All images on this website have been taken in Leicestershire and Rutland by NatureSpot members. We welcome new contributions - just register and use the Submit Records form to post your photos. Click on any image below to visit the species page. The RED / AMBER / GREEN dots indicate how easy it is to identify the species - see our Identification Difficulty page for more information. A coloured rating followed by an exclamation mark denotes that different ID difficulties apply to either males and females or to the larvae - see the species page for more detail.
Bees, Wasps, Ants
Solitary bees
Megachilidae - Leaf-cutter, Mason and Sharp-tail Bees, etc.
A large and diverse family of bees, including Leaf-cutter bees, Mason bees, Resin bees, Dark bees, Scissor bees, Wool-carder bees and Sharp-tail bees. All have two submarginal cells in the forewing.
Stelis (Dark bees) and Coelioxys (Sharp-tail bees) are cleptoparasites, laying their eggs inside a host's nest cells. Their larva consume the food stored there by the host for its larvae.
Other species make nests in cavities in wood, walls and plant material such as hollow stems and galls - even snail shells. The nest cells of Scissor bees (Chelostoma), Leaf cutters (Megachile) and Mason bees (Osmia and Hoplitis) are made out of mud mixed with saliva and other materials. The eggs are laid and food is stored for the larva, and then the cell is sealed up. The females of these species have a pollen brush beneath the abdomen.
The single UK species of Wood Carder bees (Anthidium manicatum) nests in cavities, but makes the cells out plant fibres gathered form furry-leaved plants like Mullein (Verbascum), Lamb's-ears (Stachys lanata) and Yarrow (Achillea).
Social wasps - Vespinae and Polistinae
Vespidae
An excellent guide to identifying social wasps has been produced by Eakring Birds. Though titled the social wasps of Nottinghamshire, the species are the same as those found in Leicestershire and Rutland.
Solitary wasps
The familiar yellow and black social wasps are the outliers for the group - the vast majority of the world’s 100,000+ wasp species are solitary. The Chalcids, Ichneumonids and Braconids are particularly species-rich. For all their great ecological importance, most species are poorly studied and many of these are extremely difficult to identify.
Eumeninae - Mason and Potter wasps
Michael Archer's key to the Potter and Mason wasps is available from BWARS. Eumeninae are a fascinating subfamily of wasps. Often called "Mason wasps" or "Potter wasps," they are the solitary cousins of the more famous yellow and black social wasps. They are actually some of the most beneficial (and architecturally gifted) insects , being predatory on many pest species which they use to stock the larders for their larvae.
Crabronidae - Sand wasps and Digger wasps
The Crabronidae are a group of solitary wasps which construct burrows in soil which they stock with paralysed insects to feed their larvae.
Sphecidae - Sand wasps
These solitary wasps get their name because most nest in the ground. The female digs her own hole and stocks it with paralysed prey, usually other insects or spiders, for her young to feed on.
Pompilidae - Spider hunting wasps.
While many wasps are generalists, this family is dedicated to a single task - hunting spiders which they use as living larders for their offspring. Graham Collins' draft key to Pompilidae is on BWARS' website.

















































