Stelis (Stelis) ornatula (KLUG, 1807)

KRATOCHWIL, Anselm, SMIT, Jan & AGUIAR, António F., 2018, Updated checklist of the wild bees of the Madeira Archipelago and the Selvagens Islands (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila), Linzer biologische Beiträge 50 (2), pp. 1213-1228 : 1222-1224

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.4526771

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4527433

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B3879E-3760-FFF6-FF4A-FA26FD81FEB9

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Stelis (Stelis) ornatula (KLUG, 1807)
status

 

Stelis (Stelis) ornatula (KLUG, 1807) View in CoL : See comments on Hoplitis acuticornis.

Amegilla (Amegilla) quadrifasciata maderae ( SICHEL, 1868) View in CoL : Based on males and females, A. maderae View in CoL has been validly described by SICHEL (1868). According to DOURS (1869), the specimens from Madeira are only a variety (maderae) of A. quadrifasciata View in CoL

(DE VILLERS, 1798). ALFKEN (1940) accepted the species status, but LIEFTINCK (1956, 1958) referred to the species as A. quadrifasciata (DE VILLERS, 1798) View in CoL .

There are certain morphological differences: In A. quadrifasciata , the tergite bands are wider than the tergite terminal part. Tergite 1 has light hairs in the centre. In A. maderae the tergite bands are narrow, and tergite 1 has dark to black hairs in the centre (checked by A.W. Ebmer). H.-R. Schwenninger (Natural Museum of Stuttgart) analysed the genitalia of specimens from France (Agay, Saint Raphaël, Côte d’Azur), Lanzarote (Playa Blanca), and Madeira (Cabo Girão, Câmara de Lobos). Certain differences can be detected; however, there is morphological variation, so no clear separating characteristics could be found. Because of the lack of differences in the genital structures, the actual status is A. quadrifasciata maderae. Further morphological, morphometric, and molecular investigations will be necessary.

Bombus (Bombus) terrestris lusitanicus KRÜGER, 1956 View in CoL : The Bombus View in CoL taxon ‘ maderensis’ has been regarded as a species of its own by some authors ( ERLANDSSON, 1979, RASMONT, 1984). This was not accepted by RASMONT et al. (2008) and WILLIAMS et al. (2012). We will follow RASMONT et al. (2008), who assigned the specimens of the Madeira Archipelago to B. terrestris View in CoL lusitanicus; see also COPPÉE (2012). The morphological characteristics of the former B. canariensis PÉREZ, 1895 View in CoL , are not strongly divergent from the broad variation of B. terrestris View in CoL s.l. However, a molecular genetic analysis by WIDMER et al. (1998) supported the distinctness of the Canary Island populations from the European mainland populations of B. terrestris View in CoL . This indicates that they have a longer genetic separation on the archipelago and underlines that the populations are native.

Specimens from Madeira show genetic similarities to mainland populations of B. terrestris View in CoL lusitanicus from the Iberian peninsula ( WIDMER et al. 1998). The variability at microsatellite loci is similar to that of Mediterranean island populations and larger than on the Canary Islands. The authors concluded that the occurrence of the mainland and Mediterranean mtDNA haplotype A on Madeira Island is indicative of a different evolutionary history. We classify B. terrestris View in CoL lusitanicus as native and not introduced (see also comments concerning Bombus r. ruderatus View in CoL ).

Bombus (Megabombus) r. ruderatus ( FABRICIUS, 1775) : This species was described by Fabricius in 1775 based on specimens collected by Joseph Banks (first expedition of the Endeavour led by Captain James Cook) on the stop they made in Madeira in September 1768 ( FABRICIUS 1775, BOIEIRO et al. 2015). The locus typicus of B. r. ruderatus is therefore Madeira Island. Bombus r. ruderatus is also distributed on the Iberian Peninsula. The central European subspecies is B. r. eurynotus (DALLA TORRE, 1882) .

According to RASMONT (1983), B. r. ruderatus is distributed on the Azores too (see also YARROW 1967), and was introduced in the Azores ( WEISSMANN et al. 2017), firstly recorded in 1865 ( GODMAN 1870). On Tenerife, B. ruderatus is actually an invader (PÉREZ & MACÍAS- HERNÁNDEZ 2012).

Already in the fourteenth century, ships regularly docked on Madeira Island on their return from the Canaries. In our opinion we cannot exclude a man-made unintentional introduction. If we compare the distribution with that of B. t. lusitanicus on Madeira, B. ruderatus is restricted to lower altitudes, and the preferred habitats are rural sites, and the preferring flowering ressources are rural plant species. This is not the case for B. t. lusitanicus, which is also common on Porto Santo, has a habitat preference for the trade wind zone, and is characterised by visiting the flowers of many native plant species (especially Echium); see KRATOCHWIL & SCHWABE (2018a). We studied the flowervisiting behaviour of B. t. lusitanicus intensively on Porto Santo.

Further investigations (especially population genetic analyses) are necessary to determine the rank of ‘native’ or ‘introduced’.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Megachilidae

Genus

Stelis

Loc

Stelis (Stelis) ornatula (KLUG, 1807)

KRATOCHWIL, Anselm, SMIT, Jan & AGUIAR, António F. 2018
2018
Loc

Bombus (Bombus) terrestris lusitanicus KRÜGER, 1956

KRUGER 1956
1956
Loc

B. canariensis PÉREZ, 1895

PEREZ 1895
1895
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