Widespread polytypic species or complexes of local species? Revising bumblebees of the subgenus Melanobombus world-wide (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Bombus)
Author
Williams, Paul H.
38A45E0C-02A8-407E-8E89-5162D454E9FE
Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK.
paw@nhm.ac.uk
Author
Altanchimeg, Dorjsuren
FB68F32E-4F6D-40C2-A921-20FBAD676D50
Institute of General and Experimental Biology, Peace Avenue 54 b, Ulaanbaatar 13330, Mongolia.
altanchimegd@mas.ac.mn
Author
Byvaltsev, Alexandr
B57BAD3E-9E42-4446-994E-4A45A738D404
Novosibirsk State University, ul. Pirogova 2, Novosibirsk, 630090 Russia.
byvam@yandex.ru
Author
Jonghe, Roland De
FC98CAB7-B2FF-4BEB-94FF-26F53D33CD04
Langstraat 105, B- 2260 Westerlo, Belgium.
roland.de.jonghe@telenet.be
Author
Jaffar, Saleem
77F70375-0A19-4D0E-A05A-987BB46543C0
South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China.
saleemjaffar@stu.scau.edu.cn
Author
Japoshvili, George
CCC82B7C-A1E4-4D58-90A3-623116CBAE96
Agricultural University of Georgia, 240 Agmashenebli Alley, Tbilisi, Georgia.
g.japoshvili@agruni.edu.ge
Author
Kahono, Sih
F8513496-B409-434C-A182-4146232C89FA
Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI), Jakarta, Indonesia.
sihkahono@gmail.com
Author
Liang, Huan
A99867E0-C686-4608-8DF7-0EDE8D2D57EC
Kunming Institute of Botany (Chinese Academy of Sciences), 132 Lanhei Road, Kunming, Yunnan 650201, China.
lianghuan@mail.kib.ac.cn
Author
Mei, Maurizio
82F344C7-B98A-462C-81E0-D6F3F02348D4
Università di Roma ‘ Sapienza’, Piazzale Valerio Massimo 6, Roma 00162, Italy.
maurizio.mei@uniroma1.it
Author
Monfared, Alireza
48CA77BA-8CF4-4812-89B1-696A11FEDE2D
Yasouj University, Zirtol, Yasouj, Iran.
alirezamonfared1@yahoo.com
Author
Nidup, Tshering
BE588EE1-5E2C-46CC-8907-CD344D88C869
Sherubtse College, Royal University of Bhutan, Trashigang, Bhutan.
tsheringnidup@sherubtse.edu.bt
Author
Raina, Rifat
48E5AE7A-D5DC-4549-94B7-FD8489D1EF9E
Zoological Survey of India, Pali Road, Jodhpur 342005, Rajasthan, India.
rifat72001@rediffmail.com
Author
Ren, Zongxin
27B9DD39-62A8-44D3-9D6A-E6C20D8AAA27
Kunming Institute of Botany (Chinese Academy of Sciences), 132 Lanhei Road, Kunming, Yunnan 650201, China.
renzongxin@mail.kib.ac.cn
Author
Thanoosing, Chawatat
6F4C150C-BC03-4F75-91A6-2A8AF6B5905C
Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW 7 5 BD, UK.
c.thanoosing@nhm.ac.uk
Author
Zhao, Yanhui
299C8EEA-699E-4B15-9BCD-9806E0E7EE63
Kunming Institute of Botany (Chinese Academy of Sciences), 132 Lanhei Road, Kunming, Yunnan 650201, China.
zhaoyanhui@mail.kib.ac.cn
Author
Orr, Michael C.
1E7F46C3-870E-460C-A611-BA1042ED99FB
Institute of Zoology (Chinese Academy of Sciences), 1 Beichen West Road, Chaoyang, Beijing 100101, China.
michael.christopher.orr@gmail.com
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2020
2020-10-02
719
1
120
journal article
10.5852/ejt.2020.719.1107
7ca72f76-4fae-4305-8601-4662f4cd2b96
2118-9773
4064324
A4500016-C219-4353-B81C-5E0BB520547F
Subgenus
Melanobombus
von Dalla Torre, 1880
We associate a total of 186 published formal names with species of the subgenus
Melanobombus
(including misspellings and infrasubspecific names). Applying the
ICZN (1999)
rules for an assessment of the status of these names under Article 45.6, just 115 names are considered to be available (unavailable names are not listed here). Below is a list of the 25 species recognised from the integrative analysis together with the major taxonomic and nomenclatural changes since the checklist by
Williams (1998)
.
