Triepeolus flavipennis ( Friese, 1916 )

Onuferko, Thomas M., Rightmyer, Molly G., Melo, Gabriel A. R. & Roig-Alsina, Arturo, 2024, A revision of the South American species of the cleptoparasitic bee genus Triepeolus Robertson, 1901 (Hymenoptera: Apidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 931, pp. 1-50 : 22-27

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2024.931.2505

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6A9B744E-A7B6-48FC-B664-985E884BD414

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11034714

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0E3C9F16-FF87-FFC1-FDDF-F926FB4AB9D9

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Triepeolus flavipennis ( Friese, 1916 )
status

 

Triepeolus flavipennis ( Friese, 1916) View in CoL

Figs 1E View Fig , 10 View Fig , 13A View Fig

Epeolus flavipennis Friese, 1916: 337 View in CoL (♂), lectotype presently designated.

Triepeolus bilineatus Cockerell, 1949: 460 View in CoL (♀, ♂), syn. nov.

Triepeolus flavipennis View in CoL – Moure & Melo 2007: 586 (in Friese’s original paper, the name is spelled both “ flavipennsis ” (p. 337) and “ flavipennis View in CoL ” (p. 349 in reprint; p. 372 in bound volume); as first revisers, Moure & Melo established ‘ flavipennis View in CoL ’ as the valid original spelling, with ‘ flavipennsis ’ recognized as a misprint; see also Rasmussen & Ascher 2008).

Diagnosis

The following morphological features in combination tell T. flavipennis apart from all other South American Triepeolus : T1 has a medially interrupted basal band or pair of anterolateral patches of pale tomentum, which on each side (or each of which) is mesally convex, such that the discal patch forms a trapezoid or triangle with concave anterolateral sides ( Fig. 10B View Fig ), and the T2 apical transverse band does not have lobe-like anterolateral extensions. Triepeolus flavipennis is the only species in the T. verbesinae species group—containing species in which the pseudopygidial area of the female is distinctly circular ( Fig. 10D View Fig )—that (usually) does not have an apical transverse band on T1. More commonly in this species, the T1 anterolateral patches of pale tomentum each have a short, medially directed posterolateral extension ( Fig. 10B View Fig ).

Etymology

Although Friese (1916) did not explain the etymology of his Epeolus flavipennis , the specific epithet was presumably inspired by its yellow-orange wings, which do not reliably distinguish this species from similar-looking congeners.

Material examined

Primary type material

COLOMBIA • ♂, lectotype of E. flavipennis ; Cauca, Popayán ; 1900; Lehmann leg.; ZMB 323e41 .

HONDURAS • ♀, holotype of T. bilineatus ; Francisco Morazán, Zamorano ; 20 Jan. 1947; A. Rivera leg.; USNM 534618 View Materials .

Secondary type material

COLOMBIA • 1 ♂, paralectotype of E. flavipennis ; Cauca, Popayán ; 1900; Lehmann leg.; ZMB 505a65 .

HONDURAS • 1 ♂, allotype of T. bilineatus ; Francisco Morazán, Zamorano; 20 Jan. 1947; USNM Allotype NO. 58538 USNM; 165/M.G.R. Database No. 5611.

Non-type material

COLOMBIA • 1 ♀; Valle del Cauca, Lobo Guerrero; 23 Sep. 1976; Bell, Breed, and Michener leg.; KUNHM 3 ♂♂; same collection data as for preceding; 23 Sep. 1977; Bell, Breed, and Michener leg.; KUNHM 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; 20 Oct. 1977; C. García leg.; DZUP .

GUATEMALA • 1 ♀; Guatemala, Ciudad San Cristóbal; Jan.; AMNH Ac. 4875 /M.G.R. Database No. 1550 .

HONDURAS • 1 ♂; Comayagua, El Taladro ; 15 Jun. 1979; J.A. Chemsak, A. and M. Michelbacher, and W.W. Middlekauff leg.; EMEC M.G.R. Database No. 1454 1 ♂; Francisco Morazán, Zamorano ; J. Williams leg.; USNM M.G.R. Database No. 5933 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; 20 Jan. 1947; USNM M.G.R. Database No. 5932 .

