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This publication gives new records for all bumblebee species living in Iceland: B. hortorum, B. hypnorum, B. jonellus, B. lucorum, B. pascuorum, B. pratorum and B. terrestris. B. terrestris was detected outside the greenhouses for the first time. At 23 locations 217 specimens were collected. B. pratorum was only seen. The known strong expansion of B. lucorum (Kratochwil 2016) could be confirmed. The relation between B. jonellus and B. lucorum has constantly changed at the expense of of B. jonellus since B. lucorum occurred in Iceland. It is obvious that B. lucorum has already replaced the original species B. jonellus in some places. As a reason a strong competition of both species is given primarily (Kratochwil & Schwabe 2016). Factors effecting this competition are: the distribution of the neophyte Lupinus nootkatensis, the change in management of land as well as ethological but also morphological differences (Prys-Jones et al. 2016). A too low genetic diversity and a resulting suffering from diseases carried by other introduced bumblebee species (Prys-Jones et al. 2016) only can be supposed. Probably the influence of climatic change effects on B. jonellus in a negative way too (Kratochwil 2016, Kratochwil & Schwabe 2016). B. lucorum is just going to take the north top of Iceland. Only two locations could be found there without any bumblebees. In the future an ongoing expansion of B. lucorum is expected. B. jonellus will further be repressed and may become extinct in some places. A continuing expansion of B. terrestris can be expected.