The subgenera
Rufipedibombus
and
Festivobombus
(
Richards 1968
) were included within the subgenus
Melanobombus
by
Williams
et al
. (2008)
, based on evidence from the five genes obtained by
Cameron
et al
. (2007)
. These groups are recognised here as the
rufipes
-group of species and the
festivus
-group of species. Within the remaining species of
Melanobombus
, two species groups had been recognised by
Reinig (1935)
and by
Williams (1991)
: the
rufofasciatus
-group and the
lapidarius
-group of species. Using the pattern of relationships supported here (
Fig. 22
), we recognise and label a
tanguticus
-group, a
sichelii
-group, and a
keriensis
-group from our estimate of phylogeny in order to facilitate discussion:
rufipes
-group
Bombus eximius
Smith, 1852
Bombus rufipes
Lepeletier, 1835
festivus
-group
Bombus festivus
Smith, 1861
rufofasciatus
-group
Bombus simillimus
Smith, 1852
Bombus miniatus
Bingham, 1897
Bombus eurythorax
Wang, 1982
stat. rev.
Bombus prshewalskyi
Morawitz, 1880
stat. rev.
=
Bombus rufocinctus
Morawitz, 1880
(non
Cresson, 1863
) syn. nov.
=
Bombus chinensis
von Dalla Torre, 1890
(non
Morawitz, 1890
) syn. nov.
Bombus rufofasciatus
Smith, 1852
Bombus richardsiellus
(
Tkalců, 1968
)
Bombus friseanus
Skorikov, 1933
Bombus pyrosoma
Morawitz, 1890
Bombus formosellus
(
Frison, 1934
)
tanguticus
-group
Bombus tanguticus
Morawitz, 1887
lapidarius
-group
Bombus eriophorus
Klug, 1807
=
Bombus caucasicus
Radoszkowski, 1859
Bombus lapidarius
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
=
Bombus bisiculus
Lecocq, Biella, Martinet & Rasmont, 2019
syn. nov.
sichelii
-group
Bombus incertus
Morawitz, 1881
Bombus semenovianus
(Skorikov, 1914)
Bombus sichelii
Radoszkowski, 1859
keriensis
-group
Bombus ladakhensis
Richards, 1928
Bombus alagesianus
Reinig, 1930
stat. rev.
Bombus tibeticus
Williams
sp. nov.
Bombus incertoides
Vogt, 1911
stat. rev.
Bombus qilianensis
Williams
sp. nov.
Bombus keriensis
Morawitz, 1887
Bombus separandus
Vogt, 1909
stat. rev.
=
Bombus lapidarius
[subsp.]
kohli
Vogt, 1909
(non
Cockerell, 1906
) syn. nov.
=
Bombus kozlovi
Skorikov, 1910
syn. nov.
=
Bombus lapidarius
var.
tenellus
Friese, 1913
syn. nov.
=
Bombus tenellus
var.
alpivagus
Richards, 1930
syn. nov.
=
Lapidariobombus alagesianus
subsp.
pamirus
Skorikov, 1931
syn. nov.
=
Lapidariobombus alagesianus
subsp.
mongolicus
Skorikov, 1931
(non (
Friese, 1916
) syn. nov. =
Bombus keriensis
f.g. [subsp.]
bucharicus
Reinig, 1935
syn. nov.
=
Bombus keriensis
f.g. [subsp.]
richardsi
Reinig, 1935
(non
Frison, 1930
) syn. nov.
=
Bombus tenellus
subsp.
tibetensis
S.-F.
Wang, 1982
syn. nov.