MEXICO • 1 ♀, paralectotype of E. mexicanus ; F. Sumichrast leg.; ANSP 2229-8 View Materials 1 ♂; Colima, 10 mi W of Colima; 1 Aug. 1954; M. Cazier, W. Gertsch, and Bradts leg.; AMNH M.G.R. Database No. 2243 1 ♀; Durango, 5 mi W of Durango ; 14 Jun. 1964; J.F. McAlpine leg.; CNC 753863 View Materials 2 ♀♀; same collection data as for preceding; 23 Jul. 1964; J.F. McAlpine leg.; CNC 808413 View Materials , 808414 View Materials 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; 23 Jul. 1964; J.F. McAlpine leg.; CNC 808385 View Materials 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; 29 Jul. 1964; J.F. McAlpine leg.; CNC 808394 View Materials 2 ♀♀; Guerrero, 17 mi N of Chilpancingo ; 7 Aug. 1962; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database Nos. 5176 , 5177 1 ♀; Guerrero, 3.9 km NE of Taxco (mi. 73588.7); 16 Sep. 1976; C.D. George and R.R. Snelling leg.; USNM No. 73588 A/M.G.R. Database No. 5610 2 ♀♀; Guerrero, Mezcala; 29 Jun. 1951; H.E. Evans leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database Nos. 5174 , 5175 1 ♂; Hidalgo, 4 km N of Metzquititlán ; 11 Nov. 1991; Noguera leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 7120 1 ♀; Hidalgo, 9 mi NW of Actopan ; 1 Sep. 1962; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 5180 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; 1 Sep. 1962; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 5181 1 ♀; Jalisco, 10 mi W of Tizapán ; 18 Jul. 1953; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 1549 1 ♀; Jalisco, 15.5 mi NE of Lagos de Moreno ; 26 Jul. 1962; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 1330 3 ♂♂; Jalisco, Guadalajara ; Crawford leg.; USNM M.G.R. Database Nos. 5929 , 5930 , 5931 1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; “ IX.18 ”; McClendon leg.; ANSP 1 ♀; Jalisco, Villa de Guadalupe ; 26 Jul. 1951; H.E. Evans leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 5173 1 ♂; Michoacán, Palo Alto ; 12 Jul. 1970; R.E. Beer and party leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 5183 1 ♀; Michoacán, Río del Marqués (3 km E of Cuatro Caminos on Hwy 120 ); 17 Jul. 1989; A. Roig-Alsina and R. Brooks leg.; KUNHM #061 /M.G.R. Database No. 5172 1 ♀; Morelos, Sierra de Huautla (2.5 km N and 4 km W of the Center for Environmental Education and Research Sierra de Huautla ); 18.4500° N, 99.0333° W; 5 Sep. 1996; R. Brooks leg.; KUNHM MEX 1B96 013/M.G.R. Database No. 5171 GoogleMaps 1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; 5 Sep. 1996; R. Brooks leg.; KUNHM MEX 1B96 014/M.G.R. Database No. 5170 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; 5 Sep. 1996; R. Brooks leg.; KUNHM MEX 1B96 012/M.G.R. Database No. 5185 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; Oaxaca, 17 km W of Tehuantepec ; 8 Sep. 1965; D.H. Janzen leg.; USNM M.G.R. Database No. 5928 2 ♂♂; Oaxaca, 6 km S of San Sebastián Frontera ; 18.2129° N, 97.6490° W; 5 Oct. 2007; L. Packer leg.; PCYU GoogleMaps 1 ♂; Oaxaca, El Camarón; 7 Jul. 1953; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 1331 1 ♀; Oaxaca, El Camarón ; 7 Jul. 1952; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 5178 1 ♀; Oaxaca, San Sebastián Frontera; 25 Sep. 2008; L. Packer leg.; PCYU CCDB-00601 H01 1 ♀; Puebla, 6 km SW of Zapotitlán Salinas ; 3 Nov. 1991; T. Griswold leg.; KUNHM SM0326486 /M.G.R. Database No. 7119 1 ♀; Puebla, 8 mi SE of Tehuitzingo ; 29 Jun. 1961; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 5182 1 ♂; Puebla, SW of Plan de San Miguel, Hwy 125 (km 53.4); 18.2125° N, 97.5450° W; 13 Sep. 1996; R. Brooks leg.; KUNHM MEX 1B96 056/M.G.R. Database No. 5184 GoogleMaps 1 ♀; Puebla, SW of Zapotitlán; 24 Sep. 2008; L. Packer leg.; PCYU CCDB-00601 H02 1 ♀; Querétaro, Peña Blanca; 12 Aug. 1979; R. Murillo leg.; USNM M.G.R. Database No. 5926 1 ♀; Querétaro, Peña Blanca ; 27 May 1979; R. Murillo leg.; USNM M.G.R. Database No. 5927 1 ♀; San Luis Potosí, 6.5 mi E of Ciudad del Maíz ; 23 Jul. 1962; KU Mex Expedition leg.; KUNHM M.G.R. Database No. 5179 .

