Colletes halophilus are "solitary bees", but they nest in aggregations, which can sometimes number in the thousands. They are active from the late summer, sometimes as early as July, with the males emerging first and stay close to the emergence site where they scout for females to mate with. When a female emerges, the males swarm towards her and attempt to mate; they may form a "
mating ball" with many males surrounding a single female. Once mated, the females begin to excavate their burrows, lining the walls of the burrows with a glandular secretion which hardens and acts as an anti-fungal defence. Each cell is provisioned with pollen and nectar, mainly collected from the flowers of the sea aster, and the bee's flight period is timed to coincide with the flowering period of sea aster. The late summer emergence of the adults of
C. halophilus mean that this species is
univoltine, and the bees overwinter in their natal cells to emerge the following summer as adults to begin the life cycle again. The bees feed on a limited range of plants, mostly in the
Asteraceae, including weld (
Reseda luteola), but sea aster is especially important. Both males and females need to feed on pollen to power their flight, and it is important that the nesting aggregations are located close to sources of food.
C. halophilus is parasitized by the
cuckoo bee Epeolus variegatus which takes over the nests of the mining bee, including the food provisions, and times its emergence to coincide with
C halophilus. Another parasite is the
sarcophagid fly Miltogramma punctata which has been reared from puparia taken from nests of
C. halophilus and observed flying around nest entrances. ==Conservation==