Key to the species of the subgenus
Melanobombus
Future identification of species of the subgenus
Melanobombus
will be most reliable for specimens from which COI-barcode data are available for comparison of nucleotide differences with the reference data set from this project deposited on www.boldsystems.org, project BBML. Keys using morphological shape, surface sculpturing, and hair-colour-pattern characters follow below, with the most reliable characters placed at the beginning of each couplet. Variation within species necessitates having several terminal couplets for some species. Our results imply that in some cases we should be able to assign most reliably specimens with locality labels to groups or species on the basis of their collection locality alone. All identifications of species from the key or from the figures should be checked against the species’ diagnoses within the accounts of each species.
Diagrams showing the major aspects of variation in the colour-patterns of the dorsal hair are presented in
Figs 25–180
. These diagrams summarise only the major differences (
Williams 2007
) rather than the details (
Williams 1991
: figs 394–439). This is a simplification to aid quantitative comparisons and inevitably requires compromises (
Williams 2007
). Colour-pattern variation within species is established with reference to particular individuals identified from COI barcodes. Morphology of the male genitalia is illustrated in
Figs 181–204
.
Key to species for females of the subgenus
Melanobombus
1. Hair of the thoracic dorsum entirely black ....................................................................................... 2 – Hair of the thoracic dorsum with some pale hair that is
either
white
or
yellow
or
brown ............... 6
2. Wings nearly clear ............................................................................................................................ 3 – Wings bright yellow
or
nearly black ................................................................................................ 4
3. Hair of T3 black (Europe) ........................................................
B. lapidarius
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
(part) – Hair of T3 orange-red (
China
) ...................................................
B. pyrosoma
Morawitz, 1890
(part) 4. Wings bright yellow with wing veins orange ...............................................
B. eximius
Smith, 1852
– Wings nearly black with wing veins black ....................................................................................... 5
5. Hair of mid and hind tibiae black and T4–5 red, hind tibia outer surface with many decumbent short branched black hairs (western Himalaya) .......................................
B. simillimus
Smith, 1852
(part)
– Hair of mid and hind tibiae orange
or
black, but
if black then
T4–5 black, hind tibia outer surface without decumbent short branched black hairs (
Sumatra
,
Java
) .............
B. rufipes
Lepeletier, 1835
6. Hair of the thoracic dorsum between the wing bases in the centre
either
white
or
yellow
or
brown ........................................................................................................................................................... 7
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum between the wing bases in the centre black, sometimes with some pale hair intermixed, with paler anterior and often posterior bands of pale hair that is
either
white
or
yellow ............................................................................................................................................. 10
7. Hair of T5 white .............................................................................................
B. festivus
Smith, 1861
– Hair of T5 red ................................................................................................................................... 8
8. Hair of the thoracic dorsum uniformly yellow ...........................
B. semenovianus
(Skorikov, 1914)
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum white .................................................................................................... 9
9. Hair of T2 chocolate brown, side of thorax white, wings dark (western Himalaya) .......................... ..............................................................................................................................
B. simillimus
(part)
– Hair of T2 black, side of thorax black, wings nearly clear (Caucasus) .............................................. ..........................................................................................................
B. eriophorus
Klug, 1807
(part)
10. Long hair of the face at the antennal base with an obvious patch dominated by long pale grey
or
pale yellow hair, which in its centre often has few or no black hairs intermixed ...................................11
– Long hair of the face mostly black, sometimes with a minority of long yellow
or
grey hair intermixed ....................................................................................................................................... 13
11. Hair of T2 anteriorly brown, T3–5 bright orange-red ..................
B. friseanus
Skorikov, 1933
(part) – Hair of T2 anteriorly grey or yellow, T3 anterior half at least black, T4–5 orange-red
or
pale orange
or
cream .......................................................................................................................................... 12
12. Hair of T2 posteriorly with at least a very narrow fringe of black hair, T3 predominantly black, T4–5 uniformly pale orange-red
or
pale orange
or
cream
or
white ............................................................ .................................................................................................
B. sichelii
Radoszkowski, 1859
(part)
– Hair of T2 entirely pale, posteriorly without any black hair, T3 black anteriorly but posteriorly usually with a broad pale fringe, T4–5 orange-red sometimes with paler posterior fringes ..........................................................................................
B. keriensis
Morawitz, 1887
(part)
13. Hair of the tail entirely orange-red, although sometimes pale, especially in posterior fringes ...... 14 – Hair of the tail with at least some bright white hair posteriorly on T5 ........................................... 30
14. Hair of T3 predominantly red ......................................................................................................... 15 – Hair of T3 predominantly
or
at least anteriorly broadly black sometimes with a narrow posterior fringe of red
or
white
or
cream
or
yellow ...................................................................................... 18
15. Hair of the pale thoracic bands golden yellow ......................................................
B. friseanus
(part) – Hair of the pale thoracic bands grey-white ..................................................................................... 16 16. From mainland
China
..................................................................................................................... 17 – From
Taiwan
........................................................................................
B. formosellus
(
Frison, 1934
)
17. Hair of face entirely black, thorax anterior and posterior white bands with many black hairs intermixed .............................................................................................................
B. pyrosoma
(part)
– Hair of face with short grey hairs intermixed, thorax anterior and posterior white bands with few black hairs intermixed ............................................................................................
B. friseanus
(part)
18. Hair of T2 posteriorly with some black .......................................................................................... 19 – Hair of T2 posteriorly entirely
either
white
or
cream
or
yellow .................................................... 20
19. Hair of T1 with at least a few cream
or
yellow hairs, pale bands of thoracic dorsum
either
cream
or
yellow ..................................................................................................................
B. lapidarius
(part) – Hair of T1 entirely black, pale bands of thoracic dorsum white .........................
B. eriophorus
(part)
20. Hindleg basitarsus broad (length 3× greatest breadth) with the distal posterior corner broadly angled (nearly 90°), outer surface with the short hairs golden, hair of the scutellum with few or no black hairs intermixed .............................................................................................................................. 21
– Hindleg basitarsus narrow (length 4× greatest breadth) with the distal posterior corner sharply angled (nearly 45°), outer surface with the short hairs predominantly black, hair of the scutellum often with many black hairs intermixed .............................................
B. tanguticus
Morawitz, 1887
21. From
Iran
westwards to
Turkey
...................................................................................................... 22 – From
Afghanistan
eastwards to Central Asia,
Mongolia
, Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau ....................... 24
22. Hair of the corbicular fringes black, at most with a few pale tips, pale bands bright white, scutellum anterior margin with few black hairs, leg bases with black hair, T4–5 deep red ................................ .................................................................................................................
B. incertus
Morawitz, 1881
– Hair of the distal posterior corbicular fringes often predominantly orange, pale bands
either
white
or
cream
or
yellow, scutellum anterior margin with a narrow band of many black hairs, leg bases with a few pale hairs, T4–5
either
red
or
orange-red ............................................................................. 23
23. Hair of the pale bands bright white, T4–5 red, often the face with a very few white hairs intermixed and T2 posteriorly with a very few black hairs intermixed (
Iran
) ............................
B. sichelii
(part)
– Hair of the pale bands white
or
cream
or
yellow, T4–5 orange-red, the face entirely black and T2 posteriorly entirely pale .........................................................................
B. alagesianus
Reinig, 1930
24. [NB couplets 24–29 may be reliable only for queens and not for workers] Hair of the pale bands white
or
grey
or
cream ................................................................................................................... 25 – Hair of the pale bands light yellow ................................................................................................. 27
25. Hair of the side of the thorax in its lower half with some pale hair and T3 laterally with a few pale hairs, scutellum with a narrow anterior band entirely black but usually covering less than half of the length of the scutellum (Central Asia,
Mongolia
) .......................................................................... 26
– Hair of the side of the thorax in its lower half entirely black and T3 entirely black, scutellum with the anterior half entirely black (
Mongolia
) ................................................
B. incertoides
Vogt, 1911
26. Hair of face entirely black, T3 more often with a few pale hairs usually only laterally, leg bases more often with many black hairs, T4–5 uniformly orange-red (Central Asia, northwest Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) ............................................................................................
B. separandus
Vogt, 1909
(part)
– Face with at least a very few long pale hairs and/or some short branched pale hairs at the base of the antenna, T3 more often with pale hairs laterally and often posteriorly, leg bases more often predominantly pale with few or no black hairs, T4–5
either
uniformly orange-red
or
posteriorly with distinctly paler fringes (western Himalaya, west Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) .........