USA • 1 ♂; Texas, The Basin, Big Bend National Park ; 13–14 Jul. 1948; M.A. Cazier leg.; AMNH M.G.R. Database No. 2244 .

Non-preserved material

MEXICO • 1 unsexed specimen; Coahuila, Arteaga; 25.3451° N, 100.7944° W; 30 Jun. 2020; L. Jimenez Hernandez obs.; iNaturalist record #53088456 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; Coahuila, Saltillo; 25.3363° N, 100.9900° W; 3 Aug. 2019; L. Jimenez Hernandez obs.; iNaturalist record #30154605 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; Jalisco, Teuchitlán; 28 May 2023; J.A. Álvarez Ruiz obs.; iNaturalist record #165064942 1 ♀; Oaxaca, Monte Albán, Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán ; 23 Jul. 2022; J. Kemner obs.; iNaturalist record #142220347 1 ♀; Oaxaca, San Pedro Totolapa ; 28 Jun. 2022; J. Kemner obs.; iNaturalist record #140242303 1 ♂; Querétaro, Cadereyta de Montes; 20.6872° N, 99.8048° W; 30 Jun. 2017; H. Ugalde obs.; iNaturalist record #6902218 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; Querétaro, Cadereyta de Montes ; 20.6860° N, 99.8035° W; 24 Aug. 2023; J.B. Hernández Díaz obs.; iNaturalist record #180022886 GoogleMaps 1 ♀; Querétaro, Fraccionamiento Vista Real, Corregidora ; 20.5219° N, 100.3881° W; 31 May 2022; C. Govaerts obs.; iNaturalist record #119663290 GoogleMaps 1 ♀; Querétaro, Fraccionamiento Vista Real, Corregidora ; 20.5219° N, 100.3882° W; 6 Oct. 2021; C. Govaerts obs.; iNaturalist record #97401415 GoogleMaps 1 ♀; Querétaro, Fraccionamiento Vista Real, Corregidora ; 20.5221° N, 100.3880° W; 7 Nov. 2019; C. Govaerts obs.; iNaturalist record #35428605 GoogleMaps 1 ♀; Querétaro, Fraccionamiento Vista Real, Corregidora ; 20.5226° N, 100.3884° W; 31 Oct. 2019; C. Govaerts obs.; iNaturalist record #35147139 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; Querétaro, Fraccionamiento Vista Real, Corregidora ; 20.5227° N, 100.3882° W; 28 Aug. 2020; C. Govaerts obs.; iNaturalist record #57873580 GoogleMaps 1 ♀; Querétaro, Santiago de Querétaro ; 10 Jul. 2020; F. Fleck obs.; iNaturalist record #52755779 .

Redescription

MEASUREMENTS OF LECTOTYPE. Body length 8.2 mm; ITW 1.7 mm; head length 2.0 mm; head width 2.8 mm; fore wing length 7.5 mm.

