Nomada marshamella is most frequently a univoltine species, but where the host used is the bivoltine
Andrena trimmerana, then
N. marshamella will also be bivoltine. The univoltine form is associated primarily with
Andrena scotica, and sometimes
A. nigroaenea, and it flies from early April to late June while the bivoltine form's normal host is
A. trimmerana, and sometimes late nesting
A. nigroaenae flying from late June into September.
N. marshamella is known to cleptoparasitise the nests of
A. scotica and they have been recovered from such nests. It is also thought that
N.marshamella may parasitise
Andrena ferox,
A. stragulata,
A. trimmerana,
A. nigroaenea and
A. haemorrhoa, in the Czech Republic
A. rosae has also been recorded as a host of
N. marshamella.
A. trimmerana has only been recorded as a host of this species in England. It is a highly
polylectic species of bee in which the adults exploit a wide variety of flowers at different levels from ground to canopy for their nectar. ==Flight Period==