, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Teucrium divaricatum, Ballota integrifolia,Echium sericeum, Onosma fruticosum and Centaurea solstitialis.175


Mavromoustakis records this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in Palestine from late March, primarily in May <strong>to</strong> July.Recorded flying <strong>to</strong> Ballota undulata.Recorded during June and July from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia and flower records for Turkey are Centaureasolstitialis and Vitex.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing May and early June in Lebanon where recorded at Cirsium syriacum,Calyco<strong>to</strong>me and Lavandula s<strong>to</strong>echas.Mavromoustakis noted that females collect resin from <strong>the</strong> trunks <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> evergreen forest tree Pinushalepensis. They nest close <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>se stands <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> forest, making <strong>the</strong>ir brood cells in empty shells <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> land snails Eobania vermiculata, Levantina bellardi and Levantina cypria, <strong>of</strong>ten at montanehabitats such as found on Mount Pentadactylos.Anthidium (Proanthidium) amabile Alfken 1932Turkey. Iran. Egypt.A little recorded spring bee.Anthidium (Proanthidium) anguliventre Morawitz 1888Turkey, at Urfa. Syria. Iran. Israel. Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August in Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Israel. A Turkestanic species.Oligolectic on thistles within <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Flower visit records in <strong>the</strong> levant for Ballota undulata, Chamaepeuce diacantha and Teucriumdivaricatum. Noted at Centaurea in Iran.Anthidium (Anthidium) auritum Klug 1832Israel. Egypt.A polylectic bee.Anthidium (Turkanthidium) brevithorace (Warncke 1981)Iran; Khuzestan.On <strong>the</strong> wing in late June and early July.Anthidium (Anthidium) caspicum Morawitz 1880Turkey at Ankara and Hakkari. Iran; Elburz.On <strong>the</strong> wing during summer when it is considered <strong>to</strong> collect pollen from species in <strong>the</strong>Campanulaceae.Anthidium (Anthidium) christianseni Mavromoustakis 1956North and Central Lebanon. Iran.The male figured by Mavromoustakis (1962) who recorded this species on <strong>the</strong> wing in June and Julyin Lebanon visiting Teucrium divaricatum graecum.Anthidium (Anthidium) cingulatum Latreille 1809Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Lesbos. Lefkas. Widespread Turkey. Iran. Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May and June in Attica, flying <strong>to</strong> Stachys italica and Satureia thymbra. During along-term study in <strong>the</strong> Magnesia Peninsula males were noted during June and in September withfemales recorded in Oc<strong>to</strong>ber and it has been suggested that this species is bivoltine.Common in Turkey from late May <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> middle <strong>of</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber and visiting Onobrychis viciifolia, O.cornuta, Medicago sativa, Trifolium pratense, Melilotus alba, M. <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Lotus corniculatus,Convolvulus arvensis and plants in <strong>the</strong> genera Salvia, Carduus, Onopordon, Cirsium, Centaurea,176


Stachys and Linaria. This bee is an important pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> O. viciifolia in eastern Ana<strong>to</strong>lia. Thespecies is found from sea level <strong>to</strong> an altitude <strong>of</strong> 2500 mtrs.Recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus from April, but primarily from late May onwards and visitingTeucrium divaricatum, Teucrium polium micropodioides, Statice sinuata, Carlina lanata, Calyco<strong>to</strong>mevillosa, Ballota integrifolia, Salvia, Marrubium vulgare apolum, Vicia cracca elegans and cultivatedSesamum.Anthidium (Anthidium) dalmaticum Mocsáry 1884Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey.Subspecies A. d. syriacum Dusmet 1915 is found in Sou<strong>the</strong>asternTurkey through Lebanon <strong>to</strong>Palestine and Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in June in Attica, flying <strong>to</strong> Satureia thymbra.Both sexes recorded at Salvia in mid August.Mavromoustakis noted this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing in May in Lebanon where <strong>the</strong>re was a strong preferencefor Ballota. Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing by June in Palestine.Generally this bee is a polylege on Legumes, Labiates and some plants within <strong>the</strong> Scrophulariaceae.Anthidium (Anthidium) diadema Latreille 1809Central Continental Greece. Crete. Cyprus. Throughout Turkey. Iran. Libya.Males on <strong>the</strong> wing throughout July and August in Turkey.Oligolectic on thistles within <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Recorded at Carduus, Onopordum, Medicago and o<strong>the</strong>r flower genera presumably for nectar.Anthidium (Proanthidium) echinatum Klug 1832Israel, Egypt and Libya. A desertic bee with a preference for <strong>the</strong> pollen <strong>of</strong> Zygophyllum and flowers <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Cruciferae in desert habitats where floral choices are sometimes restricted.Anthidium (Proanthidium) eremicum Alfken 1938Syria and Israel.Anthidium (Anthidium) florentinum (Fabricius 1775)Continental Greece; including Attica <strong>to</strong> Macedonia. Skiathos. Lesbos. Crete. Widespread in Turkey.Iran. Israel.Subspecies A. f. subspinosum Klug on Cyprus and in Syria and Lebanon.Mavromoustakis reported this bee very common at flowering shrubs in A<strong>the</strong>ns as well as visitingRubus and Satureia thymbra. Presumably this species will have suffered from <strong>the</strong> extensive urbanexpansion <strong>the</strong>re since <strong>the</strong> 1950s. The bee is active throughout June <strong>to</strong> August in Central Greece withfemales on <strong>the</strong> wing in<strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber.Active from June on Cyprus, attracted <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus andVitex insummer.In Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia found from mid June <strong>to</strong> August. A polylectic bee recorded <strong>the</strong>re visiting <strong>the</strong>flowers <strong>of</strong> Lotus corniculatus, Melissa <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Salvia, Stachys, Centaurea solstitialis, Onopordum,Cirsium, Linaria and Vitex.Recorded at 1200 mtrs from Antilebanon, Syria. Widely recorded in Iran where noted at Medicagosativa.Anthidium (Anthidium) gussakovskiji Mavromoustakis 1939<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey and Iran.177


An early spring bee in Iran. Late March <strong>to</strong> mid April. An oligolege <strong>of</strong> thistles within <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Anthidium (Anthidium) loti Perris 1852Continental Greece. The Aegean Greek islands <strong>of</strong> Lesbos. Lefkas. Skiathos. Widespread Turkey.Cyprus. Lebanon. Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during late June <strong>to</strong> August, with flower visiting reported for Onopordum, Vitex.Onobrychis, Medicago sativa, Lotus corniculatus, Anchusa <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, and Echinospermum deflexum.Anthidium (Anthidium) manicatum Linnaeus 1758Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Lebanon. Iran.Subspecies A. m. cyrenaica is reported from Libya (in Zanden 1992).On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> late September. Flower visits recorded for <strong>the</strong> genera Stachys, Ballota, Salvia,Onopordum, Caronilla and Linaria. This bee is polylectic on pollen resources from flowers in <strong>the</strong>Fabaceae, Lamiaceae and Scrophulariaceae.Mavromoustakis reports this bee absent from Cyprus and it is very scarce on Lesbos. This pattern <strong>of</strong>scarcity is commented upon for <strong>the</strong> bee population <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Oleo-Cera<strong>to</strong>nion phy<strong>to</strong>sociologicalcommunity studied in Thessaly (Standfuss, Standfuss and Schwarz 2003). The species may be betteradapted <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> more nor<strong>the</strong>rn parts <strong>of</strong> its’ range within Europe or perhaps be in a transitional phase <strong>of</strong>being out-competed by more adapted congeners in <strong>the</strong> mediterranean ecosystems.Recorded widely in Turkey including Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia, where active in June and July.Anthidium (Anthidium) melanopygum Friese 1917North Aegean Greece at Lesbos. Widespread on Crete. Turkey. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from mid May <strong>to</strong> mid July in Iran.Anthidium nanum Mocsáry (lituratum Panzer nec Gmelin)Lesbos.Anthidium (Anthidium) neosyriacum Mavromoustakis 1956<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Urfa. Syria. Israel. Iran.Described from The Antilebanon, Syria, at 1200 mtrs during June by Mavromoustakis. Pasteelsrecorded this species from En Gedi, Israel.Anthidium (Proanthidium) oblongatum (Illiger 1806)Turkey. Iran.Warncke noted a lack <strong>of</strong> records from Greece for this Continental species.The species is widespread and sometimes common on <strong>the</strong> wing in eastern Turkey from early June <strong>to</strong>Late September, where flowers visited include Onobrychis viciifolia, Medicago sativa, Astragaluschristianus, Trifolium pratense, Melilotus <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, M. alba, Lotus corniculatus and flowers in <strong>the</strong>genera Centaurea, (including C. carduiformis, C. iberica, C. solstitialis and C. glastifolia). Salvia,Carduus, Cirsium, Cichorium, Coronilla and Lythrum.The flight season is closely similar in Iran where flower visits are also reported for Onobrychis. Thisbee is generally classified as a polylectic species.Often a montane species, this bee is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasite Stelis punctulatissima.Anthidium (Proanthidium) pulchellum Klug 1832Palestine. Israel. Egypt.This bee appears <strong>to</strong> be located on <strong>the</strong> Sinai and is on <strong>the</strong> wing in May. A polylectic bee.178


Anthidium (Anthidium) punctatum Latreille 1809Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.The subspecies A. p. bequaerti Alfken 1915 found Syria and Mavromoustakis recorded <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong>this form (as A p. amanusense Dusmet 1915) on <strong>the</strong> wing in Israel and Palestine during April.Common in Turkey from June until <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> September. Flowers visited in our region includeOnobrychis viciifolia, Medicago sativa, Trifolium pratense, T. repens, M. <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, L. corniculatusand plants in <strong>the</strong> genera Caronilla, Stachys, Salvia and Onopordon. This species is stronglypolylectic.Anthidium (Proanthidium) rotundum Warncke 1980North Aegean Greece at Lesbos. Turkey; Hakkari. Iran; Elburz and Karaj. Lebanon at Becharré andKadisha. Egypt.Often found in montane regions when active in July. Oligolectic on thistles <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Anthidium (Anthidium) septemspinosum Lepeletier 1841<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Kayseri, Erzurum.A polylectic bee.Anthidium (Anthidium) soikai Mavromoustakis 1968Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late May in<strong>to</strong> July.Anthidium (Anthidium) spiniventre Friese 1899Continental Greece at Thrace. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine. Iran.Found by Dr A. Mochi on <strong>the</strong> wing during May in Syria. On <strong>the</strong> wing during April in Palestine.Recorded in May in Iran up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs.Oligolectic on thistles within <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Anthidium (Anthidium) sublustre Warncke 1981Iran.Active during May at up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs.Anthidium (Anthidium) syriacum Pérez 1911Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in June in Palestine, visiting Ballota undulata.Anthidium (Anthidium) taeniatum Latrielle 1809Central and sou<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Corfu. North Greece at Por<strong>to</strong> Lagos. North Aegean onLesbos. East Aegean on Rhodes. Widespread Turkey. Israel. Palestine. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing June, July and August. In Turkey recorded on Carduus.In flight during June and July in Attica, Greece, frequently visiting Ononis. Flower visits in Iraninclude Lotus and Onobrychis.Generally this bee is a polylege on Legumes, Labiates and some plants within <strong>the</strong> Scrophulariaceae.Mavromoustakis notes that this bee, though common in <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean, is absent from Cyprus.Anthidium (Anthidium) taschenbergii Morawitz 1894Subspecies A. t. shirazense Mavromoustakis 1968 occurs in Iran.179


Anthidium (Anthidium) tesselatum Klug 1832Lebanon. Jordan. Possibly Iraq. Israel. Sinai. Egypt.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Asteroideae within <strong>the</strong> Composites.Anthidium (Anthidium) trispinosum Friese 1917Turkey.Thought <strong>to</strong> be an oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Papilionoideae within <strong>the</strong> legumes. (Müller 1996).Anthidium (Proanthidium) undulatiforme Friese 1917Continental Greece at Lamia. Turkey. Israel. Palestine.Mavromoustakis described <strong>the</strong> female <strong>of</strong> this species. He illustrated <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> this and closelyrelated species (1939) p89.Noted flying during May <strong>to</strong> Phlomis viscosa in Palestine. Generally this bee is polylectic collectingpollen from a number <strong>of</strong> flower Family hosts.Anthidium (Proanthidium) undulatum Dours 1873Continental Greece. North Aegean at Lesbos. Crete.Subspecies A. u. holozonicum (Mavromoustakis 1939) widely recorded eastern Turkey and alsoGreek <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean at Rhodes. Found on Cyprus. Western Syria. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel.Jordan. Iran. Females <strong>of</strong> this race are active in Dyarbakir, Turkey and also <strong>the</strong> Iranian Elburz duringJuly.The additional subspecies A. u. wahrmanni (Mavromoustakis 1948) is in Israel and Palestine. Iran.A summer bee found May <strong>to</strong> September but mainly during June and July.Mavromoustakis discovered <strong>the</strong> female <strong>of</strong> this species from Attica, Greece, on <strong>the</strong> wing during Juneflying <strong>to</strong> Satureia thymbra. His son was able <strong>to</strong> record bees <strong>the</strong>re while studying medicine in A<strong>the</strong>nsand it seems that only one male and one female <strong>of</strong> this species were recorded <strong>the</strong>re.On Cyprus found visiting Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Carlina lanata, Linaria elatine, Satureia incana,Teucrium polium micropodioides, Teucrium cyprium, Marrubium vulgare apolum, Heliotropiumvillosum and Alhagi maurorum. These flowers typically include members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> montane summerphryganic community.In Jordan this bee is recorded as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards.Mavromoustakis notes A. u. wahrmanni on <strong>the</strong> wing July and August with some remaining active <strong>to</strong>Oc<strong>to</strong>ber. Flower visit records <strong>the</strong>re for Ballota undulata, Carlina, Sideritis perfoliata, Ononisantiquorum and Ballota saxatalis.Anthidium (Proanthidium) venustum Morawitz 1878Egypt.Anthidium (Anthidium) waltlii Spinosa 1838Continental Greece. North eastern Turkey; Artvin. Iran. Israel. Egypt.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Asteroideae within <strong>the</strong> Composites.Anthidium (Anthidium) wüstneii Mocsáry 1887Ionian Greece, Corfu. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean Greece at Rhodes. Turkey; recorded as far west as Mugla.Lebanon. Syria. Iran.A summer bee noted up <strong>to</strong> 2300 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Elburz <strong>of</strong> Iran. An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Asteroideae.180


Pseudoanthidium alpinum (Morawitz 1874)Turkey at Nevsehir and Konya. An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Pseudoanthidium arenosum (Warncke 1981)Iran.Pseudoanthidium bytinskii (Mavromoustakis 1948)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in April and May.Pseudoanthidium cribratum (Morawitz 1875)Continental Greece. North Aegean at Lesbos. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Lindos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean at Rhodes.Throughout Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Iran.Mavromoustakis (1938) described a subspecies, P. c. palestinicum which appears on <strong>the</strong> wing fromMay <strong>to</strong> July.Females have been recorded at Centaurea iberica in Turkey.Recorded flying <strong>to</strong> Centaurea in Palestine.Pseudoanthidium (Exanthidium) enslini (Alfken 1928)Egypt, including Luxor and Fayoum.Pseudoanthidium (Exanthidium) eximium (Giraud 1863)Turkey. Iran.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Asteroideae within <strong>the</strong> Composites.Both sexes recorded from July and on <strong>the</strong> wing <strong>to</strong> mid September visiting Onopordon and Lythrum. Aspecies <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> high summer.Pseudoanthidium (Pseudoanthidium) lituratum (Panzer 1801)Continental Greece. Widespread Turkey.A summer bee on <strong>the</strong> wing well in<strong>to</strong> September, at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs.Oligolectic on Compositae with a strong preference for <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.A subspecies P. l. tropicum (Warncke) 1981 is described from Iran.Pseudoanthidium (Royanthidium) melanurum (Klug 1832)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn and central Continental Greece. Crete. Pylos. Turkey; Antalya, Erzurum, Kars. Syria. Israel.Oligolectic on thistles within <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Pseudoanthidium (Pseudoanthidium) ochrognathum (Alfken 1932)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel. Palestine. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during August. This bee is strongly polylectic especially visiting flowers in <strong>the</strong>Cruciferae as well as Boraginaceae, Legumes and members <strong>of</strong> some o<strong>the</strong>r plant Families.Pseudoanthidium puncticolle (Morawitz 1888)Iran.Both sexes <strong>of</strong> this Central asian bee recorded at Fars up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs during May.Pseudoanthidium (Royanthidium) reticulatum (Mocsáry 1884)Continental Greece. Turkey. Lebanon. Iran.181


Oligolectic on thistles within <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Pseudoanthidium (Pseudoanthidium) rhombiferum (Friese 1917)Turkey near Urfa. Israel. Palestine.Noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during April in Palestine. Strongly oligolectic on thistles <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> CardueaePseudoanthidium (Exanthidium) wahrmannicum (Mavromoustakis 1933)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel. Palestine.Oligolectic on <strong>the</strong> Asteroideae within <strong>the</strong> Composites and noted on <strong>the</strong> wing in April.Icteranthidium abbasi (Warncke 1981)Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May at lower levels, <strong>the</strong> female noted flying <strong>to</strong> Centaurea.Icteranthidium aequabile (Morawitz 1896)Turkey at Urfa.Icteranthidium angulosum (Warncke 1981)Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> June <strong>to</strong> mid July.Icteranthidium bilobatum Pasteels 1969Egypt; Wadi Turrel Rachid.The female recorded during April.Icteranthidium capitum (Warncke 1981)Iran.Appears during May. As with a number <strong>of</strong> Iranian Anthidiines <strong>the</strong>re are flower visits <strong>to</strong> Alhagi, agenus <strong>of</strong> spiny racemose shrubby legumes <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> eastern Mediterranean eastwards.Icteranthidium cimbiciforme (Smith 1854)Greece from <strong>the</strong> Cyclades <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Milos and Naxos. Widespread Turkey;Aydin,Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia and eastwards. Syria. Lebanon. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from mid June <strong>to</strong> early September.The bee is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cardueae within Compositae.Flower visit records from Turkey for Centaurea solstitialis and Vitex.Icteranthidium decoloratum Alfken 1932Iran. Egypt.Icteranthidium fedtschenkoi Morawitz 1875Syria. Lebanon. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing in June and July. This bee, a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Turkestanic fauna, is an oligolege <strong>of</strong> thistlesin <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Icteranthidium ferrugineum (Fabricius 1787)Subspecies I. f. discoidale (Latreille 1809) is recorded in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Icel, Kayseri. Cyprus. Iran.182


Subspecies I. f. subhyalinum (Mavromoustakis 1947) is reported from eastern Turkey; Urfa.Palestine. Israel. Egypt.Mavromoustakis found this bee ra<strong>the</strong>r common in coastal sand habitat during high summer in parts <strong>of</strong>Cyprus. Flower visits recorded <strong>the</strong>re for Echium sericeum, Thymus capitatus and Statice. Femalesmake vertical burrows 15 cms deep in sand 10 <strong>to</strong> 15 mtrs above <strong>the</strong> tideline. Nest chambers arecreated among <strong>the</strong> roots <strong>of</strong> Zygophyllum album and Thymus capitatus and up <strong>to</strong> ten cells constructedfrom a mixture <strong>of</strong> resin and sand grains. The bee is reported <strong>to</strong> be bivoltine, presumably withoverlapping generations.Icteranthidium grohmanni (Spinola 1838)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn and central Continental Greece. Lesbos. Lefkas. Crete. Widespread Turkey. Cyprus. Syria.Lebanon. Iran. Egypt.Subspecies I. g. rubiginosum (Lepeletier 1841) is reported by Zanden on <strong>the</strong> wing in Turkey in July.Males have been noted visiting Ononis viciifolia in late August. However, <strong>the</strong> bee is a noted polylegeand has a prediliction for Eryngium.Icteranthidium laterale (Latreille 1809)Turkey. Iran.Females recorded at Carduus in summer. Cirsium, Onopordum and o<strong>the</strong>r related flowers are alsoreported, so that this bee has a broad oligolectic affinity with <strong>the</strong> Cardueae.Icteranthidium limbiferum (Morawitz 1875)Turkey. Iran.In Turkey females recorded visiting Onopordon.Mainly on <strong>the</strong> wing from late June <strong>to</strong> late July in Iran.Icteranthidium obsoletum (Warncke 1981)Iran.Icteranthidium ovasi (Warncke 1980)Turkey.Icteranthidium subangulosum (Warncke 1981)Iran.Icteranthidium urfanum (Warncke 1980)Turkey at Urfa. Recorded Iran at Fars by Mavromoustakis and Soika.Stelis aculeata Morawitz 1880<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Ankara, Van.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing during late June.Stelis aegyptiaca (Radoszkowsky 1876)Egypt.This bee may be present in Libya but does not appear <strong>to</strong> have been recorded <strong>the</strong>re.Stelis annulata (Lepeletier 1841)Continental Greece; Attica. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Konya, Icel.183


The host species is Anthidium pubescens (Friese 1921).Stelis bicornuta Pasteels 1969Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Israel.The male <strong>of</strong> this bee recorded during early June.Stelis breviuscula (Nylander 1848)Continental Greece. Turkey; Erzurum, Sivas. Egypt.Hosts <strong>of</strong> this clep<strong>to</strong>parasite are reported as Heriades truncorum and Hoplitis adunca.Stelis denticulata Friese 1899<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Jerusalem during May.In Turkey widespread in eastern provinces where on <strong>the</strong> wing from late June <strong>to</strong> early August.Stelis genalis Pasteels 1969Lebanon.Stelis gigantea Friese 1921Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran, Elburz MountainsOn <strong>the</strong> wing from early and especially mid June <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> first half <strong>of</strong> July. A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong>Anthidium pubescens.Recorded at 1350 mtrs from Turkey in Malatya where <strong>the</strong> male noted visiting Echium italicum duringmid July.Stelis inamoena Popov 1932Turkey; Ankara, Konya. Iran.Stelis iugae Noskiewicz 1962Western Turkey; Kirklareli.The flight period is from mid July <strong>to</strong> mid August.Stelis minuta Lepeletier & Serville 1828Continental Greece; Olympos. Corfu. Widespread Turkey, Black Sea and nor<strong>the</strong>astern Provinces.Lebanon; Hezine.Active at 1900 mtrs during late July on Mount Olympos, Greece.A range <strong>of</strong> hosts reported among <strong>the</strong> smaller Megachilidae including Osmia leucomelana, Osmiagallarum, Hoplitis claviventris, Heriades truncorum, Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma campanularum andChelos<strong>to</strong>ma florisomne.Stelis nasuta (Latreille 1809)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Turkey; Erzurum. Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Jordan. Syria.On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> August. Found as high as 2000 mtrs.The host bee is Chalicodoma parietina.Stelis odon<strong>to</strong>pyga Noskiewicz 1925Continental Greece; Thessaloniki. Turkey; Istanbul, Erzurum.A summer bee, on <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> August. A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Hoplosmia spinulosa.184