Both sexes

INTEGUMENT COLORATION. Dark brown to black except as follows. Mandible with apical two-fifths golden yellow (entirely dark brown/black in some non-type specimens). Mandible with middle fifth (middle three-fifths in holotype of T. bilineatus ), labrum to some extent (except basomedially), scape and pedicel to some extent, F1 extensively, pronotal lobe, tegula, coxae to some extent, trochanters to tarsi (excluding brown meso- and metatibial spurs) partially to entirely, metasomal terga laterally, and metasomal sterna to some extent orange. F2 with orange spot basally. Fore wing membrane dusky subhyaline throughout. Hind wing membrane dusky subhyaline to hyaline. Pygidial plate to some extent reddish brown.

PUBESCENCE. Face with tomentum densest around antennal socket. Tomentum slightly sparser on clypeus; upper paraocular and frontal areas and vertexal area mostly exposed. Pronotal collar with tomentum uniformly pale yellow. Mesoscutum with well-defined paramedian band of pale-yellow tomentum, tapering slightly toward and attaining anterior margin; pale tomentum otherwise mostly restricted to lateral and posterior margins. Mesopleuron with off-white, appressed, branched setae; upper half densely setose, except behind pronotal lobe, with setae slightly sparser on hypoepimeral area; ventrolateral half sparsely setose. Metanotum with tomentum uninterrupted, uniformly off-white. Propodeal triangle mostly glabrous, with (pale) setae restricted to small lateral patches. Metasomal terga with bands of bright to pale-yellow tomentum. T1 with basal band separated medially into pair of anterolateral patches, each continuous with (and indistinguishable from) lateral longitudinal band and mesally convex, such that discal patch forming trapezoid or triangle with concave anterolateral sides; anterolateral patch with short, medially directed posterolateral extension in lectotype of E. flavipennis ; with medially interrupted apical transverse band in some non-type specimens. T2–T4 with medially narrowly interrupted apical transverse bands (in lectotype of E. flavipennis ) or medially narrowed apical transverse bands (in paralectotype of E. flavipennis , holotype of T. bilineatus , and multiple non-type specimens); these bands without well-defined anterolateral extensions, although T2–T3 with faint lateral longitudinal bands of diffuse off-white setae in types of E. flavipennis and multiple non-type specimens. S2–S3 with apical transverse bands of white tomentum.

SURFACE SCULPTURE. Labrum and clypeus with punctures equally dense (most i <1d); interspaces well defined, shining. Vertexal area densely punctate (most i <1d). Mesoscutum, mesoscutellum, and axilla with punctures more or less equally dense and nearly contiguous (most i<1d). Mesopleuron with punctures in upper half not much denser (most i<1d) than in ventrolateral half (most i≤ 1d); interspaces shining; punctures similar in size throughout. Discs of metasomal terga with punctures very fine, dense (i ≈1d), and evenly distributed; interspaces shining somewhat.

STRUCTURE. Labrum with pair of small subapical denticles, each preceded by discrete longitudinal ridge. Pronotal collar rather short (medial length ~ ⅔ MOD). Mesoscutellum weakly bigibbous. Axilla extending little if at all beyond midlength of mesoscutellum; tip visible but somewhat blunt, mesally unattached to mesoscutellum for less than ⅓ medial length of axilla; lateral margin relatively straight.

Female

T5 with broadly convex apical margin and large patch of off-white to pale-yellow tomentum on each side lateral to pseudopygidial area or large, continuous patch (or band) of pale tomentum bordering and contacting pseudopygidial area. Pseudopygidial area circular, with basal crescent of dense, silvery setae; setae glossy, coppery, and sparser centrally; apical margin with row of dense, appressed and suberect coppery to silvery setae. Pygidial plate apically truncate. S4 with apical transverse band of white tomentum. S5 slightly downturned apically, with apical fimbria of coppery bristle-like setae; S5 otherwise covered in off-white tomentum.

