Bombus (Thoracobombus) weisi Friese, 1903

Williams, Paul H., Sagot, Philippe, Martínez-López, Oscar, Barajas, Ricardo Ayala-, Mérida-Rivas, Jorge A. & Vandame, Rémy, 2024, A new wave of Mesoamerican bumblebees? Revising the weisi-complex to reject numts and pseudospecies (Apidae: Bombus), Zootaxa 5514 (4), pp. 301-318 : 311-312

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5514.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:436EC045-C3AE-4BB9-9709-202B8E2E7CEB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13921751

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/740A87AE-7F3B-B828-D2DF-F8BD46ACFA9B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bombus (Thoracobombus) weisi Friese, 1903
status

sensu lato

Bombus (Thoracobombus) weisi Friese, 1903 View in CoL , sensu lato stat. rev.

Bombus laboriosus Smith, 1861:153 View in CoL , not of Fabricius 1804:352 (= Emphoropsis laboriosus (Fabricius)) . Holotype queen Mexico NHMUK (images at NHMUK014025497), examined.

Bombus weisi Friese, 1903:253 View in CoL . Lectotype queen by designation of Milliron (1960:98) Costa Rica ZMHB, images examined.

Bombus ephippiatus View in CoL [subsp.] montezumae Cockerell, 1908:344 View in CoL , replacement name for B. laboriosus Smith, 1861 .

BOMBUS MATEONIS View in CoL [sic] Cockerell, 1949:487. Holotype male Guatemala USNM (images at USNMENT00534366), examined.

[ B.<ombus> weisi View in CoL (part B) [ Mexico, Chiapas] Brasero et al., 2019:190.]

[ B.<ombus> weisi View in CoL (part C) [ Mexico, Chiapas] Brasero et al., 2019:190.]

Diagnosis. Female. (cf. B. nigrodorsalis s. str.) Metasomal T 2 in the middle between the large pits (with hair bases) with the surface weakly sculptured, smooth and shining. Short hair between the antennal base and the ocelli black; hair of the thoracic dorsum usually anteriorly black, at most with a minority of yellow hairs intermixed in a weak transverse band; metasomal T3 usually yellow at least medially but black laterally; hind basitarsus posterior long fringe black.

Male. (cf. B. nigrodorsalis s. str.) Gonostylus as long as broad, triangular, with the inwardly projecting inner basal process strongly sclerotised for a length as much as the breadth of the volsella ( Fig. 5 View FIGURES 4‒5 ); volsella distally (posteriorly) remaining broad and nearly parallel-sided throughout its length beyond the gonostylus; penis-valve head distally straight with the tip rounded. Hair of metasomal T3 with at least a distinct small lateral patch of black.

Description. Female. Queen body length 15‒17 mm, worker 10‒12 mm. Head with the oculo-malar area length / breadth ratio 1.3. Thorax with the mid basitarsus distal posterior corner acutely and spinosely pointed. Hair long, uneven, and black; pronotum and anterior scutum either sometimes with yellow intermixed, forming a weak transverse band connected with the yellow hypoepimeral area, or more usually this band reduced or replaced with black; scutellum posteriorly with a weak yellow fringe, which may be much reduced with black; lateral propodeum yellow; legs including bases, femora, and corbicular fringes black.

Male. Body length 11‒13 mm. Hair long, uneven, and black; mandibular ventral fringe with long curved hair brown; vertex and occiput sometimes mixed with yellow; pronotum and anterior scutum either yellow, forming a transverse band connected with the yellow hypoepimeral area, or often replaced with black; mesepisternum, hypoepimeral area and metepisternum with yellow; lateral propodeum yellow; leg bases and femora sometimes partly yellow; metasomal T1‒2 yellow; T3 yellow, but always with patches of black at least at the sides; T6 at least with a posterior orange fringe; T7 entirely orange. Genitalia shown in Fig. 5 View FIGURES 4‒5 .

Material examined. ECOSUR: 1195 specimens. Data and barcodes for specimens from Figs 2‒3 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 are available from https://www.ecosur.mx/beesofmesoamerica/ and barcodes are available from a Supplementary File.

Distribution. Bombus weisi is distributed from Durango, Mexico (northernmost point 23.723° N) south to San José, Costa Rica (southernmost point 9.369° N), occurring on both sides of the Tehuantepec Isthmus ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ). Its elevational range is 1025–3177 m asl through a variety of habitats, from pine or mixed forest to cloud forest, including cultivated land in semi-open areas. 95% of B. nigrodorsalis records are from above 2500 m, while B. weisi is more abundant below this elevation. Bombus weisi has been collected all year round, except in May, with 95% of the records in July to December. Bombus weisi and B. nigrodorsalis are broadly sympatric in some regions of Mexico, from San Luis Potosí to Oaxaca ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ), but B. weisi extends beyond Mexico southwards as far as Costa Rica ( Labougle, 1990).

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

ECOSUR

El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (Mexico)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Apidae

Genus

Bombus

Loc

Bombus (Thoracobombus) weisi Friese, 1903

Williams, Paul H., Sagot, Philippe, Martínez-López, Oscar, Barajas, Ricardo Ayala-, Mérida-Rivas, Jorge A. & Vandame, Rémy 2024
2024
Loc

B.<ombus> weisi

Brasero, N. & Vandame, R. & Sagot, P. & Martinet, B. & Valterova, I. & Rasmont, P. 2019: 190
2019
Loc

B.<ombus> weisi

Brasero, N. & Vandame, R. & Sagot, P. & Martinet, B. & Valterova, I. & Rasmont, P. 2019: 190
2019
Loc

BOMBUS MATEONIS

Cockerell, T. D. A. 1949: 487
1949
Loc

Bombus ephippiatus

Cockerell, T. D. A. 1908: 344
1908
Loc

Bombus weisi

Milliron, H. E. 1960: 98
Friese, H. 1903: 253
1903
Loc

Bombus laboriosus

Smith, F. 1861: 153
Fabricius, J. C. 1804: 352
1861
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