Stelis orientalis Warncke 1992Ionian Greece on Corfu. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during August.Stelis ornatula (Klug 1807)Continental Greece. Central and eastern Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing by late June. Local in montane areas <strong>of</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece.Stelis pentelica Mavromoustakis 1963Continental Greece; Attica. Turkey. Israel.Stelis phaeoptera (Kirby 1802)Crete. Turkey; Aydin, Erzurum. Israel. Egypt. Libya.On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies S. p. meridionalis Popov 1932 occurs.The populations elsewhere in our area are referred <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies S. p. murina Pérez 1884.On Cyprus found on <strong>the</strong> wing during May, visiting Marrubium vulgare apolum.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing by late July in Turkey.Hosts are some species <strong>of</strong> those Osmiine bees in <strong>the</strong> subgenera Helicosmia and Osmia.Stelis punctulatissima (Kirby 1802)The subspecies S. p. hellenica Mavromoustakis 1959 is reported from Continental Greece, Crete.Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey. Syria. This subspecies is originally described from <strong>the</strong> eastern Greek Aegeanon Rhodes.S. punctulatissima is a successful clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic species with a wide spectrum <strong>of</strong> reported hostspecies among <strong>the</strong> Megachilidae;- Hoplitis adunca, Osmia aurulenta, O. brevicornis, O.fulviventris, O. leaiana, O. niveata, Anthidium manicatum, A. oblongatum, A. scapulare andChalicodoma parietina.Stelis rhodia Mavromoustakis 1959Greece; Aegean islands on Lesbos and Rhodes. Turkey; Mut, Içel.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing in early <strong>to</strong> mid June.Stelis ruficornis Morawitz 1872North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Central Turkey; Amasya. Lebanon;Djezzine. The Lebanese example may be referable <strong>to</strong> a subspecies S. r. lebanensis Mavromoustakis1963.Active from <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> June <strong>to</strong> mid July.Stelis scutellaris Morawitz 1894This appears <strong>to</strong> be primarily a Central Asiatic bee but it is recorded from Turkey.Stelis signata (Latreille 1809)Continental Greece including Attica and The North; Euboeia, Lesbos, Rhodes, Samothrace. Turkey.In much <strong>of</strong> Greece and Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies S. s. flavescens Friese 1925 is reported. There is also asubspecies S. s. eremica Alfken 1938 in Cyprus. Israel. Lebanon. Iraq. However, Stelis signata is avariable bee and it is possible that <strong>the</strong>se subspecies represent examples <strong>of</strong> a clinal variation within <strong>the</strong>nominate species.185


It is active on <strong>the</strong> wing May <strong>to</strong> August and Mavromoustakis recorded this Stelis during <strong>the</strong> summer onCyprus, visiting Mentha longifolia, Teucrium polium micropodioides and Marrubium vulgare apolum,all flowers which are summer nectar resources in this part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> eastern Mediterranean.A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Anthidiellum strigatum.This species is distinctly different in <strong>the</strong> male armature from o<strong>the</strong>r species <strong>of</strong> Stelis.Stelis simillima Morawitz 1876Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Turkey; Kars, Bitlis. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing July <strong>to</strong> August. Recorded as a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Lithurgus chrysurus and L. cornutusfuscipennis≈Tribe DioxyiniAglaoapis tridentata (Nylander 1848)OzbekCyprus. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing July and August in Turkey, recorded visiting Onopordum.In Cyprus Mavromoustakis recorded a race, A. t. limassolica (Mavromoustakis 1948) out in May,visiting Teucrium polium micropodioides. This race was discovered <strong>to</strong> be a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>mason bee Chalicodoma roeweri akrotirika.Allodioxys schul<strong>the</strong>ssi (Popov 1936)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Urfa.Dioxys ammobius Mavromoustakis 1954Israel. Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing in June. A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Hoplitis wahrmani.Dioxys cincta (Jurine 1807)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey; Erzurum, Konya, Icel, Urfa, Sivas,Kayseri. Israel.Reported on <strong>the</strong> wing in March and April on Cyprus, with a flower visiting record for Onobrychisvenosa.Dioxys moesta (Costa 1883)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Mediterranean Turkey eastwards.Dioxys montana Heinrich 1977Turkey; Ankara, Konya, Icel,Dioxys pumila Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey; Konya, Denizli, Urfa, Sivas,Nevsehir, Icel. Syria. Israel. Iran; Elburz, Fars.On <strong>the</strong> wing April and May on Cyprus, recorded visiting Echium sericeum.186


In Iran noted from May <strong>to</strong> July between 1800 and 2300 mtrs.Ensliniana bidentata (Friese 1899)Syria. Israel. Palestine.Subspecies E. b. ana<strong>to</strong>lica Heinrich 1977Turkey; Konya, Erzurum, Agri.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May.Metadioxys formosa (Morawitz 1875)Israel. Iran.Metadioxys graeca Mavromoustakis 1963Turkey; Konya.Paradioxys pannonica Mocsáry 1877Turkey; Adana, Urfa.Prodioxys richardsi Mavromoustakis 1954Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in late March.Eudioxys quadrispinosa (Friese 1899)Egypt.In flight from <strong>the</strong> second part <strong>of</strong> March and through April.Mavromoustakis discovered <strong>the</strong> female <strong>of</strong> this species. Schmiedeknecht originally discovered <strong>the</strong>male <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> species, visiting Zygophyllum coccineum.Eudioxys schwarzi Mavromoustakis 1968Iran; Chuzistan.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during summer.≈Tribe MegachiliniCreigh<strong>to</strong>nella (Metamegachile) albisecta (Klug 1817)Continental Greece; Thrace. Corfu. Lesbos. Turkey. Israel. Palestine.In <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies C. a. caucasica (Lepeletier 1841) is also reported.In Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies C. a. cyprica is reported and this race is also reported from <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkeyat Konya. Mavromoustakis reports <strong>the</strong> species on Cyprus from May <strong>to</strong> September, visiting Scolymushispanicus, Carlina lanata, Onopordum insigne, Centaurea cilicica, Centaurea hyalolepis, Echinopsspinosus, Broteroa corymbosa, Marrubium vulgare apolum, Heliotropium europium, and Staticevirgata.Mavromoustakis (1958) reported that caucasica was <strong>the</strong> race present on Corfu. This bee is alsoreported from many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lian Provinces <strong>of</strong> Turkey.187


A high summer bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from July and August in Greece and Turkey and active well in<strong>to</strong>September. Flower visit records in Turkey include Centaurea solstitialis, C. iberica, Eryngiumbillardieri and Salvia spp.This bee is known from North Africa and so although no records published for Egypt or Libya itcould be present.Mavromoustakis also recorded this species from Palestine and Israel where on <strong>the</strong> wing in June andJuly.Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella (Metamegachile) arabica (Friese 1901)Egypt.This bee may also be present in Libya.Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella aurantiaca Rebmann 1972Iran.Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella (Metamegachile) doriae (Magretti 1890)Turkey, Ankara. Syria. Lebanon.Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella ghigii (Gribodo 1924)Libya, Cyrenaica.Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella (Metamegachile) heinrichi Tkalcu 1979Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella (Metamegachile) rhodosiaca (Rebmann 1972)Greece; Rhodes. Turkey; Antalya, Icel, Erzincan.On <strong>the</strong> wing from mid June <strong>to</strong> mid August.Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella (Metamegachile) sudanica (Magretti 1899)Jordan.The female <strong>of</strong> this bee reported active during June.This species is a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sudanic or Ethiopian fauna.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) albocincta (Radoszkowski 1874)Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Egypt.Chalicodoma (Allochalicodoma) albocristata (Smith 1853)Continental Greece; Thrace.On <strong>the</strong> wing in August.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) albonotata (Radoszkowski 1886)Continental Greece; Thrace. North Aegean Greece; Lesbos. Turkey. Palestine. Israel.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) alborufa (Friese 1911 nec 1918)Turkey; Mut.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June.Chalicodoma (Euchalicodoma) asiatica (Morawitz 1875)188


Continental Greece. Turkey; Isparta. Palestine. The range <strong>of</strong> this species in Greece needs <strong>to</strong> beclarified as it is a primarily Central Asian bee. Palestinian examples are referable <strong>to</strong> C. a. levantina(Hedicke 1938).Closely related <strong>to</strong> Chalicodoma montenegrensis.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) atrocastaneum Alfken 1932Egypt.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) branicki (Radoszkowski 1876)Egypt.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) cinnamomea (Alfken 1926)Egypt.This bee may be present in Libya.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) cressa Tkalcu 1988Greece on Crete. An island endemic taxon. On <strong>the</strong> wing during April although scarcely recorded.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) cypricola (Mavromoustakis 1938)Cyprus.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing from March <strong>to</strong> May, flying <strong>to</strong> Echium sericeum, Onobrychis venosa andAstragalus cyprius.Mavromoustakis reported <strong>the</strong> nest, constructed from mud and s<strong>to</strong>ne, is sometimes attached <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>woody parts <strong>of</strong> a plant <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> shrub Sanguisorba spinosa. Nests are o<strong>the</strong>rwise attached <strong>to</strong> large s<strong>to</strong>nes.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) derasa (Gerstaecker 1869)Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Discovered on Naxos, Central Aegean, by Krüper.This species has an affinity for Vitex Agnus-castus, but only in some habitats, possibly connected witha degree <strong>of</strong> soil surface salinity or <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong> certain salts. A summer bee.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) deser<strong>to</strong>rum Morawitz 1875Subspecies C. d. atrorufa Friese 1898 occurs Egypt.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) erice<strong>to</strong>rum (Lepeletier 1841)Continental Greece, Thrace. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. The subspecies C. e. tyrneri Tkalcu1994 is reported from western Turkey; Balikesir.The species is reported common across Turkey and a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Onobrychis viciifolia andMedicago sativa in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. On <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> September. Recorded from CentralAna<strong>to</strong>lian Turkey and fur<strong>the</strong>r flower records additional <strong>to</strong> legume forage research are for Coronillavaria, Vicia, Trifolium, Genista, Cytisus nigricans, Stachys turcomanica, Digitalis laevigata, Nepetaformosa, Acanthus longifolius, Lathyrus latifolius and in <strong>the</strong> European range also Be<strong>to</strong>nica.Friese noted Lotus corniculatus, Cytisus laburnum and Salvia argentea as host flowers.On <strong>the</strong> wing June and July.Chalicodoma (Maximegachile) esseniensis Pasteels 1979Israel.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) farinosa (Smith 1853)189


Iraq.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) flavipes (Spinola 1838)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey, Cyprus. Syria. Egypt.A summer bee with both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during July in SyriaWidespread through Central and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Recorded in June and July on Cyprus, with some records in<strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber,visiting Alhagi maurorum.Thymus capitatus, Vitex, Linaria elatine, Eryngium, Statice virgata, Trifolium and cultivatedMedicago.This bee nested in old clo<strong>the</strong>s hanging up in Mavromoustakis’ house in Limassol. The nest comprisedtwo elongate cells constructed <strong>of</strong> mud.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) foersteri (Gerstaecker 1869)Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey. Syria. Palestine. Israel. Iran.Subspecies C. f. albescens (Friese 1898) central and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Both sexes are on <strong>the</strong> wingduring July from low elevations up <strong>to</strong> 2150 mtrs. This subspecies has a centre <strong>of</strong> population gravity in<strong>the</strong> Taurus Range. The bee is reported visiting Vitex agnus-castus and Caphalaria alpina.On <strong>the</strong> wing in June up <strong>to</strong> 1200 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Antilebanon range, Syria.Chalicodoma (Allochalicodoma) hungarica Mocsáry 1877Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Common at low and high altitudes across Turkey.Lebanon. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Recorded as a pollinating visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Almond and Cherry orchards <strong>of</strong> highland Jordan.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) incana (Friese 1898)Egypt.A spring bee, on <strong>the</strong> wing during May. This bee probably ranges in<strong>to</strong> Libya as it is known fromAlgeria.Chalicodoma judaea Tkalcu 1999Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Chalicodoma (Allochalicodoma) lefebvrei (Lepeletier 1874)Greece; possibly present.Chalicodoma (Katamegachile) manicata (Giraud 1861)Continental Greece. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey; Erzurum,Sanliurfa. Syria. Lebanon. Palestine.Lebanese examples are referable <strong>to</strong> C. m. hammanensis (Mavromoustakis 1956)On <strong>the</strong> wing March <strong>to</strong> May. A spring bee visiting Rosmarinus and Cytisus.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) monstrifica (Morawitz 1877)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Lebanon.Lebanese examples are referable <strong>to</strong> C. m. lebanotica (Mavromoustakis 1956).Noted during July at 2200 mtrs in tragacanthic montane steppe.Chalicodoma (Euchalicodoma) montenegrensis (Dours 1873)190


Continental Greece; Thrace. Corfu. North Aegean on Lesbos. O<strong>the</strong>r Aegean islands, Turkey. Syria.Israel. Palestine.Ornosa, Otiz-Sánchez and Torres (2007) report that this species’ North African range is confined <strong>to</strong>Algeria.The main flight period in Turkey is from mid May <strong>to</strong> early August. Flower records for Turkey includeVitex agnus-castus.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) nasidens (Friese 1898)Jordan. Egypt. Libya.A desertic species on <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) nigripes (Spinola 1838)Egypt.Not recorded in Libya yet could be present <strong>the</strong>re.On <strong>the</strong> wing April and May, visiting Echium.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) nigrita (Radoszkowski 1876)Israel. Egypt. Libya.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) palaestina Tkalcu 1988Palestine. Israel.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) parietina (Ge<strong>of</strong>froy 1785)The nominate subspecies in North Africa, possibly present in Libya and Egypt.Present in Continental Greece, Thrace and <strong>the</strong> North Aegean on Lesbos as <strong>the</strong> subspecies C. p.nes<strong>to</strong>rea (Brullé 1832) which is <strong>the</strong> subspecies found in Turkey where it is common. Recorded inJordan as a visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> orchards. This subspecies is also found in Israel.In Turkey recorded visiting Onobrychis viciifolia, O. cornuta, Lotus corniculata, Vicia cracca,Melilotus alba, M. <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Centaurea, Potentilla and Caronilla.Chalicodoma (Parachalicodoma) pasteelsi (Van der Zanden 1998)Turkey; Urfa, Birecik. Egypt.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) pyrenaica (Lepeletier 1874)Continental Greece; Thrace. North Aegean on Lesbos. Reported from western Turkey; Bursa. Thesubspecies C. p. asiae Tkalcu 1988 on central and eastern Turkey; Elazig, Isparta. The zone <strong>of</strong>integradation between <strong>the</strong> two subspecies is not clear.The nominate subspecies is also reported in North Africa but no details from Libya or Egypt areknown.Chalicodoma (Allochalicodoma) roeweri Alfken 1927Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Crete. Turkey; Tunceli.Males recorded from May <strong>to</strong> August in Greece and Turkey with a flower visit record by <strong>the</strong> male <strong>to</strong>Acanthus from Greece. Both sexes recorded by Alfken visiting Salvia pomifera.On Crete and Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies C. r. akrotirica (Mavromoustakis 1939) is found.In Cyprus this subspecies mainly flies in May and June, some on <strong>the</strong> wing in<strong>to</strong> early July, visitingMarrubium vulgare apolum, Centaurea hyalolepis, Ballota, Teucrium polium micropodioides,Teucrium divaricatum, Anchusa and Echium sericeum. The female creates a nest in a cavity in s<strong>to</strong>nes,191


hard ground or cliff, using a mixture <strong>of</strong> glandular secretion, pebbles and fragments <strong>of</strong> Pistacia leaf forcell lining and seals.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) rubripes (Morawitz 1875)Turkey.This Central Asian bee has been reported from Aydin and Icel.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) sanguinipes (Morawitz 1875)Turkey; Konya. Palestine. Israel.Flying during May and June in Palestine, recorded at Ballota undulata.Chalicodoma (Pseudomegachile) saussurei (Radoszkowski 1874)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Reported at Centaurea and Carduus, Eryngium billardieri, Onobrychis viciifolia and Astragaluslineatus. May July <strong>to</strong> late September.Chalicodoma (Chalicodoma) sicula (Rossi 1792)Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Egypt. Libya.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) acanthopyga Alfken 1940Cyprus. Israel.Very locally recorded.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) acanthura (Illiger 1806)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey; Cankiri, Sanliurfa. Israel.A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Chalicodoma, on <strong>the</strong> wing May <strong>to</strong> August.On Cyprus recorded at Broteroa corymbosa, Centaurea cilicica, Centaurea hyalolepis and Staticevirgata.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) afra Lepeletier 1841Continental Greece. Lesbos. Samothrace. Chios. Crete. Cyprus. Widely recorded in Turkey. Israel.Egypt.Subspecies C. a. erzurumensis Tkalcu recorded from Carduus in September, <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.In parts <strong>of</strong> North Africa bees are referable <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies C. a. tunensis Gribodo.Pasteels considered this species <strong>to</strong> be a most successful member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> genus with a very large globalrange.Clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic on some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> smaller leafcutter bees in <strong>the</strong> subgenus Eutricharaea; Megachileapicalis, M. leachella, M. argentata and M. pilidens.A typical high summer flight season <strong>of</strong> late May or early June <strong>to</strong> September with females on <strong>the</strong> wing<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> beginning <strong>of</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber. This species will visit Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus, Broteroa corymbosa,Thymus, Teucrium polium micropodioides, Teucrium cyprium, Linaria elatine, Statice andOnobrychis viciifolia.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) alata Foerster 1853Turkey; Rize.A summer bee as is typical for <strong>the</strong> genus. Reported <strong>to</strong> parasitise Megachile lignesica andAnthophora furcata. The species has a nor<strong>the</strong>rly distribution in <strong>the</strong> central and eastern palaearctic. Itis known from Bulgaria but not recorded in our area.192


Coelioxys (Mesocoelioxys) argentea Lepeletier 1841Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey; Izmir. Israel.A Turano-Mediterranean and Central Asian range.A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> large chalicodomiforme Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella albisecta.Both sexes have been recorded at Vitex Agnus-castus.On Cyprus flying from late May until September, visiting Crozophora verbascifolia, Broteroacorymbosa, Carlina lanata, Centaurea cilicica, Marrubium vulgare apolum, Heliotropium europeum,Eryngium creticum, Mentha longifolia, Statice virgata and Vitex.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) artemis Schwarz 2001Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Jordan.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) aurolimbata Foerster 1853Continental Greece. Lesbos. Widespread Turkey. Lebanon. Iran.No details from Egypt or Libya but could be searched for <strong>the</strong>re.The subspecies C. a. orientalica Warncke recorded from Aydin and Konya which are westernProvinces <strong>of</strong> Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing from <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> May <strong>to</strong> August. A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Chalicodoma erice<strong>to</strong>rum.Floral visits are recorded <strong>to</strong> Be<strong>to</strong>nica, Origanum, Cirsium and Onobrychis viciifolia.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) brevis Eversmann 1852Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey, Israel.The range <strong>of</strong> this bee in North Africa is not clearly reported.On <strong>the</strong> wing in late June <strong>to</strong> mid September and recorded at Carduus, Eryngium creticum and O.viciifolia. Hosts recorded are Megachile apicalis, M pilidens and M. leachella.A successful species probably widespread through Turkey.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) caudata Spinola 1838Continental Greece; Epirus, Thrace. Widespread Turkey. Israel.Flight period June <strong>to</strong> August in montane habitats.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) conoidea (Illiger 1806)Continental Greece; mainly highlands <strong>of</strong> Chalkidiki and <strong>the</strong> Pindos. Crete. Turkey. Cyprus.On <strong>the</strong> wing late June <strong>to</strong> mid September. In Kars found at elevations <strong>of</strong> 1700 mtrs but <strong>of</strong>ten as amontane species active up <strong>to</strong> 2300 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> range..On <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus from May <strong>to</strong> September, visiting Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus, Statice andVicia cracca elegans.Hosts reported are from among <strong>the</strong> larger Megachilinae; Chalicodoma erice<strong>to</strong>rum, Megachilelagopoda and Megachile maritima.Coelioxys (Liothyrapis) decipiens Spinola 1838Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece at Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Egypt.No records for Libya although this bee should be searched for <strong>the</strong>re.On <strong>the</strong> wing by late June when males have been recorded at Vitex in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Recorded atAlhagi maurorum, Trifolium, cultivated Medicago and Linaria elatine on Cyprus. Mavromoustakisnoted this bee <strong>of</strong>ten present alongside <strong>the</strong> small leafcutter Megachile flavipes, which he reported <strong>to</strong>be <strong>the</strong> probable host.193


Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) echinata Foerster 1853North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Iran. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> August. A specialist clep<strong>to</strong>parasite on <strong>the</strong> small leafcutter bees Megachilerotundata and M. apicalis.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) elegantula Alfken 1934Greece; Naxos and Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. Israel. Egypt. Probably present in Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> August on Cyprus. Recorded at Statice, Broteroa corymbosa and Teucriumpolium micropodioides.Pasteels reported this species as present in Turkey in Cankiri and in southwestern coastalMediterranean areas.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) elongata Lepeletier 1841<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Megachile circumcincta, M. centuncularis, M. leachella, M. lignesica and M.willughbiella. On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> September. Reported visiting Cirsium spp. in Turkey.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) elongatula Alfken 1938Continental Greece. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. IsraelCoelioxys (Allocoelioxys) elsei SchwarzContinental Greece. Greek Aegean on Kos. Turkey. Jordan.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) elytrura Spinola 1838Turkey. Egypt.A very locally reported bee.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) emarginata Foerster 1853Turkey; Erzurum.In Turkey recorded mid September at an elevation <strong>of</strong> 1850 mtrs. A bee <strong>of</strong> high summer. S<strong>to</strong>eckhertrecorded <strong>the</strong> leafcutter bee Megachile leucomalla as a host.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) emarginatella Pasteels 1982Israel. PalestineReported by Pasteels on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber, primarily during August. It appears <strong>to</strong> belocal and perhaps <strong>of</strong> conservation concern.Coelioxys erythrura Spinola 1838Turkey; Icel.Coelioxys foersteri Morawitz 1871Continental Greece at Epirus.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) haemorrhoa Foerster 1853Continental Greece, including Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey;Sanliurfa, Nevsehir, Bitlis, Izmir, Erzincan, Erzurum. Israel. Egypt.Though not yet reported from Libya this species could be searched for <strong>the</strong>re.194


The bees <strong>of</strong> Israel and Egypt may be referable <strong>to</strong> C. rhodocantha Cockerell 1931which Warncke(1992) treats as a subspecies <strong>of</strong> haemorrhoa.On <strong>the</strong> wing June through August. Reported visiting summer nectar resources such as Vitex, Staticeand Thymus and found on <strong>the</strong> wing <strong>to</strong> montane elevations, sharing with many Megachilidae <strong>of</strong> AsiaMinor a propensity for high altitudes.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on Cyprus during May and June and also in September. Flowersvisited were Heliotropium europeum, An<strong>the</strong>mis and Eryngium creticum.Pasteels reported <strong>the</strong> host <strong>to</strong> be <strong>the</strong> widespread smaller leafcutter Megachile rotundata.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) inermis (Kirby 1802)Turkey; Eskisehir, Canakkale, Hakkari.This bee has a wide palaearctic range and hosts recorded are Hoplitis papaveris, Megachilecentuncularis, M. alpicola and Megachile versicolor.Warncke (1992) lists also Megachile argentata and Megachile Bombycina but without details.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) iranica Warncke 1992Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late May <strong>to</strong> early July, <strong>of</strong>ten found at lower elevations.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) mandibularis Nylander 1848Continental Greece. Turkey.Local in <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greek mountains at 2000 <strong>to</strong> 2200 mtrs during mid August.A European and Central Asian species. In Turkey on <strong>the</strong> wing June until early September. Hostspecies are in <strong>the</strong> Megachilidae;- Osmia villosa, Hoplitis papaveris, Megachile leachella and alsoreported M. centuncularis, M. versicolor, M. (brevicornis), M. circumcincta and M. pyrenaeawithin <strong>the</strong> full range, with <strong>the</strong> majority <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se or all associations given here from outside our region.Found up <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. This is a Continental Eurasian bee.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) obtusa Pérez 1884Turkey; Bitlis.on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August when females seek out <strong>the</strong> nests <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir host, <strong>the</strong> leafcutterMegachile giraudi bicoloriventris.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) polycentris Foerster 1853North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran.Fahringer noted that this species is a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite on <strong>the</strong> summer Eucerine Tetralonia nana and ison <strong>the</strong> wing June and July. Megachile decep<strong>to</strong>ria has also been reported as a host (Jozan 1971).Coelioxys pulchella Morawitz 1874Continental Greece; Attica. Turkey; Nevsehir, Bitlis, Urfa.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) quadridentata (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece; Olympos. Turkey; Erzurum.A Continental Eurasian species recorded visiting Onobrychis and Vicia in Turkey. On <strong>the</strong> wing Maythrough August. Females on <strong>the</strong> wing in<strong>to</strong> September. This is one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> strongly protandrousCoelioxys with males appearing ten day or so before females and accompanying <strong>the</strong>m until midsummer after which only <strong>the</strong> femlaes remain on <strong>the</strong> wing. Host bee species reported from <strong>the</strong> fullrange are: Megachilidae; Megachile circumcincta, M. willughbiella, M. leachella, Trachusa195


yssina and <strong>the</strong> following Anthophora species; A. furcata, A. plagiata and A. parietina. All <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong>se host bee associations are likely <strong>to</strong> have been recorded from <strong>the</strong> north <strong>of</strong> our area.Coelioxys (Coelioxys) rufescens Lepeletier & Serville 1825Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Delphi. Turkey. Iran.A transpalaearctic and north Asian species.On <strong>the</strong> wing from June through August.Host species among <strong>the</strong> Megachilidae not reported.Host species reported in <strong>the</strong> Anthophorini include Anthophora bimaculata, A. borealis, A.fulvitarsis, A. furcata and Anthophora quadrimaculata.A range <strong>of</strong> flower records include composites such as Onopordum, Centaurea and Carduus.The subspecies C. r. oltuensis Tkalcu is in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey as well as <strong>the</strong> nominate subspecies.The subspecies C. r. ana<strong>to</strong>lica Warncke has been recorded from Hakkari, Turkey, with both sexes on<strong>the</strong> wing during June and July..Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) ruficauda Lepeletier 1841Crete. Turkey. Iraq. Egypt.Probably present in Libya but confirmation needed.Coelioxys warnckei Schwarz & Gusenleitner 2003Iran.Coelioxys (Allocoelioxys) sogdiana Morawitz 1875Israel; Jerusalem.The female noted on <strong>the</strong> wing during July. This is a Central Asian species.Radoszkowskiana barrei (Radoszkowski 1893)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Iran.Radoszkowskiana gusevi Schwarz 2001Syria, Suwayda.Radoszkowskiana rufiventris (Spinola 1838)Egypt. Iran.Considered by Popov (1955) <strong>to</strong> be a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Megachile schnabli Radoszkowski in <strong>the</strong> Asianrange.Radoszkowskiana tkalcui Schwarz 2001<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey, Van.Megachile (Eutricharaea) albipila Pérez 1895Continental Greece; Thrace. Corfu. Palestine. Egypt. Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing in July and August in Greece.Megachile (Megachile) alpicola Alfken 1924Continental Greece; Olympos. Turkey; Erzurum.196


A Eurasian bee and local in our region. Found between 1900 and 2200 mtrs in late July and August in<strong>the</strong> Olympos Massif, Greece.Megachile (Xanthosarus) analis Nylander 1852Continental Greece. Turkey.Locally present in mountains <strong>of</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece from lower altitudes <strong>to</strong> 2700 mtrs when on <strong>the</strong> wingduring July and August.Widespread in <strong>Eastern</strong> Ana<strong>to</strong>lia from low elevations <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs. A summer bee with females notedduring August and September.An important pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Onobrychis viciifolia but visiting a range <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r forage flower species.Subspecies M. a. albida Friese 1898 is recorded in Turkey.Megachile (Eutricharaea) ana<strong>to</strong>lica Rebmann 1968North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; widely recorded.On <strong>the</strong> wing July <strong>to</strong> early September in eastern Turkey.Megachile (Eutricharaea) apicalis Spinola 1808Continental Greece; Thrace. Corfu. North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.present in North Africa although not reported for Egypt or Libya.A summer-flying member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> small leafcutters in <strong>the</strong> subgenus Eutricharaea, appearing on <strong>the</strong> wingduring July and August in Continental Greece and Turkey.Common during July in eastern Turkey where females collect pollen from <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> O. viciifolia.This successful and polylectic bee also visits Medicago sativa, M. lapilina, Melilotus alba, M.<strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Vicia cracca, Thymus fallax, Centaurea solstitialis, Helianthus annuus, Carduus, Lotusand Onopordum.On <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber on Cyprus, mainly June in<strong>to</strong> September, recorded visiting Echiumsericeum, Centaurea hyalolepis, Carlina lanata, Carthamus boisseri, Cirsium chamaepeucecamp<strong>to</strong>lepis, Inula viscosa and Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus. This bee is also on Cyprus frequent atsummer flowering Lamiales such as Thymus.Appears by May in Palestine and recorded <strong>the</strong>re visiting Satureia.Megachile (Eutricharaea) argentata (Fabricius 1798)Syria. North Africa.A summer bee recorded at flowers in <strong>the</strong> genera Lotus, Reseda and Sedum.Megachile (Megachile) armenia Tkalcu 1992Turkey; Erzurum.Megachile (Eutricharaea) atratula Rebmann 1967Turkey; Diyarbakir, Bingol.Megachile (Eutricharaea) auripubens Rebmann 1970Iran; Iranshah.Megachile (Eutricharaea) babylonica Rebmann 1970Iraq.Megachile (Eutricharaea) basilaris Morawitz 1875197


Subspecies M. b. posti Mavromoustakis 1952Cyprus. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Both sexes flying <strong>to</strong> Noaea mucronata during July in Cyprus.Megachile (Xanthosarus) boops Friese 1921Turkey; Amanus Mountains.Megachile (Eutricharaea) carinata Radoszkowski 1893The range in our area not documented.Megachile (Megachile) centuncularis Linnaeus 1758Continental Greece; Thrace. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.Widespread Turkey.Subspecies M. c. parvula Lepeletier 1841 reported from central eastern Turkey.Subspecies M. c. nesiotica Mavromoustakis 1953 on Cyprus, recorded during July until Septemberand sometimes Oc<strong>to</strong>ber, visiting Inula crithmoides, Inula viscosa, Heliotropium europeum, Alhagimaurorum, Pulicaria dysenterica and cultivated Medicago. Mavromoustakis also reported thisextensively red-marked subspecies from Israel.Megachile (Xanthosarus) circumcincta (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece; Olympos. Turkey.Noted at 2000 mtrs in Olympos during July.Subspecies M. c. ozbeki Tkalcu 1977 is reported as common in eastern Turkey in Provinces such asErzurum where it is a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> O. viciifolia among o<strong>the</strong>r plants.Megachile (Eutricharaea) decep<strong>to</strong>ria Pérez 1890Greece; north Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey; Balikesir and now found <strong>to</strong> be widespread through <strong>to</strong>Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia. However, this bee seems generally less numerous than some more abundantmembers <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> subgenus Eutricharaea.Polylectic.Megachile (Xanthosarus) diabolica Friese 1898Continental Greece.A rare leafcutter found in <strong>the</strong> Lykaion Range <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Peloponnesos at 1200 <strong>to</strong> 1400 mtrs. The bee has adisjunct range including <strong>the</strong> Caucusus.Females line <strong>the</strong> nesting chambers in <strong>the</strong> ground with leaf fragments <strong>of</strong> Prunus mahaleb and <strong>the</strong> cellsare provisioned with pollen <strong>of</strong> Asyneuma limonifolium (Campanulaceaea) (described by Hartmann &Arens 1998). Megacile diabolica is one <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> species sharing this calcareous montanehabitat forming a cohort utilising <strong>the</strong> floral resources <strong>of</strong> Asyneuma which includes Xylocopa iris, X.violacea, Megachile willughbiella, Osmia campanularis, Anthidium caspicum, Lasioglossumargueum ragusanum, Colletes meyeri and Coelioxys conoidea.Megachile (Eutricharaea) dorsalis Pérez 1879North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Visits Centaurea during <strong>the</strong> summer months.Megachile (Eutricharaea) fer<strong>to</strong>ni Pérez 1895Turkey; Antalya, Aydin.198


Megachile (Eutricharaea) flabellipes Pérez 1895Greece; North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Megachile (Eutricharaea) fulvocrinita Alfken 1934Egypt.Megachile (Megachile) genalis Morawitz 1880Subspecies M. g. <strong>to</strong>rtumensis Tkalcu 1980 recorded Turkey; Erzurum.Megachile (Xanthosarus) giraudi Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Samos. Widespread Turkey, including CentralAna<strong>to</strong>lia as well as eastern Provinces.Subspecies M. g. erzurumensis Tkalcu 1980 reported from eastern Turkey where on <strong>the</strong> wing duringJune.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Fabaceae, on <strong>the</strong> wing from May through July and nest building within cavities ins<strong>to</strong>ne by <strong>the</strong> creation <strong>of</strong> clusters <strong>of</strong> pot-like cells. This bee carries a substantial clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic load,reported <strong>to</strong> be Coelioxys afra, C. obtusa, C. mandibularis and parasitized by flies in <strong>the</strong> genusMelit<strong>to</strong>bia.Megachile (Eutricharaea) impressipuncta Alfken 1934Egypt.Megachile (Eutricharaea) inexpectata Rebmann 1968Turkey; Icel, Sanhurfa.Megachile (Eutricharaea) inornata Walker 1871Egypt; Sinai.Megachile (Eutricharaea) insignis Van der Zanden 1996Israel.Males on <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Megachile (Eutricharaea) iranica Rebmann 1970Iran.Megachile (Xanthosaurus) lagopoda (Linnaeus 1761)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel. Palestine. A bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> high summer months, foundvisiting Carduus and Centaurea.Reported very common in Turkey and found throughout <strong>the</strong> country, on <strong>the</strong> wing from early Junethrough <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> September. Flowers visited in <strong>the</strong> genera Carduus, Centaurea, Onopordum,Salvia and Trifolium.A typical leafcutter enthusiastic polylege <strong>of</strong> a selection <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> classical triumvirate <strong>of</strong> Legumes,Composites and Lamiales.The species is found from low elevations <strong>to</strong> mountains at 3000 mtrs.Mavromoustakis reported a subspecies M. l. fulvohirta Alfken 1935 from Palestine and Israel.Megachile (Megachile) lapponica Thomson 1872199


Continental Greece; Olympos..A Eurasian bee.Megachile (Eutricharaea) leucomalla Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece, Thrace. North Aegean on Lesbos. Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey; Artvin. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing in high summer.Megachile (Eutricharaea) levistriga Alfken 1934Egypt.Megachile (Megachile) ligniseca (Kirby 1802)Turkey; Artvin.This species has a nor<strong>the</strong>rly transpalaearctic range. A robust member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> genus, on <strong>the</strong> wing inmidsummer, <strong>of</strong>ten nesting in beetle borings in felled tree trunks. Records reported for Turkey are forJuly <strong>to</strong> September.Megachile (Eutricharaea) marginata (Smith 1853)Continental Greece. Turkey. Egypt.Megachile (Xanthosarus) maritima (Kirby 1802)Turkey; early records reported Erzurum, Kars, Artvin, Ankara, Proving <strong>to</strong> be widespread in <strong>the</strong> centreand east.A Polylectic species recorded visiting flowers in <strong>the</strong> genera Vicia, Genista, Onopordum, Centaureaand Be<strong>to</strong>nica. In Turkey visiting Onopordum in September. It is a summer bee mainly recordedduring June <strong>to</strong> AugustMegachile (Neoeutricharaea) mavromoustakisi Van der Zanden 1992Cyprus.Present in <strong>the</strong> Troodos Range with both sexes active during July up <strong>to</strong> 1900 mtrs.Megachile (Eutricharaea) melanogaster Eversmann 1852Turkey; Agri, Erzurum.Megachile (Megachile) melanopyga Costa 1863Continental Greece; Thrace. North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Jordan.A summer bee recorded visiting Centaurea paniculata and Carduus.Rhodes specimens are referable <strong>to</strong> M. m. rhodia Tkalcu 2005. Cyprus specimens are referable <strong>to</strong> M.m. zakakica Mavromoustakis 1957 while in Palestine <strong>the</strong> subspecies M. m. vulpecolor Hedicke1938 is noted.Megachile (Xanthosarus) metatarsalis Morawitz 1895Turkey; Erzincan.A scarcely recorded species.Megachile (Eutricharaea) minutissima Radoszkowski 1876Turkey; Erzincan. Israel. Egypt.The life his<strong>to</strong>ry is described by Krombein (1969).200


Megachile (Eutricharaea) minutuloides Alfken 1936Egypt.Megachile (Megachile) oc<strong>to</strong>signata Nylander 1852Continental Greece. Turkey; Erzurum, Kars.Megachile (Eutricharaea) patellimana Spinola 1838Cyprus. Israel. Egypt.Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on Cyprus during May <strong>to</strong> July, flying <strong>to</strong> Vitex agnus – castus,Alhagi maurorum and Echium sericeum.Megachile (Eutricharaea) picicornis Morawitz 1878Continental Greece. Cyprus. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Reported from North Africa without detail.Flower visit records for Centaurea glastifolia, C. solstitialis, C. iberica, Cephalaria alpina, vitex.Megachile (Megachile) pilicrus Morawitz 1877Continental Greece; Thrace. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey, widespread Central and easternProvinces. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July and August. Flower visit records for Centaurea paniculata and Salvia.Megachile (Eutricharaea) pilidens Alfken 1924Continental Greece, Thrace. Lesbos. Widespread Turkey. Jordan. Egypt. Libya.Reported on <strong>the</strong> wing mid July <strong>to</strong> mid September visiting Carduus, Centaurea solstitialis,Onopordum, Cirsium, Knautia, Onobrychis viciifolia, Arctium lappa, Medicago sativa and Mentha.Megachile (Eutricharaea) privigna Rebmann 1968Egypt.Megachile (Megachile) pyrenaea Pérez 1890Continental Greece.Both sexes recorded from Mount Olympos and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greek mountains where active on <strong>the</strong> winglater in July in<strong>to</strong> early September between 1600 and 2200 mtrs.The subspecies M. p. ardahanensis Tkalcu 1980 recorded Turkey; Ardahan. This species has beenrecorded also from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lian provinces;- Ankara and Eskisehir. On <strong>the</strong> wing from Junethrough <strong>to</strong> late August.(see Banaszak).Megachile (Eutricharaea) rotundata (Fabricius 1787)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.An important pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Onobrychis viciifolia. The commonest and most successfully distributedEutricharaea in Turkey, found from sea level <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs. On <strong>the</strong> wing July and August. Recordedflower species visited include members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> genera Onobrychis, Coronilla orientalis, Lotuscorniculatus, Trifolium repens, Vicia cracca, Melilotus alba, M. <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Medicago sativa, M.lupulina, M. papillosa, M. varia, Astragalus aureus, A. christianus, A. lineatus, A. pinoterum,Hedysarum elegans, H. hedysaroides, Thymus fallax, Vitex, Salvia sclarea, Eryngium, Sedum, Rubuscaesius and Centaurea iberica.Friese noted both sexes as visi<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>to</strong> Reseda odorata.201


Mavromoustakis recorded this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber on Cyprus, visiting Pulicariadysenterica, Ononis, Statice and Inula viscosa.This leafcutter is a host <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic bee Coelioxys rufocaudata.Megachile (Eutricharaea) rubrimana Morawitz 1894Turkey; Edirne, Samsun, Denizli,Megachile (Eutricharaea) sedilloti Pérez 1896Libya; Cyrenaica.Megachile (Eutricharaea) semicircularis Van der Zanden 1996Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey.Active during May and June.Megachile (Eutricharaea) sexmaculata Alfken 1942The subspecies M. s. thracia Tkalcu 1979 in Turkey. On <strong>the</strong> wing mid July and August.Flower visit records for Onobrychis viciifolia, C. glastifolia, S. scarea, Medicago sativa.AlsoCentaurea diffusa in forest steppe.Megachile (Eutricharaea) squamosa Rebmann 1970Iraq.Megachile (Eutricharaea) striatella Rebmann 1968Continental Greece. Iraq. Iran. Egypt. Libya.Megachile (Eutricharaea) submucida Alfken 1926Egypt.Megachile (Eutricharaea) terminata Morawitz 1875<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.A scarcely recorded bee.Megachile (Eutricharaea) tkalcui Van der Zanden 1996Israel.Females found on <strong>the</strong> wing during May.Megachile (Eutricharaea) troodica Mavromoustakis 1953Cyprus.A summer leafcutter found in July flying on open phryganic hillsides where visiting Salviagrandiflora willeana and Teucrium cyprium.Megachile (Megachile) versicolor Smith 1844Continental Greece. Turkey; Erzurum, Kars, Eskisehir.Very locally recorded in Greece; from Mount Olympos in late July.In Turkey reported visiting Trifolium repense.Megachile (Eutricharaea) villipes Morawitz 1875Turkey; Antalya, Van, Mus, Baysehir.202


Recorded at Cirsium and C. solstitialis.On <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August.Megachile (Eutricharaea) walkeri Dalla Torre 1896Cyprus. Syria. Israel. Egypt.Megachile (Xanthosarus) willughbiella (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Turkey.Found locally in Greece; Mount Olympos at 2000 mtrs where active during July.Widespread in eastern Turkey during summer when <strong>the</strong> leaves <strong>of</strong> Rosa spp. are used in nestconstruction. This handsome greater leafcutter has a temperate Eurasian distribution.≈203


Family ApidaeSubfamily XylocopinaeTribe XylocopinaeProxylocopa nitidiventris Morawitz 1895Subspecies P. n. parviceps Morawitz 1895 in eastern Turkey and Iran at up <strong>to</strong> 2350 mtrs.Proxylocopa olivieri (Lepeletier 1841)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Palestine. Israel. Sinai. Iraq. Iran.From May <strong>to</strong> September in flight, <strong>of</strong>ten crepuscular but not at all wholly so. A ground nesting species<strong>of</strong>ten, with a distinctive habitus. Mavromoustakis noted <strong>the</strong> very late and early appearance <strong>of</strong> this beeat forage plants and well after sunset this behaviour is seen on Lesbos.Capparis spinosa sicula, Centaurea hyalolepis, Echinops spinosus, Eryngium, Cistus villosus andCalyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, and in September Vitex, are recorded as visited on Cyprus.Mavromoustakis reported males <strong>of</strong> this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing during April in Palestine, visiting Anchusa.This bee lays a very large egg for its’ size, as do <strong>the</strong> Xylocopas. Egg size is an adaptation perhaps formoisture retention in a dry nest. (Rozen and Ozbek 2003).A wide range in Iran during June and July.Proxylocopa rufa Friese 1901Israel. Iran.A widespread bee in Iran.Xylocopa (Ctenoxylocopa) basalis Smith 1854Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing at lower altitudes in Iran. On <strong>the</strong> wing in April and May.Xylocopa (Kop<strong>to</strong>r<strong>to</strong>soma) caffra (Linnaeus 1767)Greece; Zakinthos.A single record.Xylocopa (Ctenoxylocopa) fenestrata (Fabricius 1798)Israel. Iraq. Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.A spring bee <strong>of</strong>ten active during March.Xylocopa (Ctenoxylocopa) hotten<strong>to</strong>tta Smith 1854Israel. Egypt.Xylocopa (Copoxyla) iris Christ 1791North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran.Widespread in numbers on Cyprus, where Mavromoustakis recorded nesting in <strong>the</strong> dried stems <strong>of</strong>Asphodelus ramosus micropodioides. In July and August fond <strong>of</strong> Vitex and Rubus ulmifoliusana<strong>to</strong>licus.Xylocopa (Afroxylocopa) nigrita (Fabricius 1775)204


Greece; Zakinthos.A single record.Xylocopa (Ancylocopa) pavlovskyi Popov 1935Central Turkey. Iran, Teheran.Xylocopa (Kop<strong>to</strong>r<strong>to</strong>soma) aestuans pubescens Spinola 1838Cyprus. Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Syria. Iran. Palestine. Egypt. Libya.This bee is on <strong>the</strong> wing during March in Cyprus and Iran. In Libya <strong>the</strong>re is a race or more possibly arelated species – X. a. bengasinensis Warncke 1976.Xylocopa (Nodula) punctilabris Morawitz 1894<strong>Eastern</strong> Iran.Xylocopa (Copoxyla) turanica Morawitz 1875Iran.This is a Caucasian and Central Asian bee which is found on <strong>the</strong> wing above 2200 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> ElburzMountains eastwards from June.However, a subspecies X. t. armeniaca Warncke 1982 is recorded from <strong>the</strong> mountains <strong>of</strong> easternTurkey above 2600 mtrs from late May in<strong>to</strong> July.Xylocopa (Xylocopa) valga Gerstaecker 1872Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Xylocopa (Xylocopa) varentzowi Morawitz 1895Turkey. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> July up <strong>to</strong> 2060 mtrs.Xylocopa (Xylocopa) violacea (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos, Thasos. Cyprus. Turkey. Jordan. Iraq. West andnor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran.Common throughout Cyprus from January and February onwards, visiting Asphodelus early in <strong>the</strong>season. O<strong>the</strong>r flower records are for Prunus dulcis, Myrtus communis, Astragalus lusitanicus, andThymelaea hirsuta.A pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry in highland Jordan.Found up <strong>to</strong> 4000 mtrs in <strong>the</strong> Taurus and o<strong>the</strong>r montane regions≈Tribe CeratininiThese are <strong>the</strong> Small Carpenter <strong>Bees</strong>. Ceratina is a genus <strong>of</strong> polylectic bees, attractively coloured.Their distributions are influenced by <strong>the</strong>ir reliance on <strong>the</strong> habit <strong>of</strong> nesting in <strong>the</strong> stems <strong>of</strong> Rubus andsometimes Verbascum. (Terzo and Rasmont 2004). In North Africa Rubus ulmifolius is frequentlyused for nesting. This plant is widespread as <strong>the</strong> leaves are used for making tea, fruits are edible and205


<strong>the</strong> plant is also used in hedging. In Central Asia <strong>the</strong> following additional species are inhabited;-Rubus saxatilis, R. idaeus, R. ana<strong>to</strong>licus, R. caesius and R. turkestanicus.Ceratina (Euceratina) acuta Friese 1896Common in Continental Greece. Crete. Widespread Turkey. Israel. Iran, Caspian Region.Ceratina (Euceratina) bifida Friese 1900Mediterranean coastal Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel.Not found on Cyprus.Ceratina (Neoceratina) bispinosa Handlirsch 1889Continental Greece. Crete. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Mediterranean coast <strong>of</strong> Turkey.Syria. Lebanon. Jordan. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing May <strong>to</strong> September. On Cyprus visiting <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Lotus, Teucrium poliummicropodioides and Satureia incana. Mavromoustakis recorded this bee hibernating and nesting in <strong>the</strong>dried stems <strong>of</strong> Asphodelus, Anchusa and Echium.Ceratina (Euceratina) chalcites Germar 1839Continental Greece. Naxos. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Widespread Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Iran. Thesubspecies C. c. ebmeri Terzo 1998 is endemic <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> eastern province <strong>of</strong> Hakkari, Turkey.Active on <strong>the</strong> wing during June and July.Ceratina (Euceratina) chalybea Chevrier 1872Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Jordan.Ceratina (Euceratina) christellae Terzo 1998<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Antalya, Hakkari. North Iran; Elburz Mountains.Recorded from late May <strong>to</strong> early August.Ceratina (Euceratina) chrysomalla Gerstaecker 1869North Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Widespread in Turkey exceptBlack Sea coast.On <strong>the</strong> wing mainly during April through <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber in Cyprus, visiting Sinapis alba, Cistussalviifolius, Malva sylvestris, Anchusa, Salvia, Calendula persica, Carlina lanata, Centaureahyalolepis and Inula viscosa. Mavromoustakis noted that this bee nests and hibernates in <strong>the</strong> deadstems <strong>of</strong> Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus, ano<strong>the</strong>r plant whose flowers are visited.Ceratina (Ceratina) cucurbitina Rossi 1792Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Israel. Jordan.This bee is absent from Cyprus, Egypt and Libya.This is <strong>the</strong> commonest and most widespread <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ceratina <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean.Ceratina (Euceratina) cyanea (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Ceratina (Euceratina) cypriaca Mavromoustakis 1954Endemic <strong>to</strong> Cyprus.206


Ceratina (Euceratina) dalla<strong>to</strong>rreana Friese 1896Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos and some o<strong>the</strong>r Aegean Islands. Crete. Turkey. Syria.Palestine and all <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> remaining Levant.Not found in Egypt or Libya.Ceratina (Euceratina) dalyi Terzo 1998Iran; Kopet Dag.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July.Ceratina (Euceratina) denesi Terzo 1998Turkey; Adana.Recorded during May.Ceratina (Euceratina) dentiventris Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey.Ceratina (Euceratina) laevifrons Morawitz 1875Iran.Ceratina (Euceratina) loewi Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Kos. Crete. Turkey. Israel.Ceratina (Euceratina) mandibularis Friese 1896Cyprus. Mediterranean coast <strong>of</strong> Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Jordan.Ceratina (Euceratina) moricei Friese 1899Cyprus. Mediterranean coast <strong>of</strong> Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Jordan.Ceratina (Euceratina) neocallosa Daly 1983Egypt; Lower Nile.This bee is on <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> early August. The range extends southwards in<strong>to</strong> eastern Africa.Ceratina (Neoceratina) nigra Handlirsch 1889Iran, sou<strong>the</strong>rn Elburz.A Turkestanic bee.Ceratina (Euceratina) nigroaenea Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Throughout Turkey except <strong>the</strong> Black Seacoastal area. Israel.Ceratina (Euceratina) nigrolabiata Friese 1896Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Syria. lebanon. Israel.(Cyprus. – check Terzo)On <strong>the</strong> wing May <strong>to</strong> July, (recorded up <strong>to</strong> 4,000 ft on Cyprus where noted at Centaurea cilicica,Salvia and Vitex.)Ceratina (Ceratina) parvula Smith 1854207


Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria and through <strong>the</strong> Levant<strong>to</strong> Egypt and Libya.Widespread although sometimes local throughout <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean, with a flight season from Junethrough <strong>the</strong> summer <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber. Visits <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Rubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus and Linaria elatineon Cyprus, hibernating and nesting in <strong>the</strong> dried stems <strong>of</strong> Asphodelus, Anchusa and Echium.Ceratina (Euceratina) rasmonti Terzo 1998<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Agri. Van.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late June in<strong>to</strong> August.Ceratina (Euceratina) sakagamii Terzo 1998Crete. Central and <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Active from June <strong>to</strong> August.Ceratina (Neoceratina) schwarzi Kocourek 1998Continental Greece. Lesbos. Samos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Iraq. Iran. Israel.Ceratina (Euceratina) schwarziana Terzo 1998<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Hakkari.Active during August.Ceratina (Euceratina) tibialis Morawitz 1895Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iraq. Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.Ceratina (Euceratina) warnckeiTerzo 1998<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Hakkari, Kahraman, Maras, Siirt.Active through June <strong>to</strong> August.Ceratina (Euceratina) zandeni Terzo 1998Continental Greece. Turkey. Israel.Ceratina (Euceratina) zwakhalsi Terzo & Rasmont 1997<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Nor<strong>the</strong>astern Iran.Pithitis citriphila (Cockerell 1935)Egypt.Widespread in Egypt with a wide spectrum <strong>of</strong> flight phenology.Pithitis tarsata (Morawitz 1872)Egypt.Widespread in Egypt and appearances scattered throughout <strong>the</strong> year.≈Tribe Allodapini208


Exoneuridia libanensis (Friese 1899)Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.Females on <strong>the</strong> wing in mid-June in Upper Galilee.Exoneuridia marginata (Smith 1854)Iran; Bandar Abbas.Exoneuridia oriola (Warncke 1979)Southwest Iran; Chuzistan, Shiraz.On <strong>the</strong> wing during July.Subfamily NomadinaeTribe NomadiniAcanthonomada odon<strong>to</strong>phora (Kohl 1905)Turkey. Syria.Nomada agrestis Fabricius 1787Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing during April in Greece.Nomada ana<strong>to</strong>lica Pittioni 1952Turkey.Nomada argentea (Schwarz 1966)Turkey.Nomada armata Herrich – Schaeffer 1839Continental Greece.Nomada atroscutellaris Strand 1921Continental Greece. Turkey.Nomada babiyi Schwarz & Standfuss 2007Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Syria.Nomada basalis Herrich-Schaeffer1839Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Iraq. Iran.Nomada beaumonti Schwarz 1967Continental Greece. Lesbos.Nomada bifasciata Olivier 1811Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada bispinosa Mocsáry 1883Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.209


Nomada blepharipes Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Turkey.Nomada bouceki Kokourek 1985Continental Greece. Turkey. Israel.Nomada braunsiana Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Jordan.Nomada calimorpha Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Turkey.Nomada caspia Morawitz 1895Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey. Israel.Nomada cherkesiana Mavromoustakis 1955Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.On Cyprus flying in late March and early April, <strong>of</strong>ten visiting Hymenocarpus circinnatus.Nomada chrysopyga Morawitz 1872Greece; Crete.Nomada cleopatra Schwarz 1989Iran. Egypt including Luxor and Fayum.The distribution extends in<strong>to</strong> Arabia.Nomada collarae Schwarz 1964Turkey. Iraq.Nomada confinis Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Nomada connectens Pérez 1884Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete. Israel.Nomada corcyraea Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada coxalis Morawitz 1877Turkey. Israel. Iran.Nomada corcyraea Schmiedeknecht 1882Turkey.Nomada cretensis (Schulz 1906)Crete.210


Nomada cruenta Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos. East Aegean on Rhodes. Crete. Turkey.Nomada curvispinosa Schwarz 1981Turkey. Israel.Nomada cypria Mavromoustakis 1952North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Rhodes. Cyprus. Israel.Nomada diacantha Schwarz 1981Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey. Syria.Nomada difficilis Friese 1920Turkey.Nomada distinguenda Morawitz 1874Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey. Syria.Nomada ebmeri Schwarz MSContinental Greece. Aegean Greek islands; Lesbos, Chios, Rhodes. Turkey. Syria.Nomada eos Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Lesbos. Turkey. Syria.Nomada erythrocephala Morawitz 1871Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey.Found in April on Cyrprus, recorded at An<strong>the</strong>mis arvensis.Nomada fabriciana (Linnaeus 1767)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Jordan.Nomada facilis Schwarz 1967Continental Greece, Thrace. Ionian Greece on Corfu. Turkey.Nomada femoralisMorawitz 1869Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Syria. Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing during may in Greece.Nomada fenestrata Lepeletier 1841Turkey. Israel. Jordan. Iraq. Iran. Egypt.Nomada ferghanica Morawitz 1875Continental Greece. Turkey. Israel.Nomada filicornis Schwarz MSNorth Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Jordan.211


Nomada flava Panzer 1798Continental Greece.Nomada flavigenis Schwarz & Standfuss 2007Continental Greece.Nomada flavinervis Brullé 1832Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Nomada flavoguttata (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey.This bee has a transpalaearctic distribution.Found during March and April, visiting Asteraceae for nectar.Nomada fucata Panzer 1798Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Iraq.A Nomad bee with a very wide palaearctic distribution.On <strong>the</strong> wing from March <strong>to</strong> May visiting An<strong>the</strong>mis, Vicia cracca elegans, Cistus villosus andAsteraceae.Nomada fulvicornis Fabricius 1793Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Lesbos. Turkey.This species has a transpalaearctic distribution and exhibits colour variability across <strong>the</strong> range, butwhich is not indicative <strong>of</strong> subspecies. (Maximilian Schwarz pers comm.).Nomada furva Panzer 1798North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey.Nomada furvoides S<strong>to</strong>eckhert 1944Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada fuscicornis Nylander 1848Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Nomada glaberrima Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon.Nomada glaucopis Pérez 1890Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Israel.Nomada goodeniana Kirby 1802Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada gracilicornis Morawitz 1895Turkey. Israel.Nomada gribodoi Schmeideknecht 1882212


Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada guichardi Schwarz 1981Turkey. Israel.Nomada gusenleitneri Schwarz 1981Turkey.Nomada guttulata Schenck 1861Continental Greece. Lesbos.Nomada hera Schwarz 1965Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey.Nomada hungarica Dalla Torre & Friese 1894Continental Greece. Turkey.Nomada immaculata Morawitz 1874Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus.Emerges in April.Nomada imperialis Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada incisa Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Cyprus.Nomada insignipes Schmiedeknecht 1882North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Nomada integra Brullé 1832Widespread Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel.Nomada italica Dalla Torre & Friese 1894Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada kervilliana Pérez 1913North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Nomada kohli Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes.Nomada kornosica Mavromoustakis 1958North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus.Nomada kusdasi Schwarz 1981Turkey. Israel.213


Nomada lapillula Schwarz (MS)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Nomada lateritia Mocsáry 1883North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Nomada laticrus Mocsáry 1883Turkey.Nomada limassolica Mavromoustakis 1955Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing from mid February <strong>to</strong> mid April in Cyprus, mostly recorded at Malva byMavromoustakis.Nomada lucidula Schwarz 1967Continental Greece. Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey. Israel.Nomada marshamella (Kirby 1802)Continental Greece.Nomada mauritanica manni Lepeletier 1841Continental Greece. Lesbos. South Aegean on Tinos. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iraq.Subspecies N. m. chrysopyga Morawitz 1871 in Syria.On Cyprus found from March <strong>to</strong> May visiting Teucrium polium micropodioides, Centaureahyalolepis, Sinapis alba.Nomada mavromoustakisi Schwarz & Standfuss 2007Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Turkey.Nomada melanopyga Schmiedeknecht 1882North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada melathoracica Imh<strong>of</strong>f 1834Turkey.Nomada Mocsaryi Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.Nomada morawitzi Radoszkowski 1876North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria.Nomada mutabilisMorawitz 1870Continental Greece. Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Nomada mutica Morawitz 1872North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.214


Nomada nausicaaSchmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey. Palestine. Israel.Nomada nigrifrons Schwarz (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Nomada nigrilabris Schwarz (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Nomada nobilis Herrich-Schaeffer1839Continental Greece; Peloponnesos. North Aegean on Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey.Nomada oculata Friese 1921Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Nomada odon<strong>to</strong>phora Kohl 1905Turkey.Nomada oralis Schwarz 1981Turkey.Nomada ot<strong>to</strong>manensis Schwarz (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. East Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey. Israel.Nomada ovaliceps Schwarz 1981Turkey. Israel.Nomada pallispinosa Schwarz 1967Continental Greece including Peloponnesos. Ionian Greece on Corfu. Aegean Greece on Lesbos,Samos. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Nomada pas<strong>to</strong>ralis Eversmann 1852Turkey.Nomada piccioliana Magretti 1883Continental Greece. Turkey.Nomada piliventris Morawitz 1877Turkey.Nomada platythorax Schwarz 1981Turkey.Nomada pleurosticta Herrich – Schaeffer 1839Turkey. Iran.215


Nomada propinqua Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Recorded in March on Cyprus, visiting Sinapis alba.Nomada pygidialis Schwarz 1981Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey.Nomada quadrifasciata Schwarz 1981Turkey, at Bursa, Mus.Nomada quinquefasciata Schwarz 1981Turkey, at Ankara and Konya.Nomada radoszkowskii Lozinski 1922North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada robertjeotiana Panzer 1799Turkey.Nomada rubiginosa Pérez 1884Turkey. Israel.Nomada rubricollis Schwarz 1967Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Jordan.Nomada rubriventris Schwarz 1981Widespread Turkey.Nomada ruficornis (Linnaeus 1758)Turkey.Nomada rufipes Fabricius 1793Turkey.Nomada scheuchli Schwarz & Standfuss 2007Continental Greece, Peloponnesos, Volos. Turkey, Cankiri. Iran, Gilan-e-Gharb.Nomada sexfasciata Panzer 1799Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.The hosts <strong>of</strong> this bee include Eucera nigrescens Pérez 1879.Nomada signata Jurine 1807Turkey.Nomada smyrnaensis Friese 1920Turkey.Nomada standfussi Schwarz 2007216


Continental Greece.Nomada stigma Fabricius 1804Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey.Nomada striata Fabricius 1793Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada succincta Panzer 1798Continental Greece. Turkey. Jordan.Nomada tarsalis Schwarz MSNorth Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel. Iran.Nomada <strong>the</strong>rsites Schmiedeknecht 1882North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iran.Nomada transi<strong>to</strong>ria Schmiedeknecht 1882Aegean Greece on Rhodes.Nomada tridentirostris Dours 1873Continental Greece. Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.Nomada trispinosa Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Lesbos. Rhodes.Nomada umbrosa Schmiedeknecht 1882Continental Greece. Turkey.Nomada unispinosa Schwarz 1981Continental Greece. Turkey.Nomada warnckei Schwarz MSNorth Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Nomada yarrowi Schwarz 1981Turkey.Nomada zonata Panzer 1793Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel. Iran.≈Tribe EpeoliniEpeolus bisch<strong>of</strong>fi (Mavromoustakis 1954)Israel.217


Epeolus cruciger (Panzer 1799)Continental Greece.Epeolus fasciatus Friese 1895Turkey.Epeolus julliani Pérez 1884Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos.Epeolus productulus Bisch<strong>of</strong>f 1930Continental Greece, at Kalamata and Patras. North Aegean on Thasos. Turkey. Syria, at Mezzé.Epeolus schummeli Schilling 1849Turkey.Epeolus variegatus (Linnaeus 1758)Turkey.≈Tribe Ammoba<strong>to</strong>idiniAmmoba<strong>to</strong>ides abdominalis(Eversmann 1852)Cyprus. Turkey. Lebanon.Ammoba<strong>to</strong>ides luctuosus (Friese 1911)Turkey.Ammobates melec<strong>to</strong>ides (Radoszkowski 1872)Turkey.Ammoba<strong>to</strong>ides rubescens (Bisch<strong>of</strong>f 1923)Turkey, at Izmir, Urfa and The Taurus.Schmiedeknechtia (Schmiedeknechtia) brevicornis Schwarz 1993Turkey. Widespread including Hakkari, Urfa, Siirt, Antalya and Mardin.Schmiedeknechtia (Schmiedeknechtia) piliventris Schwarz 1993Turkey, at Hakkari.Schmiedeknechtia (Cyr<strong>to</strong>pasites) verhoeffi Mavromoustakis 1959.Israel, at En Gedi. Egypt, at Cairo.Schmiedeknechtia (Schmiedeknechtia) walteri Schwarz 1993Turkey. Recorded at Siirt.218


≈Tribe BiastiniBiastes brevicornis (Panzer 1798)Continental Greece. Turkey.<strong>Bees</strong> in Turkey can be referred <strong>to</strong> subspecies B. b. denesi Tkalcu 1994.Biastes emarginatus (Schenck 1853)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Biastes schmidti Heinrich 1977Central Turkey at Konya.Biastes truncatus (Nylander 1848)Turkey.This bee is a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Dufourea dentiventris and Dufourea inermis (Nylander 1848).≈Tribe AmmobatiniAethammobates prionogaster Baker 1994Egypt; Gebel Asfar.This rare bee is only known from <strong>the</strong> male sex, on <strong>the</strong> wing in Late May. The district where it wasrecorded has been built upon and <strong>the</strong>re is a need <strong>to</strong> survey <strong>to</strong> find out if this bee still survives. It isconsidered <strong>to</strong> possibly be a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Meliturgula.Ammobates (Ammobates) ancylae (Warncke 1983)Turkey.Ammobates (Ammobates) armeniacus Morawitz 1876Turkey. Israel.Ammobates (Euphileremus) atrorufus (Warncke 1983)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Israel.Ammobates (Ammobates) atticus Mavromoustakis 1968Central Continental Greece.Ammobates (Ammobates) baueri (Warncke 1983)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Ammobates (Ammobates) bias<strong>to</strong>ides Friese 1895219


The subspecies A. b. globosus Mavromoustakis 1954 on Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> bee was recorded in May and June by Mavromoustakis, sometimes visiting Eryngiumcreticum. This flower is a very important resource for many Mediterranean aculeates, primarilyblooming in <strong>the</strong> high summer after May.Ammobates (Ammobates) depressus Friese 1911Turkey.Ammobates (Ammobates) dubius Benoist 1961Egypt.Ammobates (Ammobates) hellenicus Mavromoustakis 1960Central Continental Greece.Mavromoustakis recorded both species on <strong>the</strong> wing in Attica during June.Ammobates (Ammobates) iranicus (Warncke 1983)Turkey, at Urfa. Iran.Ammobates (Euphileremus) latitarsis (Friese 1899)Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing from late March in<strong>to</strong> June.Ammobates (Ammobates) mavromoustakisi Popov 1944Cyprus. Turkey. Israel.Mavromoustakis noted that this bee although a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite is an oligotrophic bivoltine species. Thefirst brood appears on <strong>the</strong> wing in June and <strong>the</strong> second is still found in September. The bee visitsCentaurea hyalolepis and C. cilicica. The second brood remains active in<strong>to</strong> September, also visitingCarlina lanata. The host species is <strong>the</strong> Anthophorine bee Tarsalia ancyliformis mediterraneaPittioni which visits <strong>the</strong> same species <strong>of</strong> flower. The autecology <strong>of</strong> this bivoltine system is not fullydescribed.Ammobates (Phileremus) melec<strong>to</strong>ides (Smith 1854)Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Crete.Ammobates (Euphileremus) muticus (Spinola 1843)Libya at Tripoli.Ammobates (Ammobates) niveatus (Spinola 1838)Israel. Egypt, including Sinai.Females on <strong>the</strong> wing early June in Israel.Ammobates (Euphileremus) oraniensis (Lepeletier 1841)Continental Greece. Jordan. Israel. Egypt. Libya.Subspecies A. o. ana<strong>to</strong>licus (Warncke 1983) Turkey.Ammobates (Ammobates) persicus Mavromoustakis 1968Iran.220


Ammobates (Ammobates) robustus Friese 1896Central Turkey. Israel.Reported visiting Cephalaria in mid June, Israel, by Mavromoustakis.Ammobates (Ammobates) rostratus Friese 1899Turkey. Israel.Ammobates (Ammobates) sanguinea Friese 1911Turkey.Ammobates (Ammobates) semi<strong>to</strong>rquatus (Warncke 1983)Egypt.Ammobates (Ammobates) similis Mocsáry 1894Continental Greece at Thessaloniki. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey.Ammobates (Ammobates) syriacus Friese 1899Israel. Jordan.Mavromoustakis noted females <strong>of</strong> this bee on <strong>the</strong> wing from early May in <strong>to</strong> June.Ammobates (Ammobates) tassus (Warncke 1983)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey. Israel.Ammobates (Ammobates) tehranicus Mavromoustakis 1968Iran.Ammobates (Ammobates) vinctus Gerstaecker 1869Continental Greece at Nea Keffisia and in Thrace.In <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes and in Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies A. v. se<strong>to</strong>sus (Morawitz 1871) occurs.Parammoba<strong>to</strong>des minutus (Mocsáry 1878)Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey. A steppic bee.Parammoba<strong>to</strong>des rozeni Schwarz 2003Israel.Chiasmognathus aegyptiacus (Warncke 1983)Israel. Egypt.In Israel females recorded active in <strong>the</strong> Negev during mid May. A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Nomioidesspecies as are <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r members <strong>of</strong> this Genus <strong>of</strong> minute bees.Chiasmognathus orientanus (Warncke 1983)Greece in Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Aegean on Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. Israel.A clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Nomia minutissimus (Rossi).Chiasmognathus rhagae Engel 2008Iran; Tehran.221


On <strong>the</strong> wing in early August.Pasites maculatus Jurine 1807Continental Greece at Loutraki, Sithonia, Kalamata, Corinth, Thrace and Olympia. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Aegeanat Lesbos. Sithia. Crete. Cyprus. Turkey. Israel. Iraq.On Cyprus recorded May <strong>to</strong> September and very active during June and July. Visits Centaureacilicica, Heliotropium europeum, Teucrium polium micropodioides, Statice and Vitex.This bee, a member <strong>of</strong> a primarily sub-Saharan African genus, is a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite <strong>of</strong> Pseudapis(Nominae) and <strong>the</strong> fascinating biology is researched in Rozen (1986).≈Subfamily ApinaeTribe AncyliniAncyla asiatica Friese 1922Turkey, Adana, Mut, Tunceli. Lebanon.A summer bee found from June <strong>to</strong> August.Ancyla cretensis Friese 1902Aegean Greece on Crete. Turkey.Ancyla holtzi Friese 1902Continental Greece, Peloponnesos. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Widespread Turkey.Iraq. Iran, Fars.Recorded in June and July on Cyprus, visiting Eryngium creticum. In Iran recorded during May insteppelands at 1550 mtrs. In Turkey and Greece <strong>of</strong>ten on <strong>the</strong> wing during August.Ancyla nitida Friese 1902Turkey, Kars, Hakkari.The subspecies A. n. nigricornis Friese 1902 reported from Continental Greece.Ancyla orientalica Warncke 1979Greece, Poros. Turkey. Coastal Syria. Iraq.On <strong>the</strong> wing June <strong>to</strong> August.Ancyla s<strong>to</strong>lli Friese 1922Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Iran, Fars.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May at 1550 mtrs in Iran. This bee is generally on <strong>the</strong> wing from May in<strong>to</strong> June.Glazunovia nigriceps (Morawitz 1895)Turkey. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during June and July. Popov reported this bee visiting Centaurea calcitrapa from <strong>the</strong>Central Asian part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> range.Tarsalia ancyliformis Popov 1935222


The subspecies T. a. mediterranea Pittioni 1950 is found on Cyprus.On Cyprus Mavromoustakis reported this bee as bivoltine, <strong>the</strong> first generation on <strong>the</strong> wing from June<strong>to</strong> July and <strong>the</strong> second in August and September. Centaurea hyalolepis and Eryngium creticum werevisited in June and Carlina lanata from Late July and August. Both sexes were found <strong>to</strong> be commonat C. hyalolepis in June and males and females also <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic bee Ammobatesmavromoustakisi Popov were amongst <strong>the</strong>m. Mavromoustakis considered this was a clep<strong>to</strong>parasite<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Tarsalia. Popov had determined this bee <strong>to</strong> be strongly oligotrophic during his researches inTadjikistan.Tarsalia hirtipes Morawitz 1895Iran, Churasan, Shiraz.On Cyprus <strong>the</strong> subspecies T. h. cypriaca Mavromoustakis 1952 is found on <strong>the</strong> wing during June andJuly and <strong>the</strong> nominate form is also active in Iran during <strong>the</strong>se months.Flower visiting on Cyprus recorded for Scolymus hispanicus.Tarsalia mimetes (Cockerell 1933)Egypt, Qina.This bee appears <strong>to</strong> have a Sudanic distribution.Tarsalia persica (Warncke 1979)Iran, Bandar Abbas, Schiraz, Chuzistan.A steppic bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> late spring and early summer when flying <strong>to</strong> Centaurea.≈Tribe EuceriniEucera albopunctulata Dours 1873Western Turkey.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) alfkeni Risch 2003Syria. Lebanon. Israel.Appears on <strong>the</strong> wing during late March and active <strong>to</strong> early June.Eucera (Eucera) alopex Risch 1999A Tunisian bee considered by Risch <strong>to</strong> probably be found in <strong>the</strong> border areas with Libya. Records inNorth Africa are for mid February and March but a single record also for early May.Eucera ampla Walker 1871Egypt, Cairo.Eucera bibalteata Dours 1873Greece, Islands.Eucera bidentata Pérez 1887North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus.223


