A critical revision of the Andrena Fabricius, 1775 of India, with the description of two new species (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae) from Uttarakhand
Author
Gautam, R. K.
Author
Uniyal, V. P.
Author
Wood, Thomas J.
670C3E36-1D28-4FCA-887C-91D6116E6F9C
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden, the Netherlands.
thomas.wood@naturalis.nl
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2024
2024-08-29
948
1
59
https://europeanjournaloftaxonomy.eu/index.php/ejt/article/download/2637/12143
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2024.948.2637
2118-9773
13511901
9985FD07-5280-41D9-B982-B175085AE5F8
13.
Andrena
(
Melandrena
)
cineraria
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
sensu lato
Andrena cineraria
Linnaeus, 1758: 575
, [Europe,
type
lost].
Lamprocolletes peregrinus
Smith, 1878: 2
[
China
, ZSI, examined by photograph].
Listed by
Nurse (1904)
;
Meena & Dey (2019)
;
Chandra
et al.
(2021)
;
Ascher & Pickering (2023)
.
Type material
Syntypes
CHINA
•
1 ♀
;
Yangihissár
[=Yengisar];
ZSI
;
ZSI0000008643
•
1 ♀
; Yarkand [=Yarkant];
NHMUK
.
Fig. 11.
Phylogenetic tree (maximum likelihood) of
Andrena
subgenus
Hoplandrena
Pérez, 1890
based on the mitochondrial COI gene. Numbers above branches represent bootstrap support (values of <75 are omitted).
Other material examined
INDIA
•
5 ♀♀
;
West Himalaya
,
Khalatse
[Khalsi],
Kashmir
,
4000–5000 m
a.s.l.
;
12–23 May 1933
;
ZMHB
.
Remarks
It is difficult to find a primary listing for the presence of
A. cineraria
in
India
.
Andrena cineraria
has been treated as a broad taxon, but it represents a species complex including
A. barbareae
Panzer, 1805
and
A. danuvia
Stöckhert, 1950
. In Asia, “
A. cineraria
” has been reported to be bivoltine (e.g.,
Osytshnjuk
et al.
2008
; Xu & Tadauchi 2009a), and hence is suspected to be more closely related to
A. barbareae
rather than to
A. cineraria
(
Wood 2023a
)
. Further study is required, along with genetic analysis (
Gueuning
et al.
2020
).
Additionally, the name
A. peregrina
(
Smith, 1878
)
is available, and is currently listed as a synonym of
A. cineraria
(
Gusenleitner & Schwarz 2002
)
. Originally described as a
Lamprocolletes
Smith, 1853
(
Colletidae
), examination of a specimen in the NHMUK collection labelled as “Type” in the handwriting of Smith (
Fig. 12
) shows that this taxon is an
Andrena
(although the head is missing, the remaining body is clearly a species of
Andrena
), and is closely affiliated with
A. cineraria
. Indeed,
Warncke (1967: 298)
considered
A. peregrina
to be conspecific with
A. cineraria
, leading to the current listing of Gusenleitner & Schwarz. However, the published type locality is Yangihissár [Yengisar] in East Turkestan [=
Xinjiang
in western
China
], whereas the specimen is labelled as “Yarkand” [=Yarkant] which is approximately
100 km
to the south-east of Yangihissár. Donald Baker (unpublished thesis: 273) suggested that additional type material of
A. peregrina
may be in the ZSI, and that this NMHUK specimen is presumably a
syntype
retained by Smith. Searching through the ZSI website produces a specimen of
A. peregrina
from Yangihissár (ZSI0000008643) which is clearly syntypic, but is not automatically considered to be the
holotype
since the NHMUK specimen is also considered to be a
syntype
. At the present time, neither specimen is designated as a
lectotype
.
Given the complexity of species delineation within this group of species (
Gueuning
et al.
2020
), no taxonomic action is taken here. The status of
A. basifusca
Cockerell, 1930
(described from
Uzbekistan
and currently listed as a valid species by
Gusenleitner & Schwarz 2002
) must also be resolved in future molecular revisions focusing on Asia. Since
Nurse (1904)
mentioned that
A. cineraria
was “fairly common in Kashmir”, the species is retained on the Indian list of
Andrena
in a broad sensu lato, pending further investigations.
Distribution
Unclear, possibly restricted to the West Palaearctic or perhaps more broadly across the Palaearctic.