Locally called "rambangon". Very abundant.
Maybe Acronychia pedunculata? Or Tetractomia tetandra?
Locally called "pinding pandan".
Exudes a yellow sap that can cause an allergic reaction on the skin. Causes red blsiters that stain the skin black.
visiting Strophostyles umbellata. Thanks @gnatcatcher!
eating a freshly caught springtail
little, dark, & bidentate; tibial spurs looked about right from specimen. Andrena imitatrix still around and I think is a host for them.
luteola itself, checked against specimen; wide carina on cheek, mostly yellow propodeum, 10ish stubby little red setae on hind tibia
Could their host be Andrena hilaris?
at least that's what specimens seem to key to; microscope pix tba
Nuluhon Trusmadi Forest Reserve, Keningau District, Sabah, Borneo. 1100 m., lower montane dipterocarp forest.
No kidding.
@joegiulian and @samwilhelm first observed and collected small Colletes males hovering around a patch of Kalmia angustifolia at this open, sandy site in the Pinelands during the last week of May. C. bradleyi had been on our radar, but this was somewhat earlier than we expected since previous records are from mid-late June. The male of C. bradleyi was formerly unknown, but it seemed to us that multiple features of these male specimens (fine, well-spaced punctures on scutum, carinate metapleural projection with testaceous rim) were reminiscent of descriptions of the female of C. bradleyi by Mitchell (1951) and Stephen (1954). The following day, @andrew_aldercotte and I visited the same site and observed multiple male Colletes, as well as females that appeared to be collecting pollen from Kalmia angustifolia (see photo). Male specimens collected on this day matched those collected previously at the site by Joe and Sam and females we collected keyed exactly to C. bradleyi following Mitchell (1951) and Stephen (1954). Highly distinctive in the field - overall impression much like other americanus-group Colletes, but somewhat duller and lacking basal hair bands on tergites; quite unique among the Colletes and general bee fauna active in our area at this time of year. Subsequent visits to other sites in the Pinelands have turned up several more female and male specimens, all collected in association with Kalmia angustifolia (alongside Andrena kalmiae and occasionally Colletes consors!). Full natural history writeup in the works...
A specimen recently discovered by Joe that was taken in Washington County, Maine, provides the first evidence that this species may occur more widely than previously thought. Moral of the story for beewatchers in the northeast US: scrutinize flowering Sheep Laurel, especially in sandy barrens habitats!
Perhaps even more interestingly, Joe and Sam also managed to collect several male specimens of an as-of-yet unidentified Epeolus visiting Kalmia alongside Colletes bradleyi at our "original" site on the date that they first observed C. bradleyi males; we have yet to find additional individuals of this Epeolus despite effort.
See observation of male here: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/122250341
See observations of Epeolus here:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/122250342
and here:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/122250345
UPDATE: Thomas Onuferko identifies the Epeolus as E. inornatus; considering previous host records for this species, it's likely associated with Colletes banksi, which almost certainly occurs at this site
Additional DSLR photos of specimens tba