B. keriensis
(part)
27. Clypeus in its ventral half with many scattered medium-sized punctures; side of the thorax with yellow hair reaching scarcely more than half of the distance ventrally to the leg bases and the more ventral part entirely black, leg bases entirely black, face entirely black, T3 entirely black (central and southeast Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) .....................................................................
B. tibeticus
sp. nov.
– Clypeus in its ventral half (excluding the depressions adjacent to the labrum) with at most only scattered small punctures; side of the thorax with yellow hair reaching ventrally nearly to the leg bases at least as a very few scattered yellow hairs, leg bases with or without yellow hairs, face black or with a few yellow hairs, T3
either
with
or
without scattered yellow hairs laterally and sometimes posteriorly ....................................................................................................................................... 28
28. Hair of the thoracic dorsum with the black band between the wing bases narrower than the yellow bands and often with yellow hairs intermixed above the wing bases and narrowly near the midline (northeast Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) ................................................................
B. qilianensis
sp. nov.
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum with the black band between the wing bases broader than the yellow bands and without yellow hairs intermixed above the wing bases or narrowly near the midline .. 29
29. Hair of the face usually with at least a very few long pale hairs and/or some short branched pale hairs at the base of the antenna, leg bases with some pale hairs, T3 more often with yellow hairs laterally and sometimes posteriorly, thoracic dorsum pale bands sometimes with a few black hairs intermixed, T4–5
either
uniformly orange-red
or
posteriorly with distinctly paler fringes (western Himalaya, west Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) .............................................................
B. keriensis
(part)
– Hair of the face entirely black, leg bases
either
with very few yellow hairs
or
without pale hairs, T3 often without yellow hairs, thoracic dorsum pale bands without black hairs intermixed, T4–5 uniformly orange-red (
Mongolia
,
Russia
, northwest Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) ................................ ............................................................................................................................
B. separandus
(part)
30. Hair on the side of the thorax black,
or if
white in part
then
the hair on the metasoma is short
and
T2 is black or anteriorly yellow
and
the thoracic dorsum has the pale posterior band broad and bright with few black hairs ........................................................................................................................ 31
– Hair on the side of the thorax predominantly
either
yellow
or
cream,
or if
black
or
white in part
then
the hair on the metasoma is long
and
T2 is usually with some white or cream (rarely yellow)
and
the thoracic dorsum has the pale posterior band often obscured by many black hairs ......................... 33
31. Hair of T3 posteriorly red ............................................................................................................... 32 – Hair of T3 entirely black .................................................................
B. richardsiellus
(
Tkalců, 1968
)
32. Large individuals (body length>
18 mm
: queens) with the hair on T2 usually with at least a few scattered yellow hairs intermixed in the anterior lateral corners, small individuals (body length <
18 mm
: workers) with T2 predominantly yellow with only a very narrow posterior black fringe, thoracic dorsum with anterior and posterior pale bands bright grey with a minority of black hairs intermixed (western Himalaya eastwards to
Nepal
) ...................
B. rufofasciatus
Smith, 1852
– Large individuals (body length>
18 mm
: queens) with the hair of T2 entirely black, at most with some grey hairs intermixed near the anterior median edge, small individuals (body length <
18 mm
: workers) with T
2 in
the anterior half yellow and in much of the posterior half black, thoracic dorsum with anterior and posterior pale bands dull grey, especially posteriorly often obscure with many black hairs intermixed (Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau,
Gansu
,
Sichuan
,
Yunnan
) ...
B. prshewalskyi
Morawitz, 1880
33. Hair of the thoracic dorsum with the black band between the wing bases without any pale hairs intermixed next to the wing bases, the hair of the face black ............
B. ladakhensis
Richards, 1928
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum with the black band between the wing bases with pale hairs intermixed next to the wing bases, the hair of the face with black and pale hairs intermixed .......................... 34
34. Hair of the thoracic dorsum with the dark band between the wing bases predominantly black with few pale hairs intermixed, the pale bands of the thorax and T1
either
brownish-yellow, goldenyellow,
or
pale greenish-yellow (western Himalaya eastwards to
Nepal
) .......................................... ..................................................................................................................
