Megachile (Eutricharaea) rotundipennis Kirby

Gonzalez, Victor H., Engel, Michael S. & Griswold, Terry L., 2013, The lithurgine bees of Australia (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae), with a note on Megachile rotundipennis, Journal of Melittology 2013 (11), pp. 1-19 : 18-20

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.17161/jom.v0i11.4520

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F8D5EC99-DB33-4628-B175-94D57B7FF550

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13737324

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/697F87FD-FF8F-FFFE-FE75-FAEB56C97EDF

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Megachile (Eutricharaea) rotundipennis Kirby
status

 

Megachile (Eutricharaea) rotundipennis Kirby View in CoL

( Figs. 26–28 View Figures 26–28 )

Megachile rotundipennis Kirby in Andrews, 1900: 87. Lectotype (new designation): NHML Hym. 17.a.2068b; ♂, near Flying-Fish Cove , Christmas Island, Australia.

COMMENTS: Kirby (1900) described this species from five males and one female and did not designate a holotype. Thus, in order to stabilize the name, we designate one of the male syntypes as lectotype ( Figs. 26–28 View Figures 26–28 ). The label data for this specimen are as follow: West coast, Oct. 1897 // Christmas I., C.W. Andrews, 98–20. // Megachile rotundipennis Kb. Type ♂ [handwritten] // Type, B.M. Type Hym 17a.2068b. // Lectotype, Megachile rotundipennis Kirby des. V. H. Gonzalez, M.S. Engel & T. Griswold ♂. The single female of the syntype series was subsequently described as L. andrewsi by Cockerell (1909) (vide supra).

Megachile rotundipennis runs to the subgenus Eutricharaea Thomson in the key to the subgenera of Megachile of Michener (2007). This subgenus is the largest group of Megachile with many species greatly confused, particularly from Southeast Asia; most of them are known from the type series or from a reduced number of specimens, such as M. rotundipennis . Within Eutricharaea , M. rotundipennis is morphologically similar to M. nivescens Kirby , a species also currently known from Christmas Island.

A Journal of Bee Biology, Ecology, Evolution, & Systematics

The Journal of Melittology is an international, open access journal that seeks to rapidly disseminate the results of research conducted on bees ( Apoidea : Anthophila) in their broadest sense. Our mission is to promote the understanding and conservation of wild and managed bees and to facilitate communication and collaboration among researchers and the public worldwide. The Journal covers all aspects of bee research including but not limited to: anatomy, behavioral ecology, biodiversity, biogeography, chemical ecology, comparative morphology, conservation, cultural aspects, cytogenetics, ecology, ethnobiology, history, identification (keys), invasion ecology, management, melittopalynology, molecular ecology, neurobiology, occurrence data, paleontology, parasitism, phenology, phylogeny, physiology, pollination biology, sociobiology, systematics, and taxonomy.

The Journal of Melittology was established at the University of Kansas through the efforts of Michael S. Engel, Victor H. Gonzalez, Ismael A. Hinojosa-Díaz, and Charles D. Michener in 2013 and each article is published as its own number, with issues appearing online as soon as they are ready. Papers are composed using Microsoft Word® and Adobe InDesign® in Lawrence, Kansas, USA .

Editor-in-Chief Michael S. Engel University of Kansas

Assistant Editors Victor H. Gonzalez Charles D. Michener Southwestern Oklahoma State University University of Kansas

Journal of Melittology is registered in ZooBank (www.zoobank.org), archived at the University of Kansas and in Portico (www.portico.org), and printed on demand by Southwestern Oklahoma State University Press.

http://journals.ku.edu/melittology ISSN 2325-4467

V

Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Megachilidae

Genus

Megachile

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