On <strong>the</strong> wing during March on Cyprus, visiting Calendula persica, Achillea san<strong>to</strong>lina, Cichoriumpumilum, Fumaria, Erodium and Sinapis.This bee has not been assigned <strong>to</strong> a subgenus.Eucera (Pteneucera) brevitarsis Risch 1997Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey; Hakkari.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late May <strong>to</strong> mid June.Eucera caerulescens Friese 1899Cyprus. Central and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing March <strong>to</strong> May on Cyprus, flying <strong>to</strong> Lamiales and Calendula persica.Eucera (Pareucera) caspica Morawitz 1873North Continental Greece. Turkey.Eucera chrysopyga Pérez 1879North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera cineraria Eversmann 1852Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Iran.This bee has not been assigned <strong>to</strong> a subgenus.Eucera cinerascens Walker 1871Egypt, Sinai.Eucera (Stilbeucera) clypeata Erichson 1835Continental Greece; Peloponnessos. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes.Turkey. Syria. Israel. Palestine. Jordan. Iraq. Iran. North Africa.Friese noted that in Europe <strong>the</strong> males <strong>of</strong> this bee fly <strong>to</strong> Anchusa and Nonnea during May and June bu<strong>the</strong> recorded <strong>the</strong> females at Trifolium.Found widely in Turkey on <strong>the</strong> wing from March <strong>to</strong> June.Eucera curvitarsisMocsáry 1879North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera (Eucera) cypriaAlfken 1933Rhodes. Cyprus. Iraq.An early bee, Mavromoustakis recorded this on <strong>the</strong> wing from January <strong>to</strong> March on Cyprus, flying <strong>to</strong>Mandragora <strong>of</strong>ficinarum, Asphodelus ramosus micropodioides, Oxalis corniculata, Lamiumamplexicaule, Faba and Vicia.Eucera dalmaticaLepeletier 1841Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey.224


Mavromoustakis recorded this species on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> June on Cyprus, with flower visitrecords for Echium sericeum and Statice sinuata. Friese recorded this bee as a summer flier in Europe,visiting Echium altissimum.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) decipiensAlfken 1935Turkey; Ankara eastwards. Syria. Israel. Jordan.Quite widely recorded in eastern Turkey and from a number <strong>of</strong> localities in Syria.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) digitataFriese 1895Greece; Aegean islands <strong>of</strong> Lesbos, Chios, Samos, Kos. Turkey; widespread from Ankara eastwards.Syria; Latakia, Dibbin, Homs, Cr. des Chevaliers, Jisr ash Shugur. Jordan. Iran; Tehran.Eucera (Eucera) dimidiataBrullé 1832Cyprus. Turkey. Iran.Reported on Cyprus from February <strong>to</strong> April, visiting Oxalis corniculata, Eruca sativa, Rhaphanus,Sinapis alba, Asphodelus ramosus micropodioides, Vicia, An<strong>the</strong>mis arvensis and Achillea san<strong>to</strong>lina.Eucera discoidalisMorawitz 1877Turkey.Eucera (Rhyteucera) ebmeriRisch 1999North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Balikesir, Bursa. Israel; Tabor.Found during February in Israel and during April in Turkey.Eucera (Pteneucera) eucnemideaDours 1873North Africa.Although not reported for Libya or Egypt it should be searched for in <strong>the</strong>se countries.Eucera euroaTkalcu (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) excisaMocsáry 1879Turkey; Isparta, Konya, Erzurum, Agri and Hakkari.Eucera (Pileteucera) fasciataRisch 1999Continental Greece; Peloponnessos, Attica. Widespread in Turkey including western Provinces. Syria.Jordan. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing during late May in Jordan. Active during mid July Ankara and in Iran. <strong>the</strong> peak <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>flight season is in June.225


Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) flavicornisRisch 2003Turkey; Ankara eastwards.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing from April through <strong>to</strong> July.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) frieseiRisch 2003Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Israel.A local montane bee active during May.Eucera fulvescensWalker 1871Egypt, Cairo.Eucera furfureaVachal 1907North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing March <strong>to</strong> April on Cyprus, recorded at Echium sericeum.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) gaulleiVachal 1907Widespread Cyprus. Turkey; widespread in eastern Provinces. Widespread Syria. Israel. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing from February <strong>to</strong> June. Flowers visited include early spring nectar and pollen resourcesamong o<strong>the</strong>r plants, including Asphodelus, calendula persica, Fumaria, Lamium amplexicaule,Achillea san<strong>to</strong>lina, Echium sericeum, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Cistus villosus, Vicia cracca elegans andOnosma fruticosum.This bee can be found well above 2000 mtrs as well as at lower elevations.Eucera (Eucera) graecaRadoszkowski 1876Greece, Syra. Ionian islands on Corfu. North Aegean on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Iran.In Cyprus appears on <strong>the</strong> wing in March, visiting Fumaria and Anchusa hybrida.Schmiedkenecht recorded this bee on Corfu.Friese noted that in Europe males visit Borago and Nonnea and females fly <strong>to</strong> Anchusa during <strong>the</strong>month <strong>of</strong> May. The emergence <strong>of</strong> this bee in <strong>the</strong> Balkans may perhaps be timed <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> flowering <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Boraginaceae as spring progresses from south <strong>to</strong> north through <strong>the</strong> range.Eucera griseaFabricius 1793Libya.Eucera (Pareucera) griseohirtaRisch 2001Syria. Israel. Jordan.A steppic bee especially active during April.Eucera helvola226


Klug 1845Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Lebanon. Iran.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing during May and June in Lebanon, strongly attracted <strong>to</strong> Cirsium syriacum<strong>the</strong>re.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) hermoniRisch 2003Syria. Israel. Jordan.Active from April <strong>to</strong> May when recorded from sea level <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs.Eucera hirsutaMorawitz 1875Turkey.Eucera (Eucera) interruptaBaer 1850Greece, Greek islands. Turkey.Eucera kervilleiPérez 1911Turkey.Eucera kilikiaeRisch 1999Turkey; Antalya.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing during late March and early April.This bee has not been placed <strong>to</strong> a subgenus yet.Eucera (Eucera) kullenbergiTkalcü 1978North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Iran.This handsome eucerine emerges during March and April, and on <strong>the</strong> wing in<strong>to</strong> May. In Turkeyrecorded from Ankara eastwards.Eucera (Pteneucera) lanataSitdikov 1988<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Kars, Hakkari.A bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> mountains found on <strong>the</strong> wing up <strong>to</strong> 2300 mtrs during mid May <strong>to</strong> early July, <strong>the</strong> springand early summer <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> highlands.Eucera (Pteneucera) laticepsRisch 1997<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzurum, Agri.Emerges from later May and active <strong>to</strong> mid July.Eucera laxiscopaAlfken 1935North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.227


Eucera majorRisch (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera maximaTkalcü 1987North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria.Active on <strong>the</strong> wing from mid May <strong>to</strong> early July.Eucera meridionalisDalla Torre & Friese 1895Egypt.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) microsomaCockerell 1922North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Widespread Turkey. Syria. Israel.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> June including a number <strong>of</strong> localities in Syria.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) minullaRisch 2003Syria; Aleppo. Jordan; Amman.Active during March and April. Recorded at Cruciferae.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) monticolaRisch 2003Turkey; Hakkari, Adiyaman.A bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> mountain springtime when on <strong>the</strong> wing from May, mainly during June, found up <strong>to</strong> 2600mtrs.Eucera multesimaTkalcü (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera (Eucera) nigrescensPérez 1879Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Turkey. Jordan. Iran. The bees <strong>of</strong> thisspecies recorded in our area are <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> subspecies E. n. contraria Tkalcu 1984.Recorded as a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry in <strong>the</strong> highlands <strong>of</strong> Jordan.The nomad bee Nomada sexfasciata Panzer 1799 is clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic on <strong>the</strong> nests <strong>of</strong> this bee.Eucera (Pteneucera) nigrifaciesLepeletier 1841Continental Greece. Corfu. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Jordan. Iran.Found from March <strong>to</strong> July.Eucera (Eucera) nigrilabrisLepeletier 1841228


Widespread Continental Greece, including Peloponnesos, Aegina, Delphi. Corinth. North AegeanGreece on Lesbos. Turkey; Adana, Konya.In Palestine and Israel <strong>the</strong> subspecies E. n. orientis Tkalcu 1984 is found.Within <strong>the</strong> rest <strong>of</strong> our area is <strong>the</strong> subspecies E. n. rufitarsis Tkalcu 1984.This eucerine appears on <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April and is noted visiting Vicia dasycarpa amidwooded terraced slopes.Eucera (Pareucera) nigritaFriese 1896Continental Greece. Corfu, Paros. Andros. North Aegean on Lesbos. Naxos. Turkey.Subspecies E. n. alb<strong>of</strong>asciata Friese recorded Samos, Rhodes, Tinos. Crete, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon,Israel, Jordan.Reported from North Africa but distribution <strong>the</strong>re not known.Friese reported visits <strong>of</strong> this bee <strong>to</strong> Rindera tetraspis during late April.Eucera notataLepeletier 1841Turkey. Egypt.Active during March and April.Eucera obsoletaPérez 1911North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) oreophilaRisch 2003Turkey; Adiyaman, Hakkari.A montane eucerine on <strong>the</strong> wing during June and found up <strong>to</strong> 2500 mtrs.Eucera (Hemieucera) paraclypeataSitdikov 1988Continental Greece including Peloponnessos, Delphi. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos and Chios.Widespread Turkey. Syria. Israel. Jordan.On <strong>the</strong> wing from April in<strong>to</strong> July.Eucera parnassiaPérez 1902North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera parvicornisMocsáry 1878Greece, Corfu. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Tinos, Rhodes.In Europe Friese noted that this bee visits Nonnea during May and June.Eucera parvulaFriese 1895Turkey.229


Eucera pedataDours 1873Greece, Islands.Eucera (Pteneucera) penicillataRisch 1997North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Widespread on Cyprus. Turkey. Widespread Syria. Jordan. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing from February in Cyprus, late March at least in Jordan and recorded as active <strong>to</strong> midMay in Syria.Eucera pilosaWalker 1871Egypt, Cairo.Eucera (Pteneucera) pseudeucnemideaRisch 1997Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel. Iran.The flight season begins in March in <strong>the</strong> Aegean and Israel but ra<strong>the</strong>r later in Highland Turkey. Thebee may be found in<strong>to</strong> mid June.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) puncticolleMorawitz 1876Continental Greece; Peloponnessos. Turkey; Antalya, Nevsehir, Marsin. Erzurum, Agri, Sivas,Develi, Kars.Active from May <strong>to</strong> early July.Eucera punctulataAlfken 1942North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) pythagorasRisch 2003Greece; Aegean islands <strong>of</strong> Lesbos, Samos. Turkey; very locally present including Aydin.Active during April and May, discovered on Samos frequenting steppic hillsides with pine trees andPhlomis.Eucera rhodiaTkalcü (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) seminudaBrullé 1832Widespread Continental Greece, Ionian islands on Corfu, North Aegean on Lesbos. Widespreadthroughout Turkey including Istanbul.In <strong>the</strong> European range Friese recorded males flying <strong>to</strong> Anchusa <strong>of</strong>ficinalis during April and femalesvisiting Trifolium pratense during May.Eucera serraticornis230


Risch 1999<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Hakkari.Males <strong>of</strong> this bee are found on <strong>the</strong> wing during June, in montane habitat <strong>to</strong> 1500 mtrs.This bee has not been placed in a subgenus yet.Eucera sogdianaMorawitz 1875<strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean Greece on Rhodes.Subspecies E. s. phrygiae Tkalcu 1978 Turkey.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) spatulataGribodo 1893This North African species species may possibly be present in Libya.Eucera spectabilisMocsáry 1881Turkey.Eucera speculiferPérez 1911Turkey.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) spinipesRisch 2003Turkey; Urfa, Gaziantep, Hakkari, Elazig, Malatya. Syria at a number <strong>of</strong> localities. Israel. Iran; Kasan,Persepolis.On <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> July.Eucera squamosaLepeletier 1841Central Continental Greece, including A<strong>the</strong>ns and Patras, North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Eucera subtilisTkalcü (MS)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera syriacaDalla TorreSyria.Eucera tauricaMorawitz 1870North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Eucera thoracicaSpinola 1838Egypt.231


Eucera (Pteneucera) tibialis(Morawitz 1837)Turkey. Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Iraq; Baiji.This bee is predominantly a Central Asian species.Eucera <strong>to</strong>men<strong>to</strong>saMorawitz 1875Iran.Eucera trivittataBrullé 1832Continental Greece.Eucera (A<strong>to</strong>peucera) troglodytesRisch 2003Turkey; Mardin, Siirt. Syria. Israel. Jordan; north Shuna.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late April in<strong>to</strong> June.Eucera velutinaSmith 1879Turkey.Eucera (Eucera) viduaLepeletier 1841This western Mediterranean bee is included as it may occur in Libya.Eucera vulpesBrullé 1832Greece, Corfu. North Aegean on Lesbos.Cubitalia (Cubitalia) baalEngel 2006North Israel, Hermon.Both sexes on <strong>the</strong> wing at 1500 mtrs on Mount Hermon during <strong>the</strong> second half <strong>of</strong> April where notedflying <strong>to</strong> Symphytum brachycalyx.Cubitalia (Cubitalia) boyadjiani(Vachal 1907)Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey; Adana, Hatay.Active during June.Cubitalia (Cubitalia) breviceps(Friese 1911)Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey.A local montane bee active during May.Cubitalia (Cubitalia) monstruosa(Risch 1999)232


Turkey; Hakkari, Kayseri, Kars.A Highland species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> east <strong>of</strong> Turkey active upon <strong>the</strong> wing during late May and early June.Cubitalia (Cubitalia) morio(Friese 1922)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Widespread through Turkey. A summer bee emerging late in May andactive in<strong>to</strong> August.Cubitalia (Pseudeucera) parvicornis(Mocsáry 1878)Continental Greece.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Boraginaceae.Cubitalia (Cubitalia) tristis(Morawitz 1876)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Mus, Kars.On <strong>the</strong> wing later in May and <strong>the</strong> first half <strong>of</strong> June.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) alternans(Brullé 1832)Turkey. Iran. North Africa.Tetralonia amoenaWalker 1871Egypt.Reported from <strong>the</strong> Red Sea region.Tetralonia atrata(Klug 1845)Egypt.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) berlandiDusmet 1926Turkey. Iran.Tetralonia blandaWalker 1871Egypt.reported from <strong>the</strong> Red Sea region.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) cressaTkalcu 1984Greece; Crete.An endemic island bee <strong>of</strong> Crete active during April and May.Tetralonia cunicularia(Klug 1845)Egypt.233


Reported on <strong>the</strong> wing during March in Egypt.Tetralonia decoraWalker 1871(research distribution).Tetralonia hungarica(Friese 1895)Greece, Corfu.Flower records given from Europe by Friese are <strong>of</strong> males visiting Anchusa and Nonnea during Mayand females visiting Centaurea cyanea during June. Medicago sativa is also a host.Tetralonia invariaWalker 1871Egypt.Recorded from <strong>the</strong> Cairo District.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) lucasiGribodo 1893North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. North Africa.Tetralonia malvae(Rossi 1790)The subspecies T. m. crinita Klug is found in <strong>the</strong> Greek Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey. Syria. Egypt.A summer bee appearing in July when visiting Malva.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) mavromoustakisiCyprus.An island endemic species <strong>of</strong> Cyprus found on <strong>the</strong> wing from April <strong>to</strong> June.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) mediterranea(Friese 1895)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) nadigi(Friese in Schul<strong>the</strong>ss 1924)North Africa.This species could be present in Libya or Egypt and is included here for reference.Tetralonia olivieri(lepeletier 1841)Iraq.Tetralonia persica(Friese 1895)Egypt. Iran.Tetralonia ruficollis234


(Brullé 1832)Continental Greece, A<strong>the</strong>ns. Syria. Iran.Tetralonia spoliataWalker 1871Palestine and Israel.Tetralonia tricincta(Erichson 1835)Continental Greece, A<strong>the</strong>ns. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Palestine. Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May in Palestine, recorded <strong>the</strong>re visiting Ballota.Recorded at Salvia silvestris in Europe.Tetralonia turcestanica(Dalla Torre 1895)Iran.A desertic bee <strong>of</strong> Central Asia.Tetralonia vetustaWalker 1871Egypt.Red Sea region.Tetralonia (Synhalonia) zeta(Dalla Torre 1896)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus.On <strong>the</strong> wing February and March on Cyprus where Mavromoustakis recorded it as an oligotrophe <strong>of</strong>Prunus dulcis (Almond) and Crataegus azarolus.Tetraloniella alticincta(Lepeletier 1841)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Females <strong>of</strong> this bee have an area <strong>of</strong> specialised pollen-collecting hairs on gastral sternites 3 <strong>to</strong> 5 whichare adapted for ga<strong>the</strong>ring pollen efficiently from <strong>the</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> Inula and Pulicaria. (Müller 2008).This bee is oligolectic on Inula ensifolia, Inula germanica and Pulicaria dysenterica.Tetraloniella basizona(Spinola 1838)Egypt.Tetraloniella fulvescens(Giraud 1863)Continental Greece, Loutraki.An oligolege <strong>of</strong> Inula candida, Inula ensifolia, Inula germanica, Inula hirta, Inula montana and Inulasalicina found on <strong>the</strong> wing during June. Females possess an especially adapted pollen-ga<strong>the</strong>ringstructure on sternites 3 <strong>to</strong> 5 enabling effective foraging from <strong>the</strong>se host plants.235


Tetraloniella glauca(Fabricius 1775)Widespread through Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. WidespreadTurkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August, especially active during July.Tetraloniella grajaEversmann 1852Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean on Rhodes. Turkey.In Syria <strong>the</strong> subspecies T. g. syriaca Friese is describedA summer Tetraloniella and in Europe recorded visiting Centaurea arenaria during July.Tetraloniella inulae(Tkalcu 1979)Cyprus. Iran.Typically active in high summer, recorded during July and August. This bee inhabits open calcareousrocky hill slopes with phryganic vegetation where Inula grows. Original observations by Tkalcu inAlbania, Continental Europe, discovered that Inula ensifolia, Inula germanica and Inula oculuschristiwere all host flowers. (Müller 2008) describes <strong>the</strong> especially adapted pollen-ga<strong>the</strong>ring structurepossessed by females <strong>of</strong> this bee and some congeners and adds Inula spiraeifolia <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> list <strong>of</strong> knownhosts <strong>of</strong> this bee.Tetraloniella jullianiPérez 1879North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.The subspecies T. j, biroi Mocsáry 1879 is found in Turkey; Mersin. A fur<strong>the</strong>r subspecies, T. j.ebmeri Tkalcu 1979 is found in Iranian mountains up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs.Active in July.Tetraloniella nanaMorawitz 1873Friese notes that this bee is ra<strong>the</strong>r rare and only locally makes an appearance. It is on <strong>the</strong> wing duringJuly.Tetraloniella pollinosa(Lepeletier 1841)A steppic summer bee and <strong>the</strong> range not known or certain in our Region.In Europe recorded visiting Scabiosa and Mentha.Tetraloniella ruficornis(Fabricius 1804)The possible range and status in our Region not known but a summer species visiting Centaureaduring July. There is also a variant or subspecies T. r. biroi Mocsáry≈236


Tribe AnthophoriniAmegilla albigenaLepeletier 1841Continental Greece; Euboea. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Crete. Cyprus. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Kars.Syria. Jordan.In Egypt a subspecies A. a. afra (Priesner 1957) occurs.In flight through <strong>the</strong> summer, June <strong>to</strong> September, on Cyprus. Flower visiting records from Cyprus forRubus ulmifolius ana<strong>to</strong>licus, Echium sericeum, Anchusa, Statice, Nepeta troodi, Thymus capitatus,Teucrium cyprium, Salvia grandiflora willeana, Ballota nigra and Ballota integrifolia.In Turkey <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> this species recorded from Onopordum during summer.A visi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> orchards <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry in Jordan.Present in desert valleys <strong>of</strong> Egypt and <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn and Red sea coasts <strong>to</strong> Sinai where active fromApril right through <strong>to</strong> January.Amegilla andresi(Friese 1914)Egypt. Libya.Widespread and locally common in Egypt where active from April until November. Recorded duringJuly from Libya.Amegilla argophenaxEngel 2007Egypt; Birket Qarun.Recorded in Oc<strong>to</strong>ber.Amegilla byssina(Klug 1845)Egypt.Common and widespread and active all year in Egypt.Amegilla cana(Walker 1871)Possibly present in Egypt. reported from <strong>the</strong> vicinity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Sea.Amegilla candidella(Priesner 1957)Egypt.Described in <strong>the</strong> female recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing in Egypt during June.Amegilla carnea(Gribodo 1894)Egypt.Found in Egypt during April <strong>to</strong> June. Uncommon but widespread.Amegilla crocea(Klug 1845)Egypt.237


A sou<strong>the</strong>rn species, presumably Sudanic. Recorded by Priesner in Egypt from Kom Ombo, Assouan,Mersa halaib and Gebel AlbaAmegilla deceptrix(Priesner 1957)Nor<strong>the</strong>ast Egypt and Sinai.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Egypt from April <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber. The full range in Egypt may be more extensive.Amegilla garrula(Rossi 1790)Turkey.Amegilla harmalaeMorawitzCyprus. Lebanon.On <strong>the</strong> wing June and July.Amegilla harttigi(Alfken 1926)Iraq, Basra.Amegilla klugi(Priesner 1957)Egypt.Ra<strong>the</strong>r common and widespread in Egypt from April through <strong>to</strong> December.Amegilla latizona(Spinola 1838)Egypt.Priesner found this bee widespread in Egypt from May through <strong>to</strong> September.Amegilla li<strong>to</strong>rana(Priesner 1957)Egypt.recorded twice from Egypt, in May and in August from Mersa Matrouh and Sinai.Amegilla lutulenta(Klug 1845)Israel. Egypt.Primarily a bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Negev desert in Israel where found on <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April withfloral visits recorded most <strong>of</strong>ten <strong>to</strong> Centaurea pallescens and also Carduus argentatus.Amegilla magnilabrisFedtschenko 1875North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Syria. Egypt.Ra<strong>the</strong>r scarce on Lesbos in comparison with some o<strong>the</strong>r members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> genus. Priesner recorded thisbee during March in Egypt where it was rarely recorded. Reported on <strong>the</strong> wing during July by Friese,visiting Anchusa.238


