Leafcutter Bee - Megachile willughbiella

Description

Length 12 to 18 mm. A large leafcutter bee, the males of which have distinctive white flattened front tarsi. Females of this genus can be difficult to identify, even under a microscope. It is the commonest leafcutter bee and the species most likely to be encountered in gardens where it readily uses bee hotels.

See our ID Aid below below for identifying males.

Where a photo is surrounded by a red box it means that it is representative of the species but may not be the actual species described.

Identification difficulty
ID checklist (your specimen should have all of these features)

Males:

  • white, posterior fringe on front tarsi
  • front basitarsi not much longer than wide and broader than the tibia tip
  • hind tibia and tarsi not swollen and tarsi as long or longer than the tibia

Females:

  • wing length 8.5-10.5mm
  • orange pollen brush (with few dark hairs on tergites 5 and 6)
  • hair brush on the front tarsi only on the basitarsus and hairs approx. 1.5x the width of the tarsus
  • hairs on tergite 6 adpressed
  • sparce buff hairs on the hind margins of the tergites
Identification aids

 

bee id

Recording advice

Most solitary bees and wasps are difficult to identify, and can rarely be identified from photos taken in the field.  All red-rated records should include a photo, or set of photos, showing the key characters, which may require the specimen. Please include a face shot, side, top and wings.  Note whether male or female, explain how the specimen met the key characters and the key used.  We will accept records identified by a recognised local or national expert, or that have been identified via the BWARS’ Facebook noting the name of the person/organisation identifying the record (e.g. ‘Stuart Roberts, BWARS Facebook’).

Habitat

Often found in gardens. It nests in sunny, sheltered locations in crevices in dead wood or in the ground, sometimes using the soil in flower pots.

When to see it

June to August.

Life History

Female Megachile bees construct nests of larval cells from leaves and provision each cell with a mixture of pollen and nectar for the young. The larva feed on this food store before overwintering and emerging the following summer.

UK Status

Common.

VC55 Status

Common.

Leicestershire & Rutland Map

MAP KEY:

Yellow squares = NBN records (all known data)
Coloured circles = NatureSpot records: 2025+ | 2020-2024 | pre-2020

UK Map

Species profile

Common names
Willughby's Leaf-Cutter Bee, Willughby's Leafcutter Bee
Species group:
Bees, Wasps, Ants
Kingdom:
Animalia
Order:
Hymenoptera
Family:
Megachilidae
Records on NatureSpot:
16
First record:
09/06/2011 (Peacock, H A)
Last record:
03/08/2024 (Bailey, Juliet)

Total records by month

% of records within its species group

10km squares with records

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