B. eurythorax
Wang, 1982
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum with the dark band between the wing bases with nearly equal numbers of black and pale hairs intermixed, the pale bands of the thorax and T1
either
cream
or
grey-white (Sikkim,
Bhutan
, Arunachal Pradesh) ....................................................
B. miniatus
Bingham, 1897
Key to species for males of the subgenus
Melanobombus
(males of
B. tanguticus
remain unknown, see the species account for further detail)
1. Hair of the thoracic dorsum uniformly
either
black
or
orange-brown
or
black with short grey hairs intermixed; genitalia with penis-valve head with the recurved inner hook nearly as broad as long .. ........................................................................................................................................................... 2
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum in part
either
yellow
or
white, often with a band of black between the wing bases; genitalia with penis-valve head with the recurved inner hook
either
much longer than broad
or
rarely the recurved part fused to the shaft (
B. ladakhensis
) ............................................... 4
2. Hair of the thoracic dorsum uniformly orange-brown; genitalia with penis-valve head with outer distal outer flange narrower than the length of the recurved inner hook .......
B. festivus
Smith, 1861
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum
either
uniformly black
or
black with short grey hairs intermixed; genitalia with penis-valve head with distal outer flange broader than the length of the recurved inner hook .................................................................................................................................................. 3
3. Wings bright yellow with wing veins orange; long hair of the face with short pale brown hair intermixed .....................................................................................................
B. eximius
Smith, 1852
– Wings nearly black with wing veins black; hair of the face entirely black ........................................ ..................................................................................................................
B. rufipes
Lepeletier, 1835
4. Genitalia with gonostylus posteriorly reduced and transverse, <0.5× as long as broad, the volsella projecting beyond the gonostylus by> 2 × as long as gonostylus (Asian mountains) ..................... 5
– Genitalia with gonostylus rounded and disc-like, nearly 1× as long as broad, the volsella projecting beyond the gonostylus by <1 × as long as gonostylus (widespread) ............................................. 13
5. Hair of the thoracic dorsum in part white, not yellow ...................................................................... 6 – Hair of the thoracic dorsum in part yellow, not white ...................................................................... 8
6. Hair of the thoracic dorsum entirely white ...............................................
B. simillimus
Smith, 1852
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum with a band of black at least intermixed between the wing bases ....... 7
7. Hair of T2 bright yellow with only a very narrow band with few black hairs along the posterior margin (western Himalaya east to
Nepal
) ............................................
B. rufofasciatus
Smith, 1852
– Hair of T2 dull yellow with
either
at least a few black hairs intermixed
or
often with many black hairs intermixed and with a broad black band in the posterior quarter that often extends medially towards the anterior (eastern Himalaya from
Arunachal Pradesh
to the interior of the QinghaiTibetan Plateau,
Gansu
,
Sichuan
,
Yunnan
) .....................................
B. prshewalskyi
Morawitz, 1880
8. Genitalia with gonostylus with the posterior interior process reduced to a single narrow spine ..... 9 – Genitalia with gonostylus with the posterior interior process broad with two distal corners ..........11
9. Gonostylus inner basal process narrow with the distal angle <45°; hair of T3 sometimes partly black but with at least the posterior margin fringed with yellow ............................................................. 10
– Gonostylus inner basal process broad with the distal angle nearly 90°; hair of T3 predominantly black ................................................................................................
B. richardsiellus
(
Tkalců, 1968
)
10. Hair of T3–5 orange-red with at least a narrow band of yellow along the posterior margin, sometimes entirely yellow (western Himalaya east to
Nepal
) ...................................
B. eurythorax
Wang, 1982
– Hair of T3–5 orange-red sometimes with a few black hairs along the posterior margin (Sikkim,
Bhutan
, Tibet, Arunachal Pradesh) .........................................................
B. miniatus
Bingham, 1897
11. Genitalia with gonostylus with the posterior interior process with the two inner corners projecting with the same length; hair of T2 yellow with very few black hairs (North
China
) ............................ ..............................................................................................................
B. pyrosoma
Morawitz, 1890
– Genitalia with gonostylus with the posterior interior process with the dorsal inner corner projecting inwards further than the ventral inner corner; hair of T2 yellow with many black hairs posteriorly. ......................................................................................................................................................... 12
12. Hair of T4 orange-red with few or no black hairs (
Xizang
,
Qinghai
,
Yunnan
,
Sichuan
,
Guizhou
) .... ................................................................................................................