Male

T5–T6 with complete or medially narrowly interrupted apical transverse bands of pale-yellow tomentum. Pygidial plate apically rounded and slightly downturned, with basal transverse ridge ill-defined and lateral margin somewhat sinuate. S4–S5 each with apical/subapical fringe of dense, long (> 1 MOD), curved, coppery to silvery setae, not contrasting strongly with bands of preceding sterna.

Distribution

Texas ( USA) to Colombia ( Fig. 1E View Fig ).

Ecology

Host records

Unknown. One vouchered male bears a label indicating that the specimen was collected in the presence of “ Anthocopa on rock wall” near Metzquititlán in Hidalgo, Mexico, but an association between the two taxa seems very unlikely given that no osmiine bees have been confirmed as hosts of Triepeolus ( Rightmyer 2006) .

Floral records

Rightmyer (2006) reported this species on Aloysia gratissima (Gillies & Hook.) Tronc. ( Verbenaceae ), Cleome viscosa L. ( Cleomaceae ), Larrea tridentata (Sessé & Moc. ex DC.) Coville ( Zygophyllaceae ), Prosopis L. ( Fabaceae ), and Zanthoxylum L. ( Rutaceae ). Images on iNaturalist show this species visiting Heterotheca inuloides Cass. ( Asteraceae ), Lantana velutina M.Martens & Galeotti ( Verbenaceae ), Lysiloma divaricatum (Jacq.) J.F.Macbr. ( Fabaceae ), and Verbesina serrata Cav. ( Asteraceae ). The label of one more recently examined voucher specimen further indicates that this species has been collected from Bidens pilosa L.

Remarks

Rightmyer (2006) indicated that T. bilineatus and T. flavipennis are likely conspecific. In one of the two studied (male) types of E. flavipennis , the T2–T4 apical transverse bands of yellow tomentum are narrowly interrupted medially. In this species, the bands are more commonly complete, but specimens with medially narrowed and/or narrowly interrupted metasomal tergal bands have been observed from across the range of this species. In both the other type of E. flavipennis and (female) holotype of T. bilineatus , the T2–T4 apical transverse bands are complete, albeit somewhat narrowed medially. The authors of the present study do not consider these to be distinct species, and T. bilineatus is herein synonymized under T. flavipennis .

Since Friese (1916) did not explicitly designate a holotype, one of the two studied male syntypes (that which bears a red label that says “Type”) is herein designated as the lectotype of E. flavipennis . The other male, which bears an orange label that says “Typus”, is recognized as a paralectotype.

In South America, this species is presently only known from a couple of localities along the Pacific coast of Colombia. Triepeolus flavipennis has not yet been confirmed from the Isthmus of Panama and consequently shows a disjunct distribution ( Fig. 1E View Fig ); however, its presence there is expected based on its occurrence in northern South America and the Northern Triangle of Central America.

ZMB

Germany, Berlin, Museum fuer Naturkunde der Humboldt-Universitaet

USNM

USA, Washington D.C., National Museum of Natural History, [formerly, United States National Museum]

DZUP

Brazil, Parana, Curitiba, Universidade Federal do Parana, Museu de Entomologia Pe. Jesus Santiago Moure

AMNH

USA, New York, New York, American Museum of Natural History

EMEC

USA, California, Berkeley, University of California, Essig Museum of Entomology

ANSP

USA, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Academy of Natural Sciences

CNC

Canada, Ontario, Ottawa, Canadian National Collection of Insects

PCYU

PCYU

DZUP

Universidade Federal do Parana, Colecao de Entomologia Pe. Jesus Santiago Moure

AMNH

American Museum of Natural History

EMEC

Essig Museum of Entomology

PCYU

The Packer Collection at York University

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Apidae

Genus

Triepeolus

Loc

Triepeolus flavipennis ( Friese, 1916 )

Onuferko, Thomas M., Rightmyer, Molly G., Melo, Gabriel A. R. & Roig-Alsina, Arturo 2024
2024
Loc

Triepeolus flavipennis

Moure & Melo 2007: 586
2007
Loc

Triepeolus bilineatus

Cockerell T. D. A. 1949: 460
1949
Loc

Epeolus flavipennis

Friese H. 1916: 337
1916
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