Bombus tibeticus Williams, 2020

Williams, Paul H., Altanchimeg, Dorjsuren, Byvaltsev, Alexandr, Jonghe, Roland De, Jaffar, Saleem, Japoshvili, George, Kahono, Sih, Liang, Huan, Mei, Maurizio, Monfared, Alireza, Nidup, Tshering, Raina, Rifat, Ren, Zongxin, Thanoosing, Chawatat, Zhao, Yanhui & Orr, Michael C., 2020, Widespread polytypic species or complexes of local species? Revising bumblebees of the subgenus Melanobombus world-wide (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Bombus), European Journal of Taxonomy 719, pp. 1-120 : 83-87

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2020.719.1107

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A4500016-C219-4353-B81C-5E0BB520547F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4335616

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/200860A6-7E80-47AA-A5B0-BE9C95AE977A

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:200860A6-7E80-47AA-A5B0-BE9C95AE977A

treatment provided by

Valdenar

scientific name

Bombus tibeticus Williams
status

sp. nov.

Bombus tibeticus Williams View in CoL sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:200860A6-7E80-47AA-A5B0-BE9C95AE977A

Figs 16 View Figs 14‒16 , 151–152 View Figs 139–180 , 200 View Figs 199‒204 , 207 View Figs 207–208 , 212 View Figs 211–212

Bombus keriensis View in CoL (part) – Reinig 1935: 341. — Williams 1998: 134 (non Morawitz, 1887: 199). This species was treated (implicitly from specimens from its unique known range) as a part of B. keriensis View in CoL s. lat. (the keriensis View in CoL -complex) by Reinig (1935) and by Williams (1998).

Our PTP analysis ( Fig. 10 View Fig ) of coalescents in the COI gene within the keriensis View in CoL -complex supports six species including B. tibeticus View in CoL sp. nov., corroborated by differences in morphology and by the absence of a positive divergence-with-distance relationship among them ( Fig. 20 View Figs 17–20 ) (see Divergence and geographical distance, page 12). This is the first time that B. tibeticus View in CoL sp. nov. is recognised as a separate species.

Bombus tibeticus sp. nov. co-occurs locally with the closely similar B. qilianensis sp. nov. in the eastern Kunlun mountains of the QTP (PW pers. obs.).

Diagnosis

Within the keriensis -group: female with the clypeus in its central area with scattered large, medium, and small punctures; hair in the black band between the wing bases without yellow hairs intermixed; hair on the side of the thorax with the yellow extending half of the distance from the wing base to the mid leg base; T1–2 yellow, T3 entirely black, T4–6 orange-red.

Male with hair on the head black except for yellow in a tuft on the face ventral to the antennal base and on the vertex; thoracic dorsum with the black band between the wing bases without yellow hairs intermixed; side of the thorax yellow anterior to the wing base; legs with the long hairs intermixed black and pale; T1–2 yellow, T3 entirely black, T4–7 orange-red; eye unenlarged relative to female eye.

Etymology

Named after the region where it occurs, Tibet, but with an unusual latinisation in order to avoid homonymy with the more usual forms Bombus tibetanus ( Morawitz, 1887) , Bombus tibethinus Gribodo, 1892 , and Bombus tibetensis S.-F. Wang, 1982, as well as with the form Bombus xizangensis S.-F. Wang, 1979. Of these, only B. (Psithyrus) tibetanus (Morawitz) is currently the accepted valid name of a bumblebee species, but in the distantly-related subgenus of parasitic bumblebees, Psithyrus Lepeletier, 1832 . The form tibeticus has been used previously for another bee species, Colletes tibeticus Kuhlmann (2002) . Although there are other similar published names, this name is a particularly good description of this species, which is widespread on the southern and eastern QTP. The species epithet is to be treated as a simple adjective.

Material examined

Holotype designation

CHINA • ♀ (worker) pinned (the right front leg is missing); four labels: (1) white printed in black “ CHINA: Qinghai / Kunlun Shan/Alpine edge 3973m 19 / 35.80313N, 94.34232E / 13.viii.2013 PH Williams ”; (2) green printed in black “ Melanobombus / ML# 228. det. PHW”; (3) green printed in black “BOLD# BBWP/PHW /CCDB-1555-B09”; (4) red printed in black “ HOLOTYPE ♀ (w)/ Bombus / tibeticus / Williams , 2019 /det. PH Williams 2019 ”; IOZ ( Fig. 207 View Figs 207–208 ).

GoogleMaps

Material sequenced (16 specimens)

CHINA – Qinghai Province • 1 ♂; Xiangpishan ; 36.7589° N, 99.6041° E; 30 Aug. 2010; P. Williams leg.; BOLD seq: 1555B05; PW: ML224 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; BOLD seq: 1555B06; PW: ML225 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; BOLD seq: 1555E04; PW: ML252 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; BOLD seq: 6880A12; PW: ML484 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Nanshan pass; 36.7628° N, 99.6071° E; 17 Aug. 2013; P. Williams leg.; BOLD seq: 1555B10; PW: ML229 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Burhan Budai Shan ; 36.0556° N, 98.1170° E; 16 Aug. 2013; P. Williams leg.; BOLD seq: 1555B11; PW: ML230 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Kunlun Shan ; 35.6920° N, 94.052° E; 13 Aug. 2013; P. Williams leg.; BOLD seq: 6877F09; PW: ML402 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; Nuogancha ; 37.0982° N, 98.8706° E; 31 Aug. 2010; P. Williams leg.; BOLD seq: 6877F11; PW: ML404 GoogleMaps 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; BOLD seq: 6880B03; PW: ML487 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); same collection data as