Notes on family-group names for bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea)
Author
Engel, Michael S.
Division of Entomology, Natural History Museum, and Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, 1501 Crestline Drive - Suite 140, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045 - 4415, USA (msengel @ ku. edu). & Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West
text
Journal of Melittology
2015
2015-03-13
2015
46
1
7
http://dx.doi.org/10.17161/jom.v0i46.4839
journal article
10.17161/jom.v0i46.4839
2325-4467
13145840
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0626B747-69EF-4C66-A9C5-A2EEB29187C1
Tribe
Hesperapini Ascher & Engel
Eremaphantina
Engel,
new subtribe
ZooBank:
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
E983673C-524A-4EDC-AC8F-DD03451D80F9
TYPE
GENUS
:
Eremaphanta
Popov, 1940
.
DIAGNOSIS: Small bees (
4–7 mm
in length), often with yellow maculation, at least on face and/or legs; maxillary stipes with distinct, large, apical concavity on ventral/ posterior margin (stipital concavity); galeal comb present anterior to maxillary palpus, galeal fringe present; metabasitibial plate present; inner surface of female metatibia with mediolongitudinal keirotrichiate zone; forewing with basal vein arched; two submarginal cells (
i.e
., 1rs-m absent,
sensu
Engel
, 2001
); pterostigma transparent, about as long as or slightly longer than costal margin of marginal cell; propodeal profile with basal area horizontal, basal area about as a long as vertical surface; prepygidial fimbria of female absent; pygidial fimbria of female absent; pygidial plate of female present; pygidial plate of male absent; male gonostylus simple, not enlarged.
INCLUDED GENERA: The subtribe presently includes only the
type
genus,
Eremaphanta
Popov
, with three subgenera:
Eremaphanta
s.str
.
,
Popovapis
Michener
, and
Eremaphantella
n. subgen.
(
vide
Appendix). It could be argued that these groups are best recognized as individual genera, but such a change is not advocated here.
COMMENTS: The recognition of the present group serves to emphasize the rather disparate morphological and biogeographic distinction between the included species and those of nominate subtribe, of the genera
Hesperapis
Cockerell
and
Capicola
Friese. While
features such as the genitalia, galeal comb, rather flattened metasoma, and metatibial keirotrichiate band are indicative of hesperapine monophyly (
Engel
, 2005
;
Michez & Patiny, 2006
), the two subtribes exhibit apparently relic distributions across different zoogeographic regions (Palearctic/Oriental versus Nearctic/Afrotropical). The eremaphantines are the only
Hesperapini
occurring in xeric areas of Central Asia southwest to
Iran
and the eastern Arabian Peninsula and southeast to
Pakistan
(overlapping with the tribe
Dasypodaini
), while the remaining lineages of the tribe are restricted to North America,
South Africa
, and
Namibia
.