Older version of Flowering Plants Visited by Bombus auricomus in Illinois

© John Hilty

Tweet

Flowering Plants Visited by Bombus auricomus in Illinois

Bombus auricomus Robertson: Apidae (Bombini), Hymenoptera
(observations are from Robertson, Graenicher, Reed, Betz et al., Haddock & Chaplin, Clinebell & Bernhardt, and Macior)

Anacardiaceae: Rhus glabra [pist sn] (Rb); Apiaceae: Cicuta maculata sn (Rb), Zizia aurea sn (Rb); Asclepiadaceae: Asclepias incarnata [plpr sn fq] (Rb, Btz), Asclepias sullivanti [plpr sn] (Rb), Asclepias syriaca [plab sn] (Rb); Asteraceae: Achillea millefolium cp (Rb), Aster pilosus sn (Rb), Aster turbinellus sn (Rb), Bidens aristosa sn (Rb), Cirsium altissimum sn cp (Rb, Gr), Cirsium discolor sn cp fq (Rb, Re), Cirsium vulgare sn (Rb), Echinacea pallida sn (Rb), Echinacea purpurea sn (Rb), Eupatoriadelphus purpureus sn (Rb), Helianthus grosseserratus sn (Rb), Helianthus tuberosus sn (Rb), Lactuca floridana sn (Rb), Liatris aspera (Re), Liatris spicata sn cp (Gr), Oligoneuron rigidum (Re), Ratibida pinnata (Re), Rudbeckia triloba sn (Rb), Solidago nemoralis sn (Rb), Solidago speciosa sn (Rb), Verbesina helianthoides sn (Rb), Vernonia fasciculata sn (Rb); Boraginaceae: Mertensia virginica sn (Rb); Brassicaceae: Cardamine bulbosa sn (Rb); Caesalpiniaceae: Chamaecrista fasciculata [flwr cp fq] (Rb); Campanulaceae: Lobelia siphilitica (Mc); Commelinaceae: Tradescantia virginiensis cp (Rb); Convolvulaceae: Ipomoea pandurata sn fq (Rb); Cornaceae: Cornus racemosa cp (Rb); Ebenaceae: Diospyros virginiana [pist sn] (Rb); Fabaceae: Astragalus canadensis sn cp fq (Rb), Astragalus crassicarpus trichocalyx sn cp (Rb), Baptisia leucophaea (HC), Cercis canadensis sn fq (Rb), Dalea candida sn (Rb), Dalea purpurea sn cp (Rb, Re), Desmodium illinoense cp (Rb), Melilotus alba sn (Rb), Orbexilum onobrychis sn (Rb), Robinia pseudoacacia sn fq (Rb), Trifolium pratense sn (Rb, Mc); Fumariaceae: Dicentra cucullaria sn fq (Rb); Grossulariaceae: Ribes missouriense sn fq (Rb); Hippocastanaceae: Aesculus glabra sn fq (Rb), Aesculus hippocastanum sn fq (Rb); Hydrophyllaceae: Hydrophyllum appendiculatum sn (Rb); Hypericaceae: Hypericum sphaerocarpum cp (Rb); Iridaceae: Iris versicolor shrevei sn (Rb), Sisyrinchium angustifolium sn (Rb); Lamiaceae: Agastache scrophulariaefolia cp (Rb), Blephilia ciliata sn cp (Rb), Blephilia hirsuta sn (Rb), Leonurus cardiaca sn (Rb), Monarda bradburiana sn fq (Rb), Monarda fistulosa sn fq (Rb, Re), Nepeta cataria sn (Rb), Pycnanthemum tenuifolium sn cp fq icp (Rb), Pycnanthemum virginianum (Re), Scutellaria incana sn (Rb), Stachys palustris sn (Rb); Liliaceae: Camassia scilloides sn (Rb); Malvaceae: Hibiscus trionum sn (Rb), Malva neglecta sn (Rb); Oxalidaceae: Oxalis violacea sn (Rb); Polemoniaceae: Phlox pilosa sn fq (Rb), Polemonium reptans sn (Rb); Portulacaceae: Claytonia virginica sn (Rb); Primulaceae: Dodecatheon meadia cp exp (Rb, Mc); Ranunculaceae: Aquilegia canadensis sn (Mc), Clematis pitcheri sn cp (Rb), Delphinium carolinianum virescens (Re), Delphinium tricorne sn fq (Rb, Mc); Rhamnaceae: Ceanothus americanus cp (Rb); Rosaceae: Crataegus crus-galli sn (Rb), Malus coronaria sn (Rb), Rosa setigera cp (Rb), Rubus allegheniensis sn (Rb); Rubiaceae: Cephalanthus occidentalis sn fq (Rb); Rutaceae: Ptelea trifoliata sn cp (Rb); Salicaceae: Salix interior [stam sn] (Rb); Scrophulariaceae: Aureolaria grandiflora cp (Rb), Collinsia verna sn (Rb), Linaria vulgaris fq (Mc), Pedicularis canadensis sn cp fq (Mc), Penstemon cobaea cobaea sn (CB), Penstemon digitalis sn (Rb), Penstemon grandiflorus (Re), Penstemon hirsutus sn fq (Rb), Penstemon pallidus sn (CB), Tomanthera auriculata sn (Rb); Verbenaceae: Verbena hastata sn (Rb), Verbena stricta sn (Rb); Violaceae: Viola striata sn np (Rb)
  • Hilty, J. Editor. 2012. Insect Visitors of Illinois Wildflowers. World Wide Web electronic publication. flowervisitors.info, version (09/2010).
    See: Abbreviations for Insect Activities, Abbreviations for Scientific Observers, References for behavioral observations

Latest updates

View current version

In the latest article

  • Trusted

    Bombus auricomus

This article is unpublished.

View current version

Source information

Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 (CC BY-NC 3.0)

Copyright © 2002-2010 by Dr. John Hilty

© John Hilty

View source
Supplier: Insect Visitors of Illinois Wildflowers

Source: John Hilty

Revisions

  • 2013-01-11 06:13:43 UTC
  • 2012-09-11 07:16:38 UTC
  • 2012-03-06 03:11:28 UTC

Encyclopedia of Life

Global Navigation

  • Discover
  • Help
  • What is EOL?
  • EOL News
  • Donate

English

  • Deutsch
  • English
  • español
  • français
  • Galego
  • Nederlands
  • Norsk bokmål
  • Tagalog
  • македонски
  • српски језик
  • ‫العربية
  • 简体中文
  • 한국어

Search the site

Login or Create Account

Become part of the EOL community!

Join EOL now

Already a member? Sign in

Site information

About EOL
  • What is EOL?
  • The EOL Blog
  • Discover
  • Statistics
  • Glossary
  • Podcasts
  • Donate to EOL
  • Citing EOL
  • Help
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact Us
Learn more about
    • Animals
    • Mammals
    • Birds
    • Amphibians
    • Reptiles
    • Fishes
    • Invertebrates
    • Crustaceans
    • Mollusks
    • Insects
    • Spiders
    • Worms
    • Plants
    • Flowering Plants
    • Trees
    • Fungi
    • Mushrooms
    • Molds
    • Bacteria
    • Protists
    • Archaea
    • Viruses
Encyclopedia of Life

v. 2.2

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest
  • Vimeo
  • Flipboard
Tell me more
  • What is biodiversity?
  • What is a species?
  • How are species discovered?
  • How are species named?
  • What is a biological classification?
  • What is an invasive species?
  • What is an indicator species?
  • What is a model organism?
  • How can I contribute to research?