A new bee species of the genus Dasypoda Latreille (Hymenoptera, Apoidea) from Portugal with comparative remarks on the subgenus Heterodasypoda Michez
Author
Radchenko, Vladimir G.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-11-16
4350
1
164
176
journal article
31475
10.11646/zootaxa.4350.1.10
4bc0d765-92d0-4df5-9e47-eb6958b4a417
1175-5326
1052020
811A55CA-CC41-4C11-81FC-BB7DD0E47CC9
Subgenus
Heterodasypoda
Morphological remarks.
The subgenus
Heterodasypoda
is characterized by the following features (according to
Michez
et al.
2004b
; with some corrections): maxillary palpi and galea subequal in length; galea (
Figs 8–10
) with sparse and superficial punctation, except
D. morotei
with dense small tubercles; margin of galea with bristles along its entire length; malar space shorter than the pedicel; nervulus (cu-v) antefurcal; apex of S6 with long and dense brown hairs in male (
Figs 24–26
); apex of S7 weakly concave and with two large sclerotized latero-apical process (
Figs 28–30
); base of S8 without hooks (
Figs 32–34
), inner (dorsal) surface of the apical part in the middle of marginal zone of S8 with transverse carina (
Figs 36–38
; shown by white arrows), which is not reaching lateral edges and deeply carved or even completely divided into 2 parts, especially in
D. pyrotrichia
(
Fig. 38
); base of gonostylus without narrow tooth (
Figs 44–46, 48–50, 52–54
), the internal ventral lobe of gonostylus with scaly surface on apex (
Figs 60–62, 64–66
).
Species composition.
Heterodasypoda
is the least speciose subgenus within
Dasypoda
: before the description of
D. michezi
sp. nov.
it included only 3 described species of Mediterranean distribution:
D. albimana
Pérez 1905
from south of
France
,
Portugal
,
Spain
,
Morocco
and
Tunisia
,
D. morotei
Quilis 1928
from
Spain
and
Portugal
and
D. pyrotrichia
Förster 1855
from
Bulgaria
,
France
,
Greece
,
Macedonia
,
Portugal
,
Spain
,
Israel
,
Syria
, and
Turkey
(
Michez
et al.
2003
,
2004a
,
2004b
;
Ascher & Pickering 2017
). The maximum species diversity of
Heterodasypoda
is found in the Iberian Peninsula, so a discovery of a new species of this subgenus is not surprising for the region.
Biology.
The nesting biologies of
Heterodasypoda
are still unknown. The studied species from other subgenera build branched nests in the soil. Unlike the vast majority of other ground-nesting bees, they do not line the walls of cells with secretory material (
Radchenko & Pesenko 1994
).