Published October 17, 2017 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Osmia (Diceratosmia) conjunctoides Robertson

Authors/Creators

Description

Osmia (Diceratosmia) conjunctoides Robertson

(Fig. 1C)

Osmia conjunctoides Robertson 1893: 276 [Lectotype male: Champaign]; Sandhouse 1939: 140 [synonymy with O. subfasciata]; LaBerge (in Webb 1980): 118 [lectotype designation]; Rightmyer et al. 2011: 270 [rejection of synonymy with O. subfasciata].

Diceratosmia subfasciata conjunctoides (Robertson); Michener 1949: 264. Osmia (Diceratosmia) subfasciata miamiensis Mitchell 1962: 84 [Holotype female: Washington, D.C.]; Rightmyer et al. 2011: 270 [synonymy].

Diagnosis. Females of this species are distinguished from all other Diceratosmia by the nearly uniformly short, straight to distally curved hairs on the clypeus. These hairs are slightly longer and less uniform on the frons. These clypeal hairs are very similar to those of Osmia (Melanosmia) calaminthae Rightmyer, Ascher & Griswold; however, in O. calaminthae the punctures of the metasomal terga are smaller, there is no carinate ridge on the hind coxa, and the parapsidal line is punctiform. Osmia conjunctoides has historically been confused with O. subfasciata; in addition to the diagnostic facial hair of O. conjunctoides noted above, females of these two species may be distinguished by differences in the scopal hairs. In O. conjunctoides, the scopal hairs are tapered at their apical tips, while in O. subfasciata the scopal hairs are blunt, widened and slightly rounded at their apical tips (Fig 12A).

Males of O. conjunctoides are extremely similar to O. subfasciata, as these are the only known species of Diceratosmia in which the hairs on the apical margin of S4 are short, stout, and form an apical comb. In addition to generally being slightly larger (body length ca. 8–9 mm vs. 6–7 mm) and bluer bee than the greenish-blue O. subfasciata, O. conjunctoides is distinguished from that species by several subtle but consistent features: the mesoscutum is more finely and densely punctate relative to the scutellum (O. conjunctoides with ca. 16 punctures between parapsidal line and midline, these punctures distinctly smaller than those on the scutellum; O. subfasciata with ca. 11 punctures between parapsidal line and midline, these punctures about the same size as those on the scutellum). In dorsal view, T1 of O. conjunctoides is less concave along its anterior margin, while in O. subfasciata the anterior margin is strongly curved, forming anterolaterally rounded corners. In O. conjunctoides, the lower propodeal triangle tends to be weakly shagreened throughout, while in O. subfasciata the lower propodeal triangle tends to be shiny.

Distribution. Southern Florida north to Georgia (St. Catherines Island) and Mississippi (Forrest County) (Fig. 18).

Floral Associations. Fabaceae: Crotalaria.

Comments. Males of this species are extremely similar to those of O. subfasciata; although previous workers were able to detect differences in the males that merited subspecific recognition (Michener 1949, Hurd & Michener 1955), recent examination of the associated females has allowed us to recognize more distinctive characters and to justify recognizing O. conjunctoides as species separate from O. subfasciata (Rightmyer et al. 2011).

Notes

Published as part of Rightmyer, Molly G., 2017, A revision of the subgenus Osmia (Diceratosmia), with descriptions of four new species (Hymenoptera, Megachilidae), pp. 1-37 in Zootaxa 4337 (1) on pages 7-8, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4337.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/1014033

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Scientific name authorship
Robertson
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Hymenoptera
Family
Megachilidae
Genus
Osmia
Species
conjunctoides
Taxon rank
species

References

  • Robertson, C. (1893) Notes on bees, with descriptions of new species. Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 20, 273 - 276.
  • Sandhouse, G. A. (1939) The North American bees of the genus Osmia. Memoirs of the Entomological Society of Washington, 1, 1 - 167.
  • Webb, D. W. (1980) Primary insect types in the Illinois Natural History Survey Collection, exclusive of the Collembola and Thysanoptera. Illinois Natural History Survey Bulletin, 32, 51 - 191.
  • Rightmyer, M. G., Deyrup, M., Ascher, J. S. & Griswold, T. (2011) Osmia species (Hymenoptera, Megachilidae) from the southeastern United States with modified facial hairs: taxonomy, host plants, and conservation status. ZooKeys, 148, 257 - 278. https: // doi. org / 10.3897 / zookeys. 148.1497
  • Michener, C. D. (1949) A revision of the American species of Diceratosmia (Hymenoptera, Megachilidae). Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 42, 258 - 264. https: // doi. org / 10.1093 / aesa / 42.3.258
  • Mitchell, T. D. (1962) The bees of the eastern United States. II. Technical Bulletin (North Carolina Agricultural Research Station), 152, 1 - 557.
  • Hurd, P. D. & Michener, C. D. (1955) The megachiline bees of California (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae). Bulletin of the California Insect Survery, 3, 1 - 248.