Andrena (incertae sedis) muelleri, Wood, 2023

Wood, Thomas James, 2023, Revisions to the Andrena fauna of north-western Africa with a focus on Morocco (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 916 (1), pp. 1-85 : 60-63

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.916.2381

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0DC587F6-9DAA-4F6E-BA2A-AD528990BA24

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10471048

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/53444414-9FEC-4BA4-9649-8B1747110481

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:53444414-9FEC-4BA4-9649-8B1747110481

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Andrena (incertae sedis) muelleri
status

sp. nov.

Andrena (incertae sedis) muelleri sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:53444414-9FEC-4BA4-9649-8B1747110481

Figs 33A, C, E View Fig , 34 View Fig

Diagnosis

Andrena muelleri sp. nov. is part of an undescribed subgenus best referred to as the relata group (see Pisanty et al. 2022b), which does not display clear defining or distinctive characters, leading to its lack of historical recognition. This group is incompletely characterised, but can predominantly be recognised by the weak and poorly defined propodeal triangle ( Fig. 34E View Fig ), the compact head, with the clypeus having the fore margin slightly raised and forming a ‘]’ shape ( Fig. 34C View Fig ), the ovoid metasoma ( Fig. 34F View Fig ), and the lack of any distinctive derived characters. Consequently, diagnosis is best made with reference to the most similar morphological species, A. corax Warncke, 1975 ( Portugal and Spain), A. macroptera Warncke, 1974 ( Portugal, Spain, Morocco), and A. melaleuca Pérez, 1895 ( Algeria to Egypt). Andrena muelleri has finely punctate terga ( Fig. 34F View Fig ), which excludes A. macroptera and A. melaleuca which have strong and coarse punctation on the tergal discs.

Andrena muelleri sp. nov. is thus extremely similar to A. corax . Andrena muelleri can be separated (alternative character state of A. corax in parentheses) by the clypeus, which has weak latitudinal striations and a variably produced impunctate longitudinal mid-line on its basal half ( Fig. 34B View Fig ; clypeus without latitudinal striations or a longitudinal, impunctate mid-line), by the facial foveae which are filled with brown hairs ( Fig. 33A View Fig ), outer margin thus appearing well defined (facial foveae filled with black hairs, outer margin poorly defined, Fig. 33B View Fig ), by the more brownish pubescence, on the face with pubescence ventrally white, becoming light brown dorsally, scutum and scutellum with short light brown hairs over the majority of their surface, medially with dark brown hairs ( Fig. 33C View Fig ; face uniformly with white-grey pubescence, scutum and scutellum with short white-grey pubescence, medially with extensive and strongly contrasting short black pubescence, Fig. 33D View Fig ), and by the punctation of the scutum, which becomes sparse medially, punctures separated by 2–3 puncture diameters, underlying surface with granular shagreen, dull to weakly shining ( Fig. 33E View Fig ; scutum with regular punctures, punctures only becoming slightly sparser medially, separated at most by 2 puncture diameters, usually by 1 puncture diameter; underlying surface smooth and shining, Fig. 33F View Fig ). The two species cannot be found in sympatry, as A. corax is restricted to Iberia and A. muelleri is currently known only from south-western Morocco.

Etymology

This species is named in honour of the Swiss entomologist Andreas Müller for his work on bee taxonomy, particularly on the tribe Osmiini , and for his collection of the type series of this species.

Material examined

Holotype

MOROCCO • ♀; 20 km N of Tafraoute ; 1220 m a.s.l.; 14 Apr. 2017; A. Müller leg.; OÖLM.

Paratypes

MOROCCO • 1 ♀; 20 km N of Tafraoute ; 1220 m a.s.l.; 14 Apr. 2017; A. Müller leg.; TJWC • 2 ♀♀; 40 km SSE of Ait Baha, Kasbah de Tizourgane ; 1190 m a.s.l.; 22 Apr. 2019; A. Müller leg.; OÖLM .

Description

Female

MEASUREMENTS. Body length: 11–12 mm ( Fig. 34A View Fig ).

HEAD. Dark, 1.25 times as wide as long ( Fig. 34B View Fig ). Clypeus weakly domed, densely punctate with latitudinally elongate punctures, punctures typically separated by 0.5–1 puncture diameter, sometimes with poorly defined longitudinal impunctate mid line; underlying surface shagreened, weakly shining, with obscure but numerous, weakly raised latitudinal striations between punctures. Apical margin of clypeus weakly upturned. Process of labrum trapezoidal, twice as broad as long, apical margin thickened and truncate, strongly emarginate, basal surface with latitudinal striations ( Fig. 34C View Fig ). Gena slightly exceeding width of compound eye; ocelloccipital distance 2 times diameter of lateral ocellus ( Fig. 34D View Fig ). Foveae broad, occupying ¾ of space between lateral ocellus and compound eye, dorsally separated from lateral ocellus by distance equal to diameter of lateral ocellus, ventrally extending below antennal insertions; foveae filled with brown hairs ( Fig. 33A View Fig ). Face on ventral half and gena ventrally with whitish hairs, becoming light brown around antennal insertions, frons, and gena posteriorly; vertex with intermixed black and brown hairs. Antennae dark basally, A4–12 ventrally lightened orange-brown; A3 slightly exceeding A4+5, shorter than A4+5+6.

MESOSOMA. Scutum and scutellum laterally and anteriorly with strong granular shagreen, dull, shagreen becoming weaker medially, here weakly shining; surface predominantly densely punctate, punctures separated by 0.5–1 puncture diameter, becoming sparser medially, here separated by 2–3 puncture diameters ( Fig. 33E View Fig ). Pronotum with obscure and small humeral angle. Mesepisternum and dorsolateral parts of propodeum with granular microreticulation, microreticulation overlain with additional network of weakly raised reticulation, surface dull. Propodeal triangle poorly defined laterally by very weak carinae, internal surface with fine granular shagreen, on basal half with short, raised rugae ( Fig. 34E View Fig ). Mesepisternum with white hairs on ventral half, becoming light brown dorsally ( Fig. 34C View Fig ). Scutum and scutellum with short and strongly plumose light brown hairs, almost squamous, medially with intermixed short dark brown hairs. Propodeal corbicula incomplete, dorsal fringe dense, composed of long, plumose, light brown hairs, internal surface with abundant long, light golden hairs. Legs dark, apical tarsal segments lightened dark reddish-brown, pubescence light to dark brown. Flocculus incomplete but distinctly produced, composed of plumose hairs; flocculus and femoral scopa white, tibial scopa dorsally dark brown, ventrally becoming white, hairs simple. Hind tarsal claws with strong inner tooth. Wings hyaline, stigma and venation brown, nervulus interstitial.

METASOMA. Terga dark, apical margin very narrowly lightened dark brown ( Fig. 34F View Fig ). Tergal discs finely and densely punctate, disc of T1 with punctures sparse laterally, separated by 2–4 puncture diameters, becoming dense medially, separated by 1 puncture diameter. Margin of T1, discs and margins of T2–4 densely and evenly punctate, punctures separated by 0.5–1 puncture diameter. Terga almost without sculpture, smooth and shining between punctures. Terga with scattered short white hairs, forming small patches basolaterally; tergal discs and marginal zones mostly hairless, apical hair bands absent. Apical fringe of T5 and hairs flanking pygidial plate dark brown, at most with occasional long white hairs laterally on T5; pygidial plate with clear raised area medially, surface dull.

Male

Unknown.

Distribution

Southern Morocco in the Anti-Atlas around Tafraoute.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Andrenidae

Genus

Andrena

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