taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
D32A87C2FFF8634CFF0BC40B53BB5D04.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7091609/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7091609	FIGURES 1–5: Osmia (Allosmia). 1: Female of O. melanura at the entrance of her nest. 2: Female of O. rufohirta rolling her nest towards a protected place. 3: Female of O. sybarita rolling her nest into a self-excavated hole in sandy soil (photo N. Vereecken). 4: Opened nest of O. melanura with one brood cell and a nest plug at the shell opening composed of a one-layered partition of leaf pulp followed by broken pieces of gastropod shells embedded into a matrix of leaf pulp. 5: Opened nest of O. rufohirta with one brood cell and a nest plug at considerable distance from the shell opening consisting of a central layer of earth crumbs sandwiched between two partitions of leaf pulp (photo P. Westrich).	FIGURES 1–5: Osmia (Allosmia). 1: Female of O. melanura at the entrance of her nest. 2: Female of O. rufohirta rolling her nest towards a protected place. 3: Female of O. sybarita rolling her nest into a self-excavated hole in sandy soil (photo N. Vereecken). 4: Opened nest of O. melanura with one brood cell and a nest plug at the shell opening composed of a one-layered partition of leaf pulp followed by broken pieces of gastropod shells embedded into a matrix of leaf pulp. 5: Opened nest of O. rufohirta with one brood cell and a nest plug at considerable distance from the shell opening consisting of a central layer of earth crumbs sandwiched between two partitions of leaf pulp (photo P. Westrich).	2022-09-19	Müller, Andreas		Zenodo	biologists	Müller, Andreas			
D32A87C2FFF8634CFF0BC40B53BB5D04.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7091611/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7091611	FIGURES 6–15: Osmia (Allosmia). 6: Female of O. gemina. 7: Male of O. gemina. 8: Male sterna 3–6 of O. gemina. 9: Male sterna 3–6 of O. rufohirta. 10: Male genitalia of O. gemina (ventral view). 11: Male genitalia of O. rufohirta (ventral view). 12: Male sterna 3–6 of O. lhotelleriei. 13: Male sterna 3–6 of O. sybarita. 14: Male genitalia of O. lhotelleriei (dorsal view). 15: Male genitalia of O. sybarita (dorsal view).	FIGURES 6–15: Osmia (Allosmia). 6: Female of O. gemina. 7: Male of O. gemina. 8: Male sterna 3–6 of O. gemina. 9: Male sterna 3–6 of O. rufohirta. 10: Male genitalia of O. gemina (ventral view). 11: Male genitalia of O. rufohirta (ventral view). 12: Male sterna 3–6 of O. lhotelleriei. 13: Male sterna 3–6 of O. sybarita. 14: Male genitalia of O. lhotelleriei (dorsal view). 15: Male genitalia of O. sybarita (dorsal view).	2022-09-19	Müller, Andreas		Zenodo	biologists	Müller, Andreas			
D32A87C2FFF66359FF0BC4A053BB5E1E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7091615/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7091615	FIGURES 16–21: Osmia (Neosmia). 16: Female of O. rosea at the entrance of her nest, which is covered with numerous patches of leaf pulp (photo N. Vereecken). 17: Female of O. cinnabarina visiting Reseda lanzerotae. 18: Opened nest of O. bicolor with one brood cell and a nest plug composed of densely packed small pebbles and earth crumbs followed by a final partition of leaf pulp at some distance from the shell opening (photo A. Krebs). 19: Opened nest of O. cinnabarina with nest plug consisting of densely packed small pebbles. 20: Female of O. bicolor covering her nest with plant stalks (photo A. Krebs). 21: Nest of O. bicolor completely hidden under a dense pile of pine needles and plant stalks (photo A. Krebs).	FIGURES 16–21: Osmia (Neosmia). 16: Female of O. rosea at the entrance of her nest, which is covered with numerous patches of leaf pulp (photo N. Vereecken). 17: Female of O. cinnabarina visiting Reseda lanzerotae. 18: Opened nest of O. bicolor with one brood cell and a nest plug composed of densely packed small pebbles and earth crumbs followed by a final partition of leaf pulp at some distance from the shell opening (photo A. Krebs). 19: Opened nest of O. cinnabarina with nest plug consisting of densely packed small pebbles. 20: Female of O. bicolor covering her nest with plant stalks (photo A. Krebs). 21: Nest of O. bicolor completely hidden under a dense pile of pine needles and plant stalks (photo A. Krebs).	2022-09-19	Müller, Andreas		Zenodo	biologists	Müller, Andreas			
D32A87C2FFF66359FF0BC4A053BB5E1E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7091619/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7091619	FIGURES 22–24: Osmia (Neosmia) nigrocalcaribus. 22: Female. 23: Tibial spurs of female hind leg. 24: Basitarsus of female hind leg.	FIGURES 22–24: Osmia (Neosmia) nigrocalcaribus. 22: Female. 23: Tibial spurs of female hind leg. 24: Basitarsus of female hind leg.	2022-09-19	Müller, Andreas		Zenodo	biologists	Müller, Andreas			