B. friseanus
Skorikov, 1933
– Hair of T4 orange-red with many black hairs especially laterally (
Taiwan)
...................................... ..............................................................................................................
B. formosellus
(
Frison, 1934
)
13. Genitalia with penis-valve head with the recurved inner hook extensively fused for 0.75 of its length with the adjacent penis-valve shaft; hair of T6–7 orange-red at the base and white distally ............. ............................................................................................................
B. ladakhensis
Richards, 1928
– Genitalia with penis-valve head with the recurved inner hook not fused for ± 0.5 of its length with the adjacent penis-valve shaft; hair of T6–7 orange-red at the base and usually orange distally ... 14
14. Hair of the thoracic dorsum in part
either
white
or
cream ............................................................. 15 – Hair of the thoracic dorsum
either
in part yellow
or
entirely black ............................................... 19
15. Eyes distinctly enlarged relative to eyes of the females; hair of the face, ventral half of the side of the thorax, and anterior half of the scutellum black with few white hairs intermixed (
Mongolia
) .... ....................................................................................................................
B. incertoides
Vogt, 1911
– Eyes similar in relative size to eyes of the females; hair of the face, ventral half of the side of the thorax, and anterior half of the scutellum either white or with few black hairs intermixed ........... 16
16. Hair of T2 posteriorly without a narrow fringe of black hairs and entirely pale ............................ 17 – Hair of T2 posteriorly with a narrow fringe of black hairs .....
B. sichelii
Radoszkowski, 1859
(part)
17. From
Afghanistan
or
eastwards to
Mongolia
..................................
B. separandus
Vogt, 1909
(part) – From
Iran
or
westwards to
Turkey
................................................................................................. 18
18. Hair of the pale bands white, black band between the wing bases narrower than the anterior white band, scutellum anterior margin with few black hairs, T4–5 red ...........
B. incertus
Morawitz, 1881
– Hair of the pale bands
either
white
or
cream, black band between the wing bases broader than the anterior pale band, scutellum anterior margin with a narrow band of many black hairs, T4–5 orangered ................................................................................................
B. alagesianus
Reinig, 1930
(part)
19. Eyes distinctly enlarged relative to eyes of the females; hair of the face predominantly black with a few yellow hairs intermixed .......................................................
B. semenovianus
(Skorikov, 1914)
– Eyes similar in relative size to eyes of the females; hair of the face predominantly yellow .......... 20
20. Hair of T2 usually predominantly black ......................................................................................... 21 – Hair of T2 predominantly yellow ................................................................................................... 22
21. Hair of the thoracic dorsum
either
extensively
or
entirely black, hair of T1 often yellow (Europe,
Turkey
) ...............................................................................................
B. lapidarius
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
– Hair of the thoracic dorsum
either
entirely yellow
or if
there is a narrow black band between the wing bases
then
T1 is entirely black (
Turkey
, Caucasus) ..........................
B. eriophorus
Klug, 1807
22. Hair of T2 posteriorly with a broad fringe of black hairs .........................................
B. sichelii
(part) – Hair of T2 posteriorly
either
entirely yellow
or
with a very few black hairs posteriorly restricted to the middle ....................................................................................................................................... 23
23. From
Iran
or
westwards ....................................................................................
B. alagesianus
(part) – From
Afghanistan
or
eastwards ...................................................................................................... 24
24. From Mongolia
or
Russia
..................................................................................
B. separandus
(part) – From the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau .................................................................................................. 25
25. Hair of T3 entirely black ......................................................................................
B. tibeticus
sp. nov.
– Hair of T3 black with yellow hairs laterally ................................................................................... 26
26. Hair of T2 entirely yellow (eastern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) ........................
B. qilianensis
sp. nov.
– Hair of T2 yellow with a very few black hairs posteriorly in the middle (western Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) ..................................................................................................
B. keriensis
Morawitz, 1887
Review of the species
Accounts of the 25 species accepted after integrated assessment follow below. Square brackets [
Bombus xus
] are used to indicate transliterations, translations, and interpretations.