Amegilla montivaga(Fedtschenko 1875)Egypt.Reported from Cairo by Friese, this is a mainly Central Asian bee.Amegilla mucorea(Klug 1845)Egypt.Widespread in Upper Egypt and uncommon but present in <strong>the</strong> canal zone and Cairo. Found fromJanuary <strong>to</strong> November.Friese noted that this bee flies <strong>to</strong> Mentha longifolia and is also attached <strong>to</strong> Acacia in some parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>range.Amegilla nivosella(Priesner 1957)Egypt.Priesner described this bee as local in Egypt, where active on <strong>the</strong> wing during May and June.Amegilla ochroleucaPérez 1879Amegilla omissa(Priesner 1957)Egypt.Females only recorded by Priesner in Egypt. On <strong>the</strong> wing during April and local in distribution.Amegilla pipiens(Mocsáry 1879)Egypt.Not common but possibly widespread in Egypt, including Sinai, where Priesner reports <strong>the</strong> speciesactive from March <strong>to</strong> May.Amegilla pulvereaWalker 1871Possibly present in Egypt.Reported from <strong>the</strong> region <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Sea.Amegilla punctifrons(Walker 1871)Egypt.Common in Egypt in Central and Upper parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Country, <strong>the</strong> Red Sea Region and <strong>the</strong> Canal zone.Active from April <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber.Amegilla quadrifasciata(Villiers 1789)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey; Erzurum. Syria. Lebanon. Egypt.239


A summer bee. On <strong>the</strong> wing from June in Lebanon and recorded June <strong>to</strong> August in Cyprus, There arealso records from September <strong>to</strong> December. The flight season recorded from Turkey is <strong>the</strong> same, fromJuly <strong>to</strong> September and with floral records <strong>to</strong> Salvia.Flower visits in Cyprus recorded <strong>to</strong> Ononis, Broteroa corymbosa, Inula viscosa, Carlina lanata,Carduus, Cirsium hamaepeuce camp<strong>to</strong>lepis, Carthamus boissieri, Cistus villosus creticus, Silene,Heliotropium europium, Echium sericeum, Statice virgata, Scutellaria hirta, Rubus ulmifoliusana<strong>to</strong>licus, Salvia grandiflora willeana and Thymus capitatus.Priesner found this bee in Central Egypt and along parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn coast, where on <strong>the</strong> wing fromMarch through <strong>to</strong> December.Amegilla salviae(Morawitz 1876)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzurum.From Turkey a record <strong>of</strong> female flower visiting <strong>to</strong> Myosotis during July..A summer bee on <strong>the</strong> wing July and August in Cyprus, recorded visiting Echium sericeum.Friese reported an association with Anchusa during August in <strong>the</strong> European range.Anthophora saussureiFedtschenko 1875Iran.This is a Central Asian species.Amegilla savignyi(Lepeletier 1841)Egypt.Common throughout Egypt including Sinai and found throughout <strong>the</strong> year.Amegilla <strong>to</strong>rensis(Priesner 1957)Egypt.Described from a single female discovered in sou<strong>the</strong>rn Sinai.Anthophora aegyptiacaDalla Torre & Friese 1895Israel. Egypt.A common hibernal bee in Egypt from August through <strong>to</strong> April, mainly during <strong>the</strong> winter and foundthroughout Central and Upper Egypt.Anthophora aestivalisPanzer 1801North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel. Jordan.Reported <strong>to</strong> be <strong>the</strong> commonest Anthophora species in parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey, where found upon <strong>the</strong>wing from late April <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> August. In <strong>the</strong>se areas <strong>of</strong> Turkey <strong>the</strong> bee visits Legumes such asOnobrychis sativa, Medicago sativa and Trifolium pratense and has a role in pollinating some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>seflower species.In Jordan also known as a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> fruit trees.Fairly widespread in Israel where found from April <strong>to</strong> late May. Floral records <strong>the</strong>re are for Cerasusmicrocarpus and Echium angustifolium.240


Anthophora affinisBrullé 1832Continental Greece.Anthophora aflabellataGribodo 1926Libya.Anthophora agamaRadoszkowski 1869Continental Greece, Attica. Syra. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Rhodes. Turkey, Erzurum,Erzincan. Syria. Israel.Recorded from Continental Greece during May.Reported on <strong>the</strong> wing in Turkey during June and July where visiting Arctium lappa, Cirsium andSalvia.Appears in Israel from <strong>the</strong> latter half <strong>of</strong> March and especially active in May, present in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> first half<strong>of</strong> JuneThis anthophorine is not a true desertic species but is found in <strong>the</strong> steppe-desert transition zone in, forinstance, <strong>the</strong> Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Negev desert.As with a number <strong>of</strong> species in <strong>the</strong> genus <strong>the</strong>re is a strong attachment <strong>to</strong> flowers in <strong>the</strong> Boraginaceae.The species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora recorded as hosts are;- Anchusa italica, Anchusa undulata,Anchusa strigosa, Echium angustifolium, Salvia palaestina and Centaurea iberica.Anthophora albomaculataRadoszkowski 1874Iran.Anthophora albosignata(Friese 1886)Continental Greece. Syria. Palestine. Israel. Egypt.Fairly common in parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> north coast <strong>of</strong> Egypt.Anthophora alfieriiAlfken 1942Egypt.Desert areas. (Priesner notes synonymy needs <strong>to</strong> be checked with A. cyrenaica GRIBODO).Anthophora alfkenellaPriesner 1957Egypt.Described from two localities in Egypt where discovered on <strong>the</strong> wing during April.Anthophora alternans(Klug 1845)Egypt.Priesner reported this bee as uncommon in Egypt during April and May.241


Anthophora ambitiosaAlfken 1935Israel.Recorded by Bytinski-Salz from <strong>the</strong> coastal plain <strong>of</strong> Israel during April and May.Anthophora annuliferaWalker 1871Possibly present in Egypt.Anthophora arabicaPriesner 1957Israel. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing late March and early April in Egypt, males visiting Stachys aegyptiaca. Priesnerconsidered this bee as possibly very rare in Egypt, yet it has been found <strong>to</strong> be at least widespread inIsrael from mid February and March. Flower visits <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are reported for especiallyAstragalus spinosus, also Moricandia nitens.Anthophora armataFriese 1905The subspecies A. a. tetra Friese 1922 in Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during February.The nominate A. a. armata is an Ethiopian species.Anthophora atricepsPérez 1879Egypt.Fairly common around <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn coastal areas <strong>of</strong> Egypt from February <strong>to</strong> April.Anthophora atricillaEversmann 1846Turkey.The subspecies A. a. aegyp<strong>to</strong>rum Priesner 1957 is common along parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> north coast <strong>of</strong> Egypt.Anthophora atroalbaLepeletier 1841Greece, North Aegean on Lesbos. Turkey.Common in forage legume fields in <strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey and an important pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Onobrychis andMedicago. Found on <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong>se habitats with <strong>the</strong> more common Anthophora aestivalis. Alsovisits Taraxacum <strong>of</strong>ficinale and Anchusa.Anthophora biciliataLepeletier 1841North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.In Turkey reported active during June from <strong>the</strong> eastern Provinces <strong>of</strong> Erzurum and Erzincan wherenoted visiting Onobrychis sativa and Cirsium.In Israel recorded from <strong>the</strong> coastal plain, though <strong>the</strong> majority <strong>of</strong> records are from montane regionsincluding <strong>the</strong> Carmel massif and <strong>the</strong> Mountains <strong>of</strong> Judea. Active primarily in later March and <strong>the</strong> firsthalf <strong>of</strong> April.242


Flower hosts recorded from among <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are;- Asphodelus aestivus, Anchusa strigosa,Anchusa undulata, Echium judaeum, Echium angustifolium, Salvia fruticosa, Trifolium clypeatum,Trifolium purpureum, Arbutus andrachne and Cistus incanus.Visits are especially noted <strong>to</strong> Anchusa strigosa for this bee.Anthophora bicincta(Fabricius 1793)Egypt.Anthophora bimaculiferaWalker 1871Possibly found in Egypt.Friese noted that this bee was reported from <strong>the</strong> region <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Sea.Anthophora blandaPérez 1895Israel. Egypt.Uncommon in Egypt and local on <strong>the</strong> wing in March and April. Found in Cairo among o<strong>the</strong>rlocalities.Found <strong>to</strong> be widespread in Israel away from <strong>the</strong> Negev desert. On <strong>the</strong> wing from March <strong>to</strong> June andespecially recorded from <strong>the</strong> Mountains <strong>of</strong> Judea. Flower visits <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are especiallyfrequent for Echium angustifolium, an important member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Boraginaceae in <strong>the</strong> Region and no<strong>to</strong>ne <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> earliest species <strong>to</strong> blossom. O<strong>the</strong>r flower visits are <strong>to</strong> Echium judaeum, Anchusa strigosa,Anchusa aegyptiaca and Salvia fruticosa.Anthophora borealisMorawitz 1864<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzurum.Reported <strong>to</strong> be quite common at Centaurea in eastern Turkey during July and August.Anthophora caelebsGribodo 1924Israel.A desert species in Israel, recorded especially throughout <strong>the</strong> Negev, in <strong>the</strong> Dead Sea region and inSinai. This bee is mainly active from February <strong>to</strong> early April.Flower visiting <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora includes a strong desertic element, with especially frequentvisits recorded <strong>to</strong> Astragalus spinosus, also noted at Onosma orientalis, Echium judaeum, Papaver sp.and Hyoscyamus deser<strong>to</strong>rum.Anthophora canescensDours 1865Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Israel.An early bee, on Cyprus emerging in late January and February, polylectic and successful, visitingPrunus dulcis, Faba, Mandragora <strong>of</strong>ficinarum, Muscari, Lamium amplexicaule, Oxalis corniculata,Crataegus azarolus, Scilla maritima and Asphodelus. In February visiting Lycium europeum amongsand dunes.In Israel found from late February <strong>to</strong> early April, with <strong>the</strong> peak <strong>of</strong> activity occuring in March. Flowervisiting records for <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are for Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa, Lamium moschatum, Vicia243


villosa, Asphodelus aestivus, Amygdalus communis, Echium judaeum, Anchusa strigosa, Trifoliumclypeatum, Bellevalia flexuosa, Lavandula and Rosmarinus <strong>of</strong>ficinaleAnthophora carneaGribodo 1894Egypt.Known from a single specimen from Cairo.Anthophora caroliPérez 1895Israel.In Israel Recorded in January and March <strong>to</strong> April. Widespread <strong>the</strong>re second half <strong>of</strong> March <strong>to</strong> mid-April. It is especially frequent at <strong>the</strong> steppe-desert transition zone where <strong>the</strong> plant Echium judaeumoccurs, and also visits Echium angustifolium and Moricandia nitens.Anthophora caucasicaRadoszkowski 1874Syria.Anthophora cinerascensLepeletier 1841Israel. Egypt. Priesner described ssp. A. c. aegyp<strong>to</strong>rum Priesner 1957.In Israel a pattern <strong>of</strong> infrequent records with an extended flight phenology in diverse landscape; fromFebruary <strong>to</strong> early July from montane, lowland and some desert areas.Flower visits recorded for Anchusa strigosa.Anthophora combusta Dours 1869Egypt.Anthophora concinna (Klug 1845)Egypt.Not rare in Egypt. On <strong>the</strong> wing from March <strong>to</strong> June and widespread including Giza and Cairo.Anthophora concolor Alfken 1926Syria. Egypt.Described from Egypt from a single female specimen.Anthophora crassipes Lepeletier 1841Turkey; Erzurum, Bitlis. Israel.Recorded in July in Turkey flying <strong>to</strong> Cirsium.Scarcely recorded in Israel during January and early February where it is a desert anthophorine with aflower visiting record for Ononis natrix.Anthophora crinipes Smith 1854North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Mus, Erzurum. Israel.Reported active in June from eastern Turkey and flower visiting records <strong>the</strong>re are for Lepidium,Lonicera and Ajuga.244


On <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April in Israel and a nest site in <strong>the</strong> Carmel Massif was located in acave within a north facing cliff where freshwater seepage was available within <strong>the</strong> cave. This bee wasalso recorded visiting nest holes in <strong>the</strong> deep shade <strong>of</strong> a Roman ruin and visiting vertical erodinglithosol cliff faces.A record from Israel <strong>of</strong> predation <strong>of</strong> this bee by <strong>the</strong> Arachnid Synaema globosum.A male noted patrolling and defending a patch <strong>of</strong> Moricandia nitens which was growing around abush <strong>of</strong> Retama raetum suggests resource defence terri<strong>to</strong>riality and mating occuring at floralresources.Flower visit records from <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are Podonosma orientalis, Anchusa strigosa, Salviafruticosa, Styrax <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Echium angustifolium, Alkanna strigosa, Anchusa aegyptiaca, Ononisnatrix and Onosma.Anthophora dalmatica Pérez 1902North Aegean on Greece.Anthophora deserticola Morawitz 1873Israel.Records for April and July from Israel, where found in <strong>the</strong> Negev desert but scarcely recorded.Anthophora deser<strong>to</strong>rum Priesner 1957Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing in March and April about <strong>the</strong> valleys <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Desert, Egypt.Anthophora dispar Lepeletier 1841Syria. Israel. Egypt.In Egypt <strong>the</strong> subspecies or variant A. d. niveohirta Friese 1922 is reported.Common about <strong>the</strong> Nile Delta from December <strong>to</strong> March.In Israel appears <strong>to</strong>wards late January and found frequently by February through March. Thedistribution <strong>the</strong>re extends from <strong>the</strong> Central Negev Desert northwards <strong>to</strong> Hermon. This bee visits awide selection <strong>of</strong> flowers <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora and especially seems attached <strong>to</strong> Asphodelus aestivusand Prasinum majus. O<strong>the</strong>r members <strong>of</strong> that flora recorded as hosts are Echium angustifolium,Echium judaeum, Anchusa strigosa, Anchusa undulata, Bellevalia flexuosa, Calyco<strong>to</strong>me villosa,Lycium shawii, Retama raetam, Ononis natrix, Rosmarinus <strong>of</strong>ficinale, Salvia horminum, Salviafruticosa, Anagyris foetida, Trifolium clypeatum, Astragalus lanatus, Arbutus andrachne, Narcissustazetta, Amygdalus communis and Helian<strong>the</strong>mum vesicarium,A bilateral gynandromorph has been recorded from Anchusa strigosa during April.Anthophora disparilis Friese 1922Syria. Palestine. Israel. Jordan.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing from January <strong>to</strong> April in nor<strong>the</strong>rn regions <strong>of</strong> Israel and <strong>the</strong> Mountains <strong>of</strong> Judea.Flower visiting records <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are for Amygdalus communis, Asphodelus aestivus,Rosmarinus <strong>of</strong>ficinale and Anagyris foetida.Anthophora dufourii Lepeletier 1841Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Recorded widely in Israel where active during March and April.Flower visits <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora show a classical vernal anthophorine pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> Boraginaceae,Lamiales and some visits <strong>to</strong> Compositae. The bee is especially noted at Salvia fruticosa and also visits245


Echium judaeum, Echium angustifolium, Anchusa strigosa, Onosma orientalis, Salviahierosolimytana, Salvia dominica and Crepis sancta,Anthophora dusmeti Guiglia 1933Libya.Cyrenaica.Anthophora elbana Priesner 1957Egypt.The male <strong>of</strong> this species found on <strong>the</strong> wing during February and March.Anthophora erschowi Fedtschenko 1875Turkey. Israel. Libya.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Israel from early February well in<strong>to</strong> April, with one or two records in<strong>to</strong> May.Widespread <strong>the</strong>re including <strong>the</strong> Negev Desert and nor<strong>the</strong>rn montane districts. This bee seems <strong>to</strong>occupy a dispersed polylectic vernal niche and <strong>the</strong>re are flower visit records for a good range <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>Palestinian flora;- Echium judaeum, Matthiola aspera, Erucaria rostrata, Alkanna sp., Anchusaaegyptiaca, Lavandula coronopifolia, Anchusa strigosa, Reboudia pinnata, Moricandia nitens,Bellevalia deser<strong>to</strong>rum, Senecio vernalis, Helian<strong>the</strong>mum vesicarium, Diplotaxis harra, Eruca sativaand Brassica sp..Anthophora erubescens Morawitz 1880Israel.Rarely recorded in Israel during April.Anthophora extricata Priesner 1957Israel. Egypt.Found in desert areas <strong>of</strong> Egypt from February <strong>to</strong> April.A early vernal desert phenology in Israel where recorded January and February with floral records forMoricandia nitens and Diplotaxis acris.Anthophora facialis Priesner 1957Egypt.Priesner noted males from March and females from April in <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Desert, Egypt.Anthophora fallaciosa Priesner 1957Egypt.The male <strong>of</strong> this species described from Egypt at Amriah where found flying during April.Anthophora fastuosa GribodoLibya.Anthophora fayoumensis Priesner 1957Egypt.Active in March <strong>to</strong> May throughout Central and Upper Egypt including sou<strong>the</strong>rn regions <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><strong>Eastern</strong> Desert.Anthophora festae Gribodo246


LibyaAnthophora finitima Morawitz 1894Turkey.Anthophora flabellata Priesner 1957Israel. Egypt.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing in March and May in <strong>the</strong> deserts <strong>of</strong> Egypt.Very local in Israel; recorded in early April <strong>the</strong>re and with a flower visiting record for Echiumrauwolfi.Anthophora fratercula GribodoLibyaAnthophora freimuthi Fedtschenko 1875Israel.In Israel <strong>of</strong>ten found in lowlands and deserts from <strong>the</strong> Lower Jordan Valley <strong>to</strong> Central and sou<strong>the</strong>rnNegev, Judean Desert, <strong>the</strong> Dead Sea region and <strong>to</strong> Sinai. The bee is found up <strong>to</strong> 1000 mtrs inmountain desert. Noted from late February <strong>to</strong> April with a peak <strong>of</strong> activity in March, recordedinspecting possible nesting sites in <strong>the</strong> vertical clay bank <strong>of</strong> a Wadi.Flower hosts recorded among <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora show a desertic pr<strong>of</strong>ile;- Astragalus spinosus,Moricandia nitens, Onosma orientalis, Anchusa strigosa and Papaver sp..Anthophora fulvipes Eversmann 1846Turkey; Van, Tatvan, Erzurum.Found during June and July in eastern Turkey visiting Centaurea, Onopordum and Salvia.Anthophora fulvitarsis Brullé 1832Turkey; Mus, Erzurum. Israel.Reported on <strong>the</strong> wing during June from eastern Turkey where noted flying <strong>to</strong> Malvea, Lepidium,Salvia and Cirsium.Widespread in Israel and found quite strongly active from early February through March.Flowers visiting records from amongst <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are Echium judaeum, Erucaria rostrata,Anchusa strigosa, Alkanna and Lycium shawii.In <strong>the</strong> Negev Desert during March males are found patrolling <strong>the</strong> edges <strong>of</strong> vertical clay and fluviatileloess cliffs where females construct <strong>the</strong>ir nest mines in <strong>the</strong> vertical faces.Anthophora fulvodimidiata Dours 1869Egypt.Locally common in Egypt during July <strong>to</strong> SeptemberAnthophora fumipennis Alfken 1926Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing in May. Known from a single female specimenAnthophora furcata (Panzer 1798)Turkey; Erzurum.247


Reported from eastern Turkey during August where flower visiting noted <strong>to</strong> Cirsium and Arctiumlappa.Anthophora galalensis Priesner 1957Egypt.Recorded during March, Priesner considered this <strong>to</strong> be a probably rare and local bee.Anthophora ghigii Gribodo 1924Libya.Anthophora guigliae DusmetLibya.Anthophora heliopolitensis Pérez 1910Lebanon. Israel.In Lebanon on <strong>the</strong> wing during May and June and flying <strong>to</strong> Stachys.Local in Israel. A late spring and early summer species <strong>of</strong> May and June recorded visiting Anchusaitalica and Echium angustifolium.Anthophora helouanensis Priesner 1957Egypt.The male <strong>of</strong> this bee described. On <strong>the</strong> wing in April.Anthophora hermanni Schwarz & Gusenleitner 2003Egypt.Anthophora hispanica (Fabricius 1787)Turkey. Syria. Israel. Egypt.Active in nor<strong>the</strong>rn areas <strong>of</strong> Egypt during February <strong>to</strong> April.In Israel a desert bee, found during March and April throughout <strong>the</strong> Negev and northwards <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>coastal plain.Flower visits are <strong>of</strong>ten <strong>to</strong> desertic elements within <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora;- Echium angustifolium,Moricandia nitens, Stachys aegyptiaca and Astragalus spinosus.Anthophora humilis (Spinola 1838)Egypt.A rare bee on <strong>the</strong> Egyptian north coast.Anthophora illepida Walker 1871Possibly present in Egypt.An Arabian species from <strong>the</strong> vicinity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Sea. One <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> anthophorines described byWalker whose range appears <strong>to</strong> be Arabian.Anthophora inclyta Walker 1871Egypt.Active from March <strong>to</strong> May, this bee is a sou<strong>the</strong>rn species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Sea coast, Wadi Ambaga, GebelElba and Sinai.248


Anthophora intermixta GribodoLibya.Anthophora intricata Gribodo 1924Libya.Anthophora kapnoptera Alfken 1936Egypt.Anthophora lanata (Klug 1845)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Egypt.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing in north coastal Egypt during February and March, a typical flight period for one<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> larger endo<strong>the</strong>rmic vernal Anthophorine bees.Anthophora lepida Eversmann 1848Iran.Anthophora libyphaenica Gribodo 1893Israel. Libya.Widespread in Israel, appearing from late january and <strong>the</strong>n frequent by February in<strong>to</strong> March.A range <strong>of</strong> floral resources visited in <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora;- Eruca sativa, Lycium shawii, Erucariaboveana, Retama raetam, Reboudia pinnata, Moricandia nitens, Astragalus lanatus and Bellevaliastepporum.Anthophora lutescens Walker 1871Possibly present in Egypt. An Arabian species.Anthophora lutulenta (Klug 1845)Egypt.Found from February <strong>to</strong> May. Apparently local but not rare.Anthophora lydia Tkalcu 1994Turkey, southwest Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Recorded during mid May.Anthophora maculigera Priesner 1957Egypt.In flight during May along <strong>the</strong> north coast <strong>of</strong> Egypt and described from a series <strong>of</strong> males collected byFerrante. Priesner states that this may be <strong>the</strong> male <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r species which are only known in<strong>the</strong> (entirely black) female sex.Anthophora melaleuca Walker 1871Egypt.Anthophora mellina Priesner 1957Egypt.Found from several localities in Egypt.249


Anthophora moderna Morawitz 1878Continental Greece. Turkey.Anthophora moricei Friese 1899Egypt.An hivernal anthophorine in Egypt from Oc<strong>to</strong>ber <strong>to</strong> April when common in desert valleys and foundalso in Upper Egypt and <strong>the</strong> Elba Mountains.Anthophora mucida Gribodo 1873North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Erzurm. Egypt.Reported as active locally in Turkey from May <strong>to</strong> July visiting Anchusa and Onobrychis sativa.Priesner reported a single male <strong>of</strong> this species collected by Frauenfeld as <strong>the</strong> only record for Egypt,perhaps alluding <strong>to</strong> Friese who reported this bee from Alexandria.Anthophora muscaria Fedtschenko 1875Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Israel during March in <strong>the</strong> Central Negev and Sinai, though infrequently recorded.Anthophora nigriceps Morawitz 1886Lebanon. Israel. Syria.Recorded during mid March from Syria.Reported by Mavromoustakis active during May in Lebanon where visiting Asphodelus.In Israel this bee has a ra<strong>the</strong>r nor<strong>the</strong>rn and montane distribution and found from February <strong>to</strong> May.There is a good range <strong>of</strong> records for species in <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora;- Eremurus libanoticus,Onobrychis comuta, Pyrus syriaca, Asphodelus aestivus, Amygdalus communis, Anchusa undulata,Anchusa strigosa, Salvia horminum, Rosmarinus <strong>of</strong>ficinale, Gagea chlorantha, salvia fruticosa,Echium angustifolium, Trifolium clypeatum and Alkanna strigosa.Anthophora nigrilabris Alfken 1926Israel. Egypt.Local in Egypt with Priesner reporting four localities for <strong>the</strong> Country.Anthophora niveiventris Friese 1919Egypt.Priesner reported this <strong>to</strong> be a local species in Egypt, on <strong>the</strong> wing <strong>the</strong>re in February and March.Anthophora nubica Lepeletier 1841Egypt.Found in Egypt during February. A little-known desert bee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sudanic fauna.Anthophora oraniensis Lepeletier 1841Egypt.A rare anthophorine in Egypt. On <strong>the</strong> wing during February.Anthophora orientalis Morawitz 1878Ionian Greece, Corfu. <strong>Eastern</strong> Aegean Greece on Rhodes. Turkey; Kars, Erzurum. Israel.A variety or subspecies A. o. flaviventris Friese reported from Syria.250


In eastern Turkey reported on <strong>the</strong> wing from late April through <strong>to</strong> June. Here this bee appears <strong>to</strong> beattracted <strong>to</strong> fruit trees and noted flying <strong>to</strong> Prunus cerasus, Prunus domestica, Prunus armeniaca andalso visiting Salix.Recorded in Israel from <strong>the</strong> Lower Jordan valley northwards, mainly active from later March and inApril with some records in<strong>to</strong> May.There are a number <strong>of</strong> flower species in <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora recorded as hosts, and as with a number<strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r anthophorine bees <strong>the</strong>re is <strong>the</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong> a rational pattern where individual bees areforaging from more than one species <strong>of</strong> flower. Species recorded are Eremurus libanoticus, Anchusaundulata, Anchusa strigosa, Echium angustifolium, Alkanna strigosa, Amygdalus communis,Rosmarinus <strong>of</strong>ficinale and Trifolium purpureum.Anthophora pauperata Walker 1871Egypt. Israel.Both sexes rarely recorded in <strong>the</strong> Sinai Desert during late March.Anthophora pedata Eversmann 1852<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzurum.Recorded rarely in eastern Turkey in February and from May <strong>to</strong> July, with most records falling inJune.Anthophora perlustrata Priesner 1957Egypt.The male discovered on <strong>the</strong> wing in April at Taloun, Egypt.Anthophora persica Radoszkowski 1876Iran.Anthophora plagiata (Illiger 1806)Turkey; Erzurum, Kars.Common on <strong>the</strong> wing in some areas <strong>of</strong> Turkey from early June until late July. This bee is polylectic <strong>to</strong>some extent and one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> anthophorine species attracted <strong>to</strong> clover meadows. It appears <strong>to</strong> share aforaging strategy shared with some o<strong>the</strong>rs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> numerically succesful anthophorines where visits arefrequent <strong>to</strong> Legumes but resources are also Boraginaceae, Lamiales and some plants in o<strong>the</strong>r Families.Flower record visits are for Onobrychis sativa, Trifolium pratense, Trifolium repens, Anchusa,Echium vulgare, Lamium album, Salvia and Sinapis arvensis.Anthophora plumipes Pallas 1772North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey. Israel.In eastern Turkey on <strong>the</strong> Erzurum Plain this bee is a visi<strong>to</strong>r and pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Prunus armeniaca,Prunus domestica and Malus domestica. It also visits Salix. Flies during April and May.In Jordan a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Almond and Cherry.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing in Israel from February <strong>to</strong> May.During April about <strong>the</strong> Carmel Massif nesting was observed within caves on north facing slopeswhere water is available from seepages.This succesful anthophorine visits a wide selection <strong>of</strong> plants in <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora with records forAsphodelus aestivus, Nepeta cilicica, Salvia hierosolymitana, Eremurus libanoticus, Rosmarinus<strong>of</strong>ficinale, Trifolium clypeatum, Salvia fruticosa, Bellevalia flexuosa, Prasium majus, Begonia sp.,Symphytum palaestinum, Lamium moschatum, Pyrus syriaca, Amygdalus communis, Echium251


judaeum, Lavandula sp., Trifolium purpureum, Pyrus var., Anchusa strigosa, Asphodeline lutea,Serapias levantina, Lupinus palaestinus, Salvia horminum, Anagyris foetida, Sinapis alba, Jasminumfruticans, Ononis natrix and Onosma orientalis.Anthophora podagra Lepeletier 1841North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Anthophora ponomarevae Brooks 1988Israel.Recorded in mountain regions <strong>of</strong> Israel during late April and in July and August. Flower visitsrecorded <strong>the</strong>re are for Anchusa strigosa.Anthophora pretiosa Friese 1919Egypt.Priesner recorded a solitary male <strong>of</strong> this large Anthophorine in Egypt during February but he did notdetect <strong>the</strong> female.Anthophora priesneri Alfken 1932Israel. Egypt.Recorded in Egypt during Oc<strong>to</strong>ber and January <strong>to</strong> April, probably hivernal. Present in valleys <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><strong>Eastern</strong> Desert <strong>of</strong> Egypt and very attached <strong>to</strong> Stachys aegyptiaca.In Israel also recorded in December and from January <strong>to</strong> April; a desert species <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Judean Desertand western and Central Negev.Flower visiting records <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora show a desertic pr<strong>of</strong>ile, with <strong>the</strong> following species;-Anchusa aegyptiaca, Moltkiopsis ciliata, Lycium shawii, Matthiola longipetala, Diplotaxis harra,Rosmarinus <strong>of</strong>ficinalis and Reboudia pinnata.Anthophora prshewalskyi (Morawitz 1880)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Erzinan, Kars.Noted at Centaurea during July.Anthophora pubescens Fabricius 1871Israel.A single record in Israel, from En Gedi during February. Visiting Trichodesma africana.Anthophora quadrimaculata (Panzer 1798)Reported from Turkey.Anthophora retusa (Linnaeus 1758)Continental Greece. Turkey; Erzurum, Erzincan, Kars.Common in some eastern Turkish Provinces and reported active from early May <strong>to</strong> late August. Notedas a good pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> legume forage crops;- Medicago sativa, Onobrychis sativa, Trifolium pratenseand Trifolium repens. Also recorded at Anchusa, Salvia, Centaurea, Cirsium and Taraxacum.Anthophora richaensis Alfken 1938Israel.Anthophora rivolleti Pérez 1895252


Israel.Within Israel a small number <strong>of</strong> records during March and April from <strong>the</strong> Central Negev and Sinaideserts.Anthophora robusta (Klug 1845)Continental Greece, Ionian islands on Corfu. Cyprus. Turkey. Syria. Israel.Found in<strong>to</strong> montane habitat on Cyprus during June and July where visiting phryganic summer flowersincluding Nepeta troodi, Saponaria vaccaria, Salvia grandiflora willeana and Anchusa.A common species in parts <strong>of</strong> eastern Turkey although <strong>the</strong> population is not high. In some easternProvinces noted from late June <strong>to</strong> late August and recorded at Onobrychis sativa, Anchusa andPapaver.Recorded from Smyrna, Syria, during May and in Israel <strong>of</strong>ten from Mount Hermon at 2100 mtrsduring May and Mount Meron, Upper Galilee, during July.This is an early <strong>to</strong> mid summer montane anthophorine with visits <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora recorded forAstragalus cruentiflorus and Salvia multistegia.Anthophora rogenh<strong>of</strong>eri Morawitz 1872Aegean Greece on Tinos and Rhodes. Cyprus. Turkey. Lebanon. Israel. Palestine.On <strong>the</strong> wing February until May in Cyprus, Mavromoustakis recorded this bee visiting Echiumsericeum and Anchusa hybrida among a variety <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r plants. The sexes mate around <strong>the</strong>se twospecies <strong>of</strong> flower. Flower records also include Hyacinthus trifoliatus, Lamium amplexicaule,Lithospermum hispidulum, Salvia viridis and Salvia verbenacea.In Turkey recorded from <strong>the</strong> eastern Province <strong>of</strong> Mus with females on <strong>the</strong> wing in early June flying <strong>to</strong>Malvea.In Palestine recorded at Anchusa during April.Recorded during May in Lebanon.In Israel this bee is apparent from March <strong>to</strong> June and especially active from <strong>the</strong> second half <strong>of</strong> March<strong>to</strong> late April, a spring phenology which probably applies throughout <strong>the</strong> range. The bee is found in <strong>the</strong>Lower Jordan Valley but appears <strong>to</strong> be absent from <strong>the</strong> Negev. Males are found patrolling andfighting in <strong>the</strong> vicinity <strong>of</strong> gullies where nest sites are probably placed. There is a good record <strong>of</strong>flower visits <strong>to</strong> members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora as follows;- Anchusa italica, Anchusa undulata,Anchusa strigosa, Salvia multicaulis, Echium angustifolium, Echium judaeum, Ononis natrix,Papaver subpiriforme (a pollen-collecting record), Asphodelus aestivus, Lamium moschatum, Salviafruticosa, Salvia indica, Salvia hierosolimitana, Cistus incanus, Trifolium resupinatum, Trifoliumpurpureum and Silene sp..Anthophora romandii Lepeletier 1841Israel.Within Israel found from <strong>the</strong> Central Negev desert northwards <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Coastal Plain and Judean Desert.Most active on <strong>the</strong> wing from mid March <strong>to</strong> mid April and nests sometimes in aggregations in vericalhard sand pan surfaces. Males patrol <strong>the</strong>se hard desert pan surfaces but also gullies. The nestaggregations on vertical terrain attract aerially ovipositing Bombylidae during March.Flower visiting <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora is recorded for Alkanna, Anchusa strigosa, Echiumangustifolium, Cistanche tubulosa and Moricandia nitens.Anthophora rubricrus Dours 1869Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Palestine. Israel.253


On <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus from January <strong>to</strong> April. Recorded visiting Anchusa hybrida, Mandragora<strong>of</strong>ficinarum, Gagea chlorantha, Lithospermum hispidulum, Calendula persica, Fumaria, Sinapisalba, Salvia viridis, Salvia verbenacea, Lamium amplexicaule, Hyacinthus trifoliatus, Muscari,Romulea columnae, Genista sphacellata, Onosma fruticosum, Crataegus azarolus, Prunus dulcis,Asphodelus ramosus microcarpus and Raphanus. This species is a successful generalist <strong>to</strong> someextent but Mavromoustakis also recorded it in sand dune habitat in March, visiting Anchusaaggregata.Also out in January <strong>to</strong> March in Palestine where flower visits reported for Calendula and Bellevalia.In Israel this bee is recorded from January <strong>to</strong> April – a widespread early vernal bee distributed inregions north <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Negev desert. This anthophora is a successful polylectic species and a goodvariety <strong>of</strong> species in <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora is recorded as host flowers;- Asphodelus communis, A.aestivus, Lavandula sp., Amygdalis communis, Crepis sancta, Echium judaeum, Bellevalia flexuosa,Bellevalia deser<strong>to</strong>rum, Bellevalia mosheovii, Salvia horminum, Anchusa strigosa, Anchusa undulata,Rosemarinus <strong>of</strong>ficinale, Trifolium stellatum, Alkanna strigosa, Erucaria rostrata and Lycium shawii.Anthophora rugosa Radoskowski 1884Iran.Anthophora rutilans Dours 1869North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey. Palestine. Israel.Recorded infrequently during February <strong>to</strong> May, primarily March, on Cyprus, where visiting Vicia.Asphodelus ramosus micropodioides, Quercus infec<strong>to</strong>ria, Prasium majus, Calendula persica, Sinapisalba, Lithospermum hispidulum, Prunus dulcis, Hyacinthus trifoliatus, Lamium amplexicaule, Salviaviridis, Papaver rhoeas, Genista sphacellata, Anchusa hybrida, Echium sericeum, Onosmafruticosum, Allium, Trifolium stellatum, Medicago marina and Astragalus lusitanicus.In Palestine found during April, flying <strong>to</strong> Anchusa.Recorded from February in Israel, although most active <strong>the</strong>re from mid March <strong>to</strong> late April.Distribution within Israel is from <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn Negev desert north <strong>to</strong> Hermon. An interesting array <strong>of</strong>flower hosts within <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora includes Papaver subpiriforme as a pollen source. O<strong>the</strong>rplants visited are Anchusa strigosa, Anchusa undulata, Echium judaeum, Echium angustifolium,Trifolium clypeatum, Vicia villosa, Asphodelus aestivus, Eremostachys laciniata, Salvia fruticosa andTulipa sharonensis,Anthophora sagamehli Morawitz 1883Iran.Anthophora saropodoides Dalla Torre 1896Egypt.Anthophora scopipes Spinola 1838Israel. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April in desertic regions <strong>of</strong> Egypt.Recorded in <strong>the</strong> same months from Israel, including Negev and Sinai deserts where <strong>the</strong> species is lessfrequent than some congeners.Noted visiting Echium judaeum in Israel desert habitat.Anthophora selecta Priesner 1957Egypt.254


The female <strong>of</strong> this bee described from Borgash, Egypt. Recorded during April.Anthophora semirufa (Friese 1898)Israel. Egypt.Found in desert areas <strong>of</strong> Egypt from April <strong>to</strong> July.Recorded infrequently from desertic areas <strong>of</strong> Israel from late March <strong>to</strong> early July. Flower visit recordsare for Blepharis edulis and Erucaria boveana.Anthophora semperi Fedtschenko 1875Iran.Anthophora senescens Lepeletier 1841Continental Greece. Israel. Egypt.Common in <strong>the</strong> Nile Delta and along north coastal Egypt.In Israel widely found on <strong>the</strong> wing from February <strong>to</strong> late April. This species is present <strong>the</strong>n within <strong>the</strong>Central Negev. In <strong>the</strong> Lower Jordan Valley found nesting in vertical eroding lithosol cliff faces.Flower visit records for <strong>the</strong> palestinian flora suggest a partly desertic pr<strong>of</strong>ile and are listed as Lyciumshawii, Moricandia nitens, Reboudia pinnata, Retama raetum, Astragalus lanatus and Onosmaorientalis.Males (along with males <strong>of</strong> Tetralonia) have been noted <strong>to</strong> patrol, hover and fight around clumps <strong>of</strong>Moricandia nitens during April.Anthophora shagrensis Priesner 1957Egypt.Priesner reported that only <strong>the</strong> female was known. Collected by Moh. Kassim and M. Tewfik during<strong>the</strong> months <strong>of</strong> April and <strong>of</strong> August from desert areas <strong>of</strong> Egypt, including Sinai.Anthophora socia (Klug 1845)Syria.Anthophora speciosa Friese 1919Egypt. Libya.Found along north coastal Egypt from February <strong>to</strong> April.Anthophora spinacoxa Brooks 1988Israel.In Israel found in <strong>the</strong> Lower Jordan Valley, Negev Desert and environs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dead Sea. Noted fromFebruary <strong>to</strong> April but much less frequently than A. dufourii <strong>to</strong> which it is closely related.Anthophora spinolana Priesner 1957Israel. Egypt.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Egypt from December <strong>to</strong> March in Central regions and <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn coast.Rarely recorded in Israel, February <strong>to</strong> April.A flower visiting record from Israel for Daemia <strong>to</strong>men<strong>to</strong>sum.Anthophora subterranea Germar 1826Israel.Widespread in Israel.255


Anthophora superans Walker 1871Possibly present in Egypt. Reported from Mount Sinai.Anthophora tarsalis Priesner 1957Israel. Egypt.Described from <strong>the</strong> <strong>Eastern</strong> Desert <strong>of</strong> Egypt.Apparently local in Israel with records during February and March from En Gedi.Anthophora taurica Friese 1922Presumably eastern Turkey and Iran.Anthophora tenella (Klug 1845)Egypt.Widespread in Egypt from March <strong>to</strong> May.Anthophora tenuicilata Alfken 1926Priesner reported this bee as possibly present in Egypt.Anthophora aff. tibialis MorawitzNorth Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Anthophora tridentella Priesner 1957Egypt.In Egypt reported on <strong>the</strong> wing in April and considered by Priesner <strong>to</strong> be a possibly widespread butlocal bee.Anthophora trochanterica Morawitz 1888<strong>Eastern</strong> Iran.Found in montane areas up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs during May.Anthophora valga Klug 1845Friese noted <strong>the</strong> range as The Arabian Desert and it perhaps should be looked for from Sinai and <strong>the</strong><strong>Eastern</strong> Desert <strong>of</strong> Egypt.Anthophora vernalis Morawitz 1878Israel.On <strong>the</strong> wing in Israel from late January <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> first half <strong>of</strong> March, mainly recorded from <strong>the</strong> NegevDesert. Known flower hosts among <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are Astragalus lanatus, Astragalus spinosus,Leontice leon<strong>to</strong>pelatum and Bellevalia stepporum.Anthophora vetula (Klug 1845)Friese noted that this bee is reported from <strong>the</strong> Arabian Desert. The distribution in our Region is notclarified.Anthophora viduata (Klug 1845)Egypt.Widespread in Egypt.256


Anthophora wegelini Friese 1914Israel. Egypt.Priesner notes this bee as common all over Egypt including oases. One <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> first <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> springanthophorines <strong>to</strong> appear, with <strong>the</strong> emergence precipitated by <strong>the</strong> first rains <strong>of</strong> mid December <strong>the</strong> beeremains on <strong>the</strong> wing in<strong>to</strong> March. Strongly associated with Zilla spinosa.In Israel found in <strong>the</strong> Arava Valley during February, with a flower visiting record for Astragalusspinosus.Anthophora zanoni Gribodo 1925Egypt. LibyaFound in February and March on <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn coast <strong>of</strong> Egypt. Priesner noted that <strong>the</strong> Egyptian beeswere a form, borgensis.Habropoda annae Schwarz & Gusenleitner 2001Turkey, found in <strong>the</strong> provinces <strong>of</strong> Elazig, Antalya, Hakkari and Siirt.On <strong>the</strong> wing from late May and especially June.Habropoda ezonata Smith 1854Widespread Continental Greece. Some Greek Islands.Habropoda hakkariensis Schwarz & Gusenleitner 2001Turkey, Hakkari.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing from late May and June at elevations up <strong>to</strong> 1700 mtrs.Habropoda schafelneri Schwarz & Gusenleitner 2001Turkey, Kars.Found at 1600 mtrs during May.Habropoda tarsata Spinola 1838Greece, Corfu. Tinos. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey; Erzurum. Syria. Israel.Reported from eastern Turkey during June.In Israel on <strong>the</strong> wing during March and April with <strong>the</strong> majority <strong>of</strong> records from <strong>the</strong> Carmel Massif andMountains <strong>of</strong> Judea.Flower hosts from among <strong>the</strong> Palestinian flora are recorded as Asphodelus aestivus, Echium judaeum,Anchusa undulata, Anchusa strigosa, Cercis siliquastrum and Vicia hybrida.Habropoda zonatula Smith 1854Greece, North Aegean on Lesbos and o<strong>the</strong>r Greek Islands. Turkey. Syria.Friese noted that females <strong>of</strong> this species fly <strong>to</strong> Salvia and Vicia.Found on <strong>the</strong> wing through June and July in Erzurum, eastern Turkey.≈Tribe MelectiniMelecta albifrons (Foerster 1771)Continental Greece. Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.257


From late March <strong>to</strong> June on <strong>the</strong> wing in Cyprus. Mavromoustakis found this bee in <strong>the</strong> nest <strong>of</strong>Anthophora acervorum.Melecta ashabadensis Radoszkowski 1893Turkey.Melecta crassicornis Friese 1921Turkey.Melecta duodecimmaculata Rossi 1790North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus.Melecta festiva Lieftinck 1980Continental Greece. Lesbos.Melecta fulgida Lieftinck 1980Continental Greece. Lesbos.Melecta guichardi Lieftinck 1980North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Melecta italica Radoszkowski 1876Continental Greece. Lesbos.Melecta leucorhyncha Gribodo 1893Continental Greece. Lesbos.Melecta luctuosa (Scopoli 1770)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.This clep<strong>to</strong>parasitic anthophorine is hosted by Anthophora aestivalis (Panzer 1801) andAnthophora retusa (Linnaeus 1758) in <strong>the</strong> European range.Melecta tuberculata Lieftinck 1980Continental Greece.Eupavlovskia funeraria (Smith 1854)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Eupavlovskia obscura simulatrix (Lieftinck 1969)Continental Greece. Lesbos.Paracrocisa guilochi Dusmet 1915North Aegean Greece on Lesbos.Thyreomelecta bidentata (Kirby 1889)A Central Asian bee likely <strong>to</strong> be present in <strong>Eastern</strong> Iran. It is present along <strong>the</strong> Harirund River on <strong>the</strong>Afghanistan side <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> border with Iran.258


Thyreomelecta dimidiatipuncta (Spinola 1838)Libya; Tripolitania and eastwards. Egypt. Iraq, near Baghdad.Thyreus affinis (Morawitz 1874)Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey. Iran. Egypt.Recorded by Mavromoustakis visiting Statice, Centaurea cilicica, Thymus capitatus and Echiumsericeum on Cyprus from May <strong>to</strong> July..Thyreus elegans (Morawitz 1877)Turkey.Thyreus hellenicus Lieftinck 1968North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.Thyreus hirtus (Beaumont 1940)Turkey.Thyreus histrionicus (Illiger 1806)Continental Greece. Cyprus. Turkey.On <strong>the</strong> wing April <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber on Cyprus, recorded visiting Echium sericeum, Statice, Inula viscosa,Marrubium vulgare apolum, Statice virgata, Heliotropium europeum, Nepeta troodi, Cirsiumsyriacum, Centaurea cilicica, Centaurea hyalolepis and Eryngium creticum. Recorded up <strong>to</strong> montaneslopes on Cyprus.Thyreus orbatus (Lepeletier 1841)Turkey.Thyreus picaron Lieftinck 1968Continental Greece. Lesbos.Thyreus praevalens (Kohl 1905)Turkey.Thyreus ramosus (Lepeletier 1841)Continental Greece. North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Cyprus. Turkey.Recorded mainly from May <strong>to</strong> September on Cyprus but with some later autumn records, visitingMarrubium vulgare apolum, Inula viscosa, Carlina lanata, Teucrium polium micropodioides,Heliotropium europeum, Echium sericeum and Statice virgata.Thyreus scutellaris (Fabricius 1781)Turkey.Thyreus truncatus (Pérez 1883)North Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Turkey.≈259


