Nomada furva (Panzer, 1798)

Herrera Mesias, Fernanda & Weigand, Alexander M., 2021, Updates to the checklist of the wild bee fauna of Luxembourg as inferred from revised natural history collection data and fieldwork, Biodiversity Data Journal 9, pp. 64027-64027 : 64027

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.9.e64027

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/11409551-665C-5A11-98D1-1B559156557B

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Biodiversity Data Journal by Pensoft

scientific name

Nomada furva (Panzer, 1798)
status

 

Nomada furva (Panzer, 1798)

Nomada furva Common names: Nomade funeste (French), Schwärzliche Wespenbiene (German)

Materials

Type status: Other material. Occurrence : catalogNumber: MNHNL39915 ; recordedBy: Fernand Feitz ; sex: male; lifeStage: adult; Taxon : scientificName: Nomada furva (Panzer, 1798); order: Hymenoptera ; family: Apidae ; genus: Nomada ; specificEpithet: furva; taxonRank: species; scientificNameAuthorship: (Panzer, 1798); vernacularName: Nomade funeste (French), Schwaerzliche Wespenbiene (German); Location : country: Luxembourg; locality: Remerschen ; decimalLatitude: 49.4837; decimalLongitude: 6.3475; Identification : identifiedBy: Andrea Jakubzik ; Event: samplingProtocol: Net; eventDate: 16-07-2004; Record Level: institutionCode: MNHNL; basisOfRecord: Preserved Specimen GoogleMaps GoogleMaps

Diagnosis

Male: A small (4-6 mm) dark coloured Nomada presenting yellow maculations in the margin of labrum, malar area, apex of clypeus and in front of the eyes (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 a and b). The lower part of the sides of the propodeum shows a small sub-erect tuft of pale hair (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 c). The dark brown abdomen presents impuctated tergites with lateral yellow spots and a notched tergite 7 (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 d). The labrum presents a small tooth (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 e) and the femur 2 is widened (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 f).

Voucher specimen (MNHNL39915): Adult male. Body length of 4.7 mm.

Ecology

A bivoltine species that parasites the nests of small Lasioglossum , with a flight season that extends from the end of April until mid-September ( Amiet et al. 2007).

Conservation

Nomada furva is classified under the IUCN category "Data Deficient (DD)", meaning that there is a lack of scientific information to assess extinction risk ( Nieto et al. 2014). More information regarding its population size, distribution, trends and potential threats to this species is needed ( Smit 2013).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Apidae

Genus

Nomada