Hoplitis (Anthocopa) similis ( Friese, 1909 ) Kuhlmann & Gess & Koch & Gess, 2011
publication ID |
1175-5326 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039A87E0-FFF1-FFB4-FF71-5F123072FC3D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Hoplitis (Anthocopa) similis ( Friese, 1909 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Hoplitis (Anthocopa) similis ( Friese, 1909) View in CoL comb. nov.
Osmia similis Friese, 1909: 317 View in CoL , 321.
Female type: Capland / (handwritten): ♀ Mus. Wien, S. Africa / (Friese’s handwriting): Osmia similis View in CoL ♀ 1904 Friese det. / (red label): Type / Coll. Friese / Zool. Mus. Berlin ( ZMHB) .
Osmia similis Friese View in CoL : Brauns 1926: 221 (♂); 222 (nesting).
Osmia forficulina Cockerell, 1921: 202 View in CoL . syn. nov.
Male type: Basutol., Likhoele, Dieterlin / (Cockerell’s handwriting): Osmia forficulina Ckll. View in CoL TYPE / (red label): Type / (orange label): SAM / SAM-HYM-BO 1406 (SAMC).
Hoplitis rhodesiae Cockerell, 1944: 248–249 View in CoL .
Hoplitis anthodemnion Michener, 1968: 355–359 View in CoL (♂, ♀); 337–342 & 349 (nesting);
Gess 1981: 24, 60, 61 (nesting); Gess and Gess 1990: 24–25 (nesting).
Hoplitis (Anthocopa) similis (Friese) View in CoL : Gess and Gess 2003: 177 (flower visiting).
Flower visiting. Females have been collected from Asteraceae View in CoL ( Berkheya heterophylla (Thunb.) O. Hoffm. View in CoL ) (one specimen), Boraginaceae View in CoL ( Anchusa capensis Thunb. View in CoL ) (two specimens), and Scrophulariaceae View in CoL ( Selago species ) (one specimen), all near Grahamstown, Eastern Cape.
Nesting. Nesting aggregations on banks were investigated at Avontuur, Longkloof ( Michener 1968) and on the farm Hilton, near Grahamstown ( Gess 1981) both in the Eastern Cape. The banks were, respectively, a hard dry clay roadside bank and a relatively soft sandstone bank. Each nest consisted of a single cell and the burrow leading to it. The cells are lined with four to six layers of very thin petal discs, on Hilton cut from flowers of Barleria (Scrophulariaceae) . Excavation of the burrows was not observed. After oviposition the outer ends of the petals are bent inward to close the cell and mud is pushed in as a plug, which becomes convex on its inner surface. The entrance burrow is completely filled with clay, apparently applied as mud, up to the surface of the bank. As the clay used in nests at both sites was a different colour from the substrate it is suggested that it is collected at some distance from the nest. Michener (1968) found old cells being re-used. The cell is filled to a depth of 9 to 10 mm with firm yellow provision after which oviposition takes place, the large egg positioned lying on the provision. Pollen from the provisions was not identified.
Brauns (1926) recorded the species as nesting in close proximity to one another in pseudocolonies in the ground (given as „in der Erde“, therefore presumably in horizontally rather than vertically presented ground).
SAM |
South African Museum |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Hoplitis (Anthocopa) similis ( Friese, 1909 )
Kuhlmann, M., Gess, F. G., Koch, F. & Gess, S. K. 2011 |
Hoplitis (Anthocopa) similis (Friese)
Gess, S. K. & Gess, F. W. 2003: 177 |
Hoplitis anthodemnion
Michener, C. D. 1968: 359 |
Hoplitis rhodesiae
Cockerell, T. D. A. 1944: 249 |
Osmia similis
Brauns, H. 1926: 221 |
Osmia forficulina
Cockerell, T. D. A. 1921: 202 |
Osmia similis
Friese, H. 1909: 317 |