Colletes maidli Noskiewicz 1936

(Figs 2 f, 9e–f, 10c–d, 20c–f)

Colletes maidli Noskiewicz 1936: 166 –168, plate IV, fig. 1, plate XXVIII, figs 7–8, ♀, ♂ (type locality: “Grado” or “Venetien- Lignano” [NE Italy]); Proshchalykin & Kuhlmann 2012: 12; Kuhlmann & Proshchalykin 2013a: 409.

Colletes lebedewi Noskiewicz 1936: 163 –166, plate III, fig. 6, ♀, ♂ (type locality: “Aleschki (Kherson)”, “Cosen Os (Kherson)” [Ukraine], “Krim” [Crimea] or “Suchum (Südwestkaukasus)” ([southwestern Caucasus, Abkhazia]); Osytshnjuk et al. 1978: 296; Kuhlmann 2005: 1365. Synonymized by Proshchalykin & Kuhlmann 2012: 12.

Material examined. Russia. Volgograd Prov.: 1 ♂, Sarepta[=Volgograd] [44°28'E 48°42'N], 8.VIII.1906, M. Koch (ZISP); Krasnodar Terr.: 1 ♂, Novorossiisk [37°46'E 44°43'N], 10.VI.1910, P. Podolyak (ZISP); Astrakhan Prov.: 1 ♂, Astrakhan, Gorodskoi Is. [48°02'E 46°20'N], 23.VI.2004, SAB (ZISP).

Distribution in Russia (Fig. 2 f). Volgograd Prov., Krasnodar Terr., Astrakhan Prov.

General distribution. Portugal, Spain, France, Hungary, Italy, Croatia, Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, Egypt, Cyprus, Syria, Israel, Ukraine, Russia, Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Iran.