Tribe BombiniBombus (Cullumanobombus) apollineus Skorikov 1910Turkey.Widespread eastern Turkey, especially Erzurum, and also central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia. A bumblebee <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>mountain meadows, pastures and fallows. Open areas at higher altitudes where visits made <strong>to</strong>Onobrychis viciifolia, Medicago sativa, Trifolium pratense and some o<strong>the</strong>r forage legumes. Alsonoted flying <strong>to</strong> Helianthus annuus and Brassica napus. This may be conspecific with B. cullumanus(Williams 1998; molecular study awaited).Bombus (Megabombus) argillaceus (Scopoli 1763)Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. North Aegean on Lesbos. Thasos. Turkey. Iran.Up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs on montane slopes in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece where visiting Crocus.An abundant and widespread Bombus <strong>of</strong> Turkey where found from sea level <strong>to</strong> 3500 mtrs. This bee isstrongly polylectic and from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia known <strong>to</strong> frequent Cousinea caesarea, Anchusalep<strong>to</strong>phylla, Consolida repalis, Consolida orientalis, Ballota nigra, Echium italicum, Helianthusannuus, Centaurea solstitialis, Salvia virgata, Salvia cyanescens, Salvia bracteata and Ononisspinosa.Widespread in <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz Range <strong>of</strong> Iran where found up <strong>to</strong> 2900 mtrs between May <strong>to</strong>August. Generally discovered <strong>to</strong> be widespread in western and central Iran where active from Mayin<strong>to</strong> August and flower visiting recorded <strong>to</strong> Borago <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Securigera varia, Lathyrus roseus,Medicago sativa, Onobrychis altissima and Lamiales in <strong>the</strong> genera Phlomis, Marrobium, Salvia andStachysBombus (Thoracobombus) armeniacus Radoszkowski 1877Turkey. Iran.Widespread and abundant through Turkey. Often a lowland species yet occurs up <strong>to</strong> 3500 mtrs andinhabits meadows, pastures, clover fields and orchards. A substantial decline in numbers has occuredin <strong>the</strong> populations <strong>of</strong> this bee visiting forage legume fields <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Erzurum Plain since <strong>the</strong> 1970s. Aninteresting selection <strong>of</strong> floral hosts recorded for this bee from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia includes Marrubiumanisodan, Ononis spinosa, Cousinia, Salvia virgata and Consolida repalis.Noted <strong>to</strong> 2600 mtrs in Iran from May <strong>to</strong> July foraging at Legumes and Salvia.Bombus (Psithyrus) barbutellus (Kirby 1802)Turkey.Bombus (Psithyrus) bohemicus Seidl 1837Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Rarely recorded in north Greece during May flying <strong>to</strong> Crocus in montane habitat <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs.Bombus (Pyrobombus) brodmanni Vogt 1909Turkey.In Turkey recorded from nor<strong>the</strong>ast Ana<strong>to</strong>lia where inhabits mountain meadows rarely from over2000mtrs <strong>to</strong> 3500 mtrs. A subspecies B. b. denesi Tkalcu 1994 is referable <strong>to</strong> this population.Bombus (Psithyrus) campestris (Panzer 1801)Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.260


Rarely noted in north Greece during early May when males recorded visiting Origanum in montanehabitat.Bombus (Bombus) cryptarum (Fabricius 1775)Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece.Bombus (Thoracobombus) deuteronymus Schulz 1906Continental Greece.Rarely recorded in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece during June when females noted visiting Vicia at 650 mtrs.Bombus eversmanni Friese 1911Turkey.Bombus (Subterraneobombus) fragrans (Pallas 1771)Turkey. IranIn Turkey now found sporadically and generally rare, having declined greatly and with a fragmenteddistribution in <strong>the</strong> meadowlands <strong>of</strong> central and eastern Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Queens recorded locally in Iran at 2500 mtrs during late July, flying <strong>to</strong> Lamium album and Salvia.Bombus (Pyrobombus) haematurus Kriechbaumer 1870North Continental Greece. Thasos. Turkey. Iran.Noted at Prunus dulcis in Greece.Not common in north Ana<strong>to</strong>lian Turkey where found in open forest habitats from 600 mtrs <strong>to</strong> 2600mtrs.In <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz <strong>of</strong> Iran and perhaps more widely this bee is more locally present than somecongeners and is found during May and June, <strong>of</strong>ten <strong>to</strong> 1200 mtrs or lower but can be recorded <strong>to</strong> 2500mtrs. Flower visiting records in Iran are for Berberis vulgaris, Borago <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Medicago sativa,Lamium album, Salvia, Stachys, Securigera varia and Citrus.Bombus (Mendacibombus) handlirschianus Vogt 1909Turkey. Iran.Bombus (Megabombus) hor<strong>to</strong>rum (Linnaeus 1761)Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Corfu. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Noted from May <strong>to</strong> August in Greece at Crocus up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs montane slopes. Also recordedvisiting Carduus and Vicia.Mainly found in Turkey in <strong>the</strong> north and especially abundant in <strong>the</strong> Black Sea region. This bee ispresent in Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia. It has been extinguished from <strong>the</strong> Black Sea coastal belt due <strong>to</strong> humandevelopment pressures on <strong>the</strong> natural landscapes. Found in forested areas up <strong>to</strong> 2500 mtrs.In <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz range <strong>of</strong> Iran this bee is scarcely recorded during May at up <strong>to</strong> 2000 mtrs. Thebee seems <strong>to</strong> be very scarce in Iran and occasionally recorded; from 2000 <strong>to</strong> 2500 mtrs and flying <strong>to</strong>Lamium album and Stachys.Bombus (Thoracobombus) humilis Illiger 1806Central and north Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing from June <strong>to</strong> August in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece where noted at Vicia cracca, Echium andCarduus.261


Flower visit records for Ankara province Turkey include Anchusa lep<strong>to</strong>phylla, Helianthus annuus,Echium italicum, Centaurea solstitialis, Cousinia and Ononis spinosa.In Iran this bee has a broad altitudinal range about <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz Mountains and is active at lowerlevels but especially from 1500 mtrs and up <strong>to</strong> 3200 mtrs from May in<strong>to</strong> September.Bombus hypnorum (Linnaeus 1758)Turkey.Bombus (Melanobombus) incertus (Morawitz 1881)Turkey. Iran.Widespread and fairly abundant in Turkey and known <strong>to</strong> pollinate legume and fruit crop plants. Foundabout clover fields, pastures, meadows and fallow plots.Found in <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz and o<strong>the</strong>r Regions <strong>of</strong> Iran from 2000 mtrs up <strong>to</strong> 3200 mtrs between Mayand July. This bee appears <strong>to</strong> have a wide range <strong>of</strong> floral hosts, not only visiting Lamiales, Fabaceaeand Boraginaceae but also noted at Plumbaginaceae and o<strong>the</strong>rs. It is likely <strong>to</strong> be a pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Citrusin Iran.Bombus jonellus (Kirby 1802)Turkey.Bombus (Melanobombus) keriensis Morawitz 1886Turkey. Iran.Confined in Turkey <strong>to</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>astern Ana<strong>to</strong>lia where an inhabitant <strong>of</strong> colder plateau meadow andpasture at high altitude.Bombus (Thoracobombus) laesus Morawitz 1875Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Recorded <strong>to</strong> 600 mtrs in Greece during June and July where noted visiting Vicia, Echium andCentaurea.In Turkey widespread from west-central <strong>to</strong> eastern provinces although ra<strong>the</strong>r sporadicallyencountered. Frequents meadows, pastures and fallow plots in open areas <strong>to</strong> 2400 mtrs. This bee is apollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Pisum arvense although most frequently recorded visiting Centaurea glastifolia.Found <strong>to</strong> 2500mtrs during late June and July in Iran where noted flying <strong>to</strong> Salvia.Bombus (Melanobombus) lapidarius (Linnaeus 1758)Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey.Recorded from June <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber in Greece with flower records for Alkanna, Carduus and Epilobium.Not common in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Turkey where found in open forest, meadow and orchard. In nor<strong>the</strong>astAna<strong>to</strong>lia nor<strong>the</strong>astwards <strong>of</strong> an imaginary line between Zigana and Kizildağ <strong>the</strong> subspecies B. l.caucasicus (Radoskowski 1859) is found and can be locally abundant at colder and higher elevationsin forest clearings and orchards above 1500 mtrs.Bombus (Bombus) lucorum (Linnaeus 1761)Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs in Greece where recorded from May <strong>to</strong> August with flower visit records forPrunus dulcis, Origanum, Crocus, Epilobium and Rubus.Flower visit records for central Turkey are <strong>to</strong> Stachys and Astragalus.262


Widespread from May <strong>to</strong> September in <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz Range <strong>of</strong> Iran where recorded <strong>to</strong> 2550 mtrs.and more widely up <strong>to</strong> 2730 mtrs with forage plant records for Echinops, Berberis vulgaris, Borago<strong>of</strong>ficinalis and a variety <strong>of</strong> species in <strong>the</strong> Fabaceae including Medicago sativa, Trifolium repens,Onobrychis altissima, Securigera varia and Lathyrus roseus.From Iran <strong>the</strong>re are also records for visits <strong>to</strong> a variety <strong>of</strong> fruit trees such as Prunus, Malus, Citrus andPyrus species.Bombus (Psithyrus) maxillosus Klug 1817Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Recorded up <strong>to</strong> 1350 mtrs in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece during June <strong>to</strong> August when flying <strong>to</strong>Origanum, Vicia and Carduus.Discovered in Iran at Ardebil where females are active on <strong>the</strong> wing during late May.Bombus (Subterraneobombus) melanurus (Lepeletier 1835)Turkey. Iran.Within Turkey ra<strong>the</strong>r occasionally recorded from central Provinces but widespread in east andnor<strong>the</strong>ast Ana<strong>to</strong>lia where abundant at colder high altitude pastureland and meadow in Ağri andErzurum. Also considered an important pollina<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> legume crops.Active on <strong>the</strong> wing Iran from May in<strong>to</strong> July when found foraging between 2200 and 2730 mtrs atAstragalus, Medicago sativa, Vicia, Lamium album, Salvia and Acantholimon.Bombus (Thoracobombus) mesomelas (Gerstaecker 1869)Continental Greece; Olympos and <strong>the</strong> north. Turkey. Iran.In nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece noted visiting Crocus up <strong>to</strong> 1800 mtrs and from lower elevations recorded atEchium and Centaurea. This bee is rarely recorded in Iran during July at 2050 mtrs.In Turkey some records from central Provinces. Flower hosts noted in Ankara Province are Anchusalep<strong>to</strong>phylla, Consolida orientalis and Marrubium anisodan.It is an abundant bee in east and nor<strong>the</strong>astern Ana<strong>to</strong>lia. The subspecies B. m. alboluteus Vogt 1909 isreferable <strong>to</strong> this Turkish population which inhabits mountain pasture and meadow from 1600 mtrs <strong>to</strong>3500 mtrs.In Iran found active from May <strong>to</strong> August up <strong>to</strong> 2565 mtrs, visiting Astragalus, Medicago sativa, Vicia,Trifolium, Lamium album, Salvia and Acantholimon.Bombus (Psithyrus) mlokosewitzi (Radoszkowski 1889)Turkey.Bombus (Thoracobombus) mlokosievitzii Radoszkowski 1877Turkey; Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.Bombus (Pyrobombus) monticola Smith 1849Continental Greece; Mount Olympos.Bombus (Thoracobombus) muscorum (Linnaeus 1758)North Continental Greece. Crete. Thassos. Turkey. Iran.On <strong>the</strong> wing July <strong>to</strong> September <strong>to</strong> 600 mtrs in Continental Greece where males recorded at Carduusand females at Echium.Iranian records are from July in<strong>to</strong> November and <strong>of</strong>ten at 2500 mtrs.263


Bombus (Sibiricobombus) niveatus Kriechbaumer 1870Widespread Continental Greece. Crete. Turkey. Iran.Found up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece. Noted from June <strong>to</strong> August with flower visit records forEpilobium, Vicia and Echium.Widespread through Turkey where present from sea level <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs. Reported <strong>to</strong> be a commonspecies here and nests in cavities in fences and walls about human habitations. Known as a pollina<strong>to</strong>r<strong>of</strong> forage legumes and fruit crops.An interesting aspect <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> breeding biology is recorded by Rasmont et al (2008) where in Turkey,southwest Ana<strong>to</strong>lia, this bee occupied and usurped 40% <strong>of</strong> nests (in nestboxes) <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> CommonRedstart Phoenicurus phoenicurus leading <strong>to</strong> desertion by <strong>the</strong> birds even when eggs or young wereestablished. It was also noted that o<strong>the</strong>r bird species utilising nestboxes were not intruded upon at allby <strong>the</strong> bees.flower hosts recorded in central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia include Cousinea caesarea, Ononis spinosa, Anchusalep<strong>to</strong>phylla, Consolida orientalis, Helianthus annuus and Astragalus gymnolobus.In <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz Mountains <strong>of</strong> Iran recorded on <strong>the</strong> wing from May <strong>to</strong> August and quitewidespread <strong>the</strong>re up <strong>to</strong> 2550 mtrs. Recently found <strong>to</strong> be more widespread in Western and Central Iran<strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs and <strong>to</strong> have a wide spectrum <strong>of</strong> floral hosts.Bombus (Thoracobombus) pascuorum (Scopoli 1763)Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Thássos. Turkey. Iran.Active during June <strong>to</strong> August up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs in Greece where noted visiting Vicia cracca, Origanumand Epilobium.Recorded visiting Anchusa lep<strong>to</strong>phylla in central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia, Ankara.Found between 1500 and 2700 mtrs within Iran emerging from February and active in<strong>to</strong> July. Notedflying <strong>to</strong> Borago <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Salvia and Althaea.Bombus (Thoracobombus) persicusRadoszkowski 1881Turkey. Iran.Found widely on <strong>the</strong> wing in <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz <strong>of</strong> Iran and more widely from May <strong>to</strong> Oc<strong>to</strong>ber up <strong>to</strong>2850 mtrs.The populations <strong>of</strong> this bee in Turkey are referred <strong>to</strong> as B. p. eversmanniellus (Skorikov 1922). Thissubspecies is widespread in open montane habitats from 1500mtrs <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs and most abundant ineastern and nor<strong>the</strong>astern Ana<strong>to</strong>lia where it exhibits a marked preference for Cephalaria procera.Flowers visited in Iran are <strong>of</strong>ten Legumes including Securigera varia, Medicago sativa and Vicia andalso mints in <strong>the</strong> genera Lamium, Stachys, Salvia and Marrobium.Bombus (Thoracobombus) pomorum (Panzer 1805)North Continental Greece.Recorded in Greece by Reinig.In Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies B. p. canus Schmiedeknecht 1883 is found on mountain plateaux <strong>of</strong>nor<strong>the</strong>astern Ana<strong>to</strong>lia where <strong>the</strong>re is meadow and pasture above 1700 mtrs. generally not commonexcept for Erzurum province where <strong>the</strong> bee is locally abundant.Bombus (Megabombus) portchinsky Radoszkowski 1883Turkey. Iran.Found in nor<strong>the</strong>ast Ana<strong>to</strong>lia only in cooler open montane zones <strong>of</strong> pasture and meadow from over2000 mtrs <strong>to</strong> 3500 mtrs. Reported from Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lia.264


Very rarely noted in Iran at 2500 mtrs during May flying <strong>to</strong> Lamium album.Bombus (Pyrobombus) pra<strong>to</strong>rum (Linnaeus 1761)Central and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece. Iran.Active from April in<strong>to</strong> August at altitudes up <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs and noted flying <strong>to</strong> Verbascum, Epilobiumand Prunus dulcis in Greece.Bombus (Pyrobombus) pyrenaeus (Pérez 1880)Continental Greece.Bombus (Psithyrus) quadricolor (Lepeletier 1832)Turkey. Iran.Bombus (Thoracobombus) ruderarius (Müller 1776).Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Found between May and August in <strong>the</strong> Iranian western and central mountains at up <strong>to</strong> 3200 mtrs.Bombus ruderatus (Fabricius 1775)Turkey.Bombus (Psithyrus) rupestris (Fabricius 1793)Turkey.Bombus (Cullumanobombus) serrisquama Morawitz 1888Turkey.Confined <strong>to</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>ast Ana<strong>to</strong>lia where found at low densities about <strong>the</strong> higher montane meadows andpastures.Bombus (Melanobombus) sichelii (Radoszkowski 1859)<strong>Eastern</strong> Turkey; Agri, Ardahan, Bayburt, Erzurum.This bee recorded in very low population sizes about mountain meadows and pastures <strong>of</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>asternAna<strong>to</strong>lia above 2000 <strong>to</strong> 3000 mtrs ot higher.Bombus (Kallobombus) soroeensis (Fabricius 1777)Central and north Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Recorded flying <strong>to</strong> Origanum, Carduus and Epilobium in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece where noted <strong>to</strong> 1600 mtrs.An abundant bumblebee throughout most <strong>of</strong> Turkey and fond <strong>of</strong> montane valley orchards.Recorded in Iran during May and June from 1950 <strong>to</strong> 2230 mtrs and visiting Lamium album andSalvia.Bombus (Subterraneobombus) subterraneus (Linnaeus 1758)Central Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.In Iran infrequently noted in <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz where active at up <strong>to</strong> 3200 mtrs between May andAugust. O<strong>the</strong>rwise more widely recorded in western and central areas <strong>of</strong>ten at 2500 mtrs during Mayand June. Flower visits recorded in Iran for Borago <strong>of</strong>ficinalis, Medicago sativa, Onobrychisaltissima, Securigera varia, Lathyrus roseus, Phlomis, Marrobium, Salvia and Stachys.265


In Turkey <strong>the</strong> subspecies B. s. latreillellus Kirby 1802 occurs and is widespread throughout. It isespecially abundant in east and nor<strong>the</strong>ast Ana<strong>to</strong>lia about woodland, orchard, montane pasture andmeadow where it shows an affinity for Salvia.Bombus (Sibiricobombus) sulfureus Friese 1905Turkey; Erzurum, Niğde, Osmaniye, Ağri and Kayseri.An extremely rare and local bee <strong>of</strong> eastern Turkey. Iran.Recorded locally in small numbers in Iran during June and July where noted flying <strong>to</strong> Salvia andMedicago sativa.Bombus (Thoracobombus) sylvarum (Linnaeus 1761)Continental Greece. Turkey. Iran.Recorded active in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece between 550 and 750 mtrs between June and September whenvisiting Tagetes, Carduus, Vicia, Alkanna and Echium.This bee has a narrow high summer flight phenology in <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz Range <strong>of</strong> Iran where notedfrom July but mainly during August when found up <strong>to</strong> 2050 mtrs. generally in Iranian Highlands <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> west and centre reported between 1940 and 2730 mtrs. A good range <strong>of</strong> floral hosts is visited.Bombus (Psithyrus) sylvestris (Lepeletier 1832)Iran.Recorded infrequently in Iran from May <strong>to</strong> August at up <strong>to</strong> 2250 mtrs.Bombus (Bombus) terrestris (Linnaeus 1758)North Continental Greece. Aegean Greece on Lesbos. Samos. Rhodes. Turkey. Jordan. Iran.Widespread Turkey.Widespread in <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz <strong>of</strong> Iran <strong>to</strong> 2550 mtrs and active <strong>the</strong>re from May <strong>to</strong> September.Bombus (Psithyrus) vestalis (Ge<strong>of</strong>froy 1785)North Continental Greece. Iran.Recorded visiting Vicia and Origanum in Greece.Infrequently recorded from <strong>the</strong> Central Elburz <strong>of</strong> Iran from May <strong>to</strong> July at up <strong>to</strong> 2550 mtrs.Bombus (Alpigenobombus) wurflenii Radoszkowski 1859North Continental Greece. Turkey.Rarely recorded in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Greece at 1500 mtrs during August.Bombus (Thoracobombus) zonatus Smith 1854Continental Greece. Corfu. Turkey. Iran.Found <strong>to</strong> 600 mtrs in nor<strong>the</strong>rn Continental Greece during <strong>the</strong> summer when noted at Echium, Carduusand Centaurea.Flower visit records for Central Ana<strong>to</strong>lian Turkey include Anchusa lep<strong>to</strong>phylla, Echium italicum,Cousinia caesarea, Ononis spinosa, Centaurea iberica, Centaurea solstitialis, Helianthus annuus,Consolida orientalis and Cirsium alatum.On <strong>the</strong> wing from May, primarily during August, in <strong>the</strong> Iranian Elburz at up <strong>to</strong> 3348 mtrs where visitsa good range <strong>of</strong> flower species.≈266


Tribe ApiniApis (Apis) mellifera Linnaeus 1758The Western Honey Bee occurs throughout <strong>the</strong> region after having arisen in <strong>the</strong> Near East orPon<strong>to</strong>caspian Regions during <strong>the</strong> early Pliocene (Engel 1999).The subspecies A. m. adami Ruttner is endemic <strong>to</strong> Crete. A. m. ana<strong>to</strong>liaca Maa is through much <strong>of</strong>Turkey. A. m. cecropia Kiesenwetter ranges through most <strong>of</strong> Continental Greece and <strong>the</strong> Aegeanislands. In Nor<strong>the</strong>rnmost Continental Greece A. m. macedonica Ruttner is found. A. m. cypriaPollmann is found on Cyprus. The race A. m. meda Skorikov is found in Iran and Iraq in<strong>to</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rnSyria and sou<strong>the</strong>astern Turkey. The race A. m. syriaca occurs in <strong>the</strong> levant from Syria south <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>Negev Desert.A m. lamarckii Cockerell is present along <strong>the</strong> Nile Valley, Egypt.Apis (Micrapis) floreaFabricius 1787Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Iran and Iraq.≈267


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Schwarz, M. & Gusenleitner, F. (2003). ‘Ergebnis der Untersuchung einiger von Spinolabeschriebener Apiden mit Bemerkungen und Erganzungen (Hym: Apidae).’ En<strong>to</strong>m<strong>of</strong>auna 24; 17.Standfuss, K. & Schwarz, M. (2007). ‘Zur aktuellen Bienenfauna der Olbaumzone in SO-Thessalien/Griechenland.’ En<strong>to</strong>m<strong>of</strong>auna 28, 24.Warncke, K. (1988) ‘Isolierte bienenvorkommen auf dem Olympos in Griechenland (Hym; Apidae).’Linzer biol. Beitrage 20:1.Index <strong>to</strong> Bee Families andGeneraAcanthonomada 266Aethammobates 279Afranthidium 220Aglaoapis 235Allodioxys 235Amegilla 302Ammobates 279Ammoba<strong>to</strong>ides 278Ancyla 283Andrena 61Andrenidae 61Anthidiellum 218Anthidium 221Anthophora 307Apidae 259Apis 343Biastes 279Bombus 333Camp<strong>to</strong>poeum 103Ceratina 261Ceylalictus 117Chalicodoma 238Chelos<strong>to</strong>ma 172Chiasmognathus 282Clavipanurgus 106Coelioxys 243Colletes 43Colletidae 43Creigh<strong>to</strong>nella 237Cubitalia 296Dasypoda 164Dioxys 235Dufourea 110Ensliniana 236Eoanthidium 219Epeolus 277Eremophanta 166Eucera 284Eudioxys 236Eupavlovskia 331Exoneuridia 265Gasparinahla 106Glazunovia 284Habropoda 329Hae<strong>to</strong>smia 176Halictidae 108Halictus 120Heriades 176H<strong>of</strong>feria 177Hoplitis 177Hoplosmia 194Hylaeus 51Icteranthidium 229Lasioglossum 131Lipotriches 117Lithurgus 170Macropis 167Megachile 249Megachilidae 170Melecta 330Melitta 167Melitturga 106283


Mellitidae 164Metadioxys 236Nomada 266Nomia 113Nomioides 118Ochreriades 196Osmia 196Panurginus 104Panurgus 106Paracrocisa 331Paradioxys 236Parammoba<strong>to</strong>des 282Pararophites 170Pasites 282Pithitis 265Plesiopanurgus 107Prodioxys 236Promelitta 166Pro<strong>to</strong>smia 213Proxylocopa 259Pseudanthidium 228Pseudapis 114Pseudoheriades 215Radoszkowskiana 249Rhodanthidium 220Rophites 109Rophi<strong>to</strong>ides 108Schmiedeknechtia 278Sphecodes 159Stelis 232Stenoheriades 215Stenosmia 215Systropha 108Tarsalia 284Tetralonia 297Tetraloniella 300Thyreomelecta 332Thyreus 332Trachusa 216Wainia 216Xylocopa 259284

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