Lasioglossum (Dialictus) argammon, Gardner & Gibbs, 2020

Gardner, Joel & Gibbs, Jason, 2020, The ‘ red-tailed’ Lasioglossum (Dialictus) (Hymenoptera: Halictidae) of the western Nearctic, European Journal of Taxonomy 725, pp. 1-242 : 23-27

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.725.1167

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:89FA8DDF-F4B9-417A-A5AF-B2BC9660E024

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4337990

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AE9F3361-270B-4D1A-BA1C-83074AC69F50

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:AE9F3361-270B-4D1A-BA1C-83074AC69F50

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Lasioglossum (Dialictus) argammon
status

sp. nov.

Lasioglossum (Dialictus) argammon sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:AE9F3361-270B-4D1A-BA1C-83074AC69F50

Figs 11–12 View Fig View Fig , 95B View Fig

Diagnosis

Females of Lasioglossum argammon sp. nov. can be recognized by the face relatively long (length/width ratio ~0.91), episterna and metasomal terga mostly covered in dense tomentum, T1 anterior surface and scutum anterior portion with dull microsculpture, frons shiny with dense but distinctly separated punctures, mesosoma mostly densely punctate (i ≤ 1 pd) with sparser punctures (i =1–3 pd) limited to submedial areas of the scutum and scutellum, metasomal terga finely and moderately sparsely punctate (i =1–3 pd), pronotal angle obtuse, T2–4 with dark spiracular spots, ocelli normal (separated by more than two thirds of one OD), and relatively small size (ITD usually <1 mm). They are most similar to L. lilianae sp. nov. and are somewhat similar to L. hudsoniellum . Females of L. lilianae sp. nov. have the scutum and T1 anterior surface almost entirely shiny, scutum more sparsely punctate (i = 1–4 pd), ocelli slightly enlarged (separated by less than two thirds of one OD), and are larger (ITD usually> 1 mm). Females of L. hudsoniellum have T1 anterior surface shiny, metasomal terga usually with moderately large and dense punctures (i=1–2 pd), T2 lacking dark spiracular spots, and pronotal angle nearly 90 degrees.

The male of Lasioglossum argammon sp. nov. is unknown, but it is probably similar to that of L. lilianae sp. nov.

Etymology

The specific epithet argammon is formed from the Greek adjective ‘ argos ’ (‘bright’, ‘white’) and the genitive plural noun ‘ ammon ’ (‘of sands’). It refers to this species’ restricted distribution in and around the White Sands National Monument. An appropriate translation would be the White Sands sweat bee.

Material examined

Holotype

UNITED STATES – New Mexico • ♀; Otero Co., White Sands National Monument; [32.7° N, 106.3° W]; 16 Jul. 1991; B. Alexander leg.; ex Lepidium ; SEMC.

GoogleMaps

[ Verbatim label: NEW MEXICO:Otero Co. / White Sands Nat’l Mon. / 16 July 1991, B. Alexander / ex: Lepidium // HOLOTYPE / Lasioglossum (Dialictus) argammon Gardner and Gibbs ]

Paratypes

UNITED STATES – New Mexico • 2 ♀♀; 25 mi. W of Tularosa; [33.07° N, 106.45° W]; 1 Jul. 1940; D.E. Hardy leg.; SEMC GoogleMaps 2 ♀♀; Dona Ana Co.; 32.4435° N, 106.3992° W; 17 Nov. 2004 – 26 Feb. 2005; S.L. Buchmann and A.J. Donovan leg.; RLM GoogleMaps . – Texas • 1 ♀; Hudspeth Co., Salt Flats , N of Hwy 62/180; 31.7563° N, 104.9909° W; 1105 m a.s.l.; 26 Jun. 2010; J. D. Herndon leg.; BBSL GoogleMaps .

Description

Female

COLOURATION. Head and mesosoma blue-green to olive green; clypeus apical colour reddish brown to orange; labrum reddish brown to orange; mandible orange with black basal spot and red tip; flagellum reddish brown dorsally, orange ventrally; pronotal lobe reddish brown to orange; metasoma reddish brown to orange with dark spiracular spots on T2–4; legs reddish brown with femur-tibia joints, base and apex of tibiae, and tarsi mostly orange; tegula pale amber to orange; wing membrane hyaline, veins with subcosta dark brown, otherwise pale amber to brown.

PUBESCENCE. Body hair colour white. Tomentum dense on paraocular area, frons, gena, pronotal collar and lobe, space between pronotal lobe and tegula, margins of scutum, metanotum, episterna, T1 laterally, T2 basolaterally, and T3–4 throughout; sparse on clypeus and supraclypeal area. Scutum hair moderately plumose. Wing hairs light, long or short, and dense. Acarinarial fan complete, sparse. T2 fringes sparse, T3 fringes sparse.

SURFACE SCULPTURE. Clypeus punctures dense to sparse (i=1–4 pd), large and irregularly spaced apically (i <2 pd), sculpture shiny; supraclypeal area punctures dense (i ≤ 1 pd), sculpture shiny; paraocular area punctures dense (i <1 pd), sometimes crowded around antenna socket (i= 0 pd), sculpture shiny, sometimes weakly imbricate around antenna socket; frons punctures dense (i <1 pd), sculpture shiny; vertex punctures dense (i ≤ 1 pd), sometimes fine and sparse medially (i= 1–3 pd), sculpture shiny; gena punctures fine, moderately dense (i=1–2 pd), sculpture shiny; postgena sculpture shiny, becoming tessellate posteriorly; tegula punctures absent; scutum punctures dense (i ≤ 1 pd), becoming moderately dense to sparse submedially and anteromedially (i =1–3 pd), sculpture shiny to weakly tessellate, becoming more strongly tessellate anteromedially; scutellum punctures dense marginally and on median line (i <1 pd), sometimes finer and sparser anteriorly (i=1–2 pd), sparse submedially (i= 1–3 pd), diversopunctate, sculpture shiny, becoming weakly tessellate marginally; metanotum sculpture shiny and finely, densely punctate (i <1 pd), becoming weakly rugulose laterally; metapostnotum rugae strong, anastomosing, not reaching margin, sculpture tessellate; preëpisternum sculpture areolaterugulose; hypoepimeron punctures crowded (i= 0 pd), sculpture shiny; mesepisternum punctures crowded (i= 0 pd), sculpture shiny; metepisternum sculpture ruguloso-lineate dorsally, imbricate ventrally; propodeum lateral face sculpture tessellate; propodeum posterior face sculpture tessellate; T1 anterior face sculpture coriarious; T1 dorsal surface punctures moderately sparse (i=1–3 pd), absent or very sparse in large apicolateral oval patches, sculpture shiny; T2 disc punctures moderately sparse (i=1–3 pd), disc sculpture shiny, rim punctures minute, sparse (i= 2–6 pd), rim sculpture shiny.

STRUCTURE. Face length/width ratio 0.91 (± 0.01 SD). Clypeus projecting ~67% below suborbital tangent; clypeal area length/width ratio 0.42 (± 0.05 SD); apicolateral denticles rounded knobs; supraclypeal area length/width ratio 0.81 (± 0.07 SD). Forewing with 3 submarginal cells; pronotal angle obtuse; tegula shape normal. Intertegular distance 0.86 (± 0.05 SD) mm. Scutum length/width ratio 0.83 (± 0.05 SD); scutum/scutellum length ratio 3.14 (± 0.29 SD); scutellum/metanotum length ratio 1.65 (± 0.1 SD); metanotum/metapostnotum length ratio 0.58 (± 0.06 SD). Propodeum lateral carinae not reaching dorsal margin; oblique carina absent. T2 depressed apical rim length less than 50% of segment. (n =6)

Male

Unknown.

Range

Gypsum dunes of the White Sands Desert of New Mexico, southeast to Hudspeth County, Texas ( Fig. 12 View Fig ).

Floral records

BRASSICACEAE Burnett : Lepidium L.

DNA barcodes

One sequence available (BOLD process ID: DLIII160-19; BIN: BOLD:AEA0446). This sequence has greater than expected divergence from L. lilianae sp. nov. (4.7% p-distance), which appears to be closely related based on overall morphology. Phylogenetic analysis of DNA barcodes ( Fig. 7 View Fig ) suggests that L. argammon sp. nov. may be more closely related to L. mesillense . Lasioglossum argammon sp. nov. has no unique fixed substitutions among all western red-tailed L. ( Dialictus ).

Remarks

Rare. Only six specimens are known, all from gypsum dunes in southern New Mexico and western Texas.

BBSL

BBSL

SEMC

University of Kansas - Biodiversity Institute

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Halictidae

Tribe

Halictini

Genus

Lasioglossum

SubGenus

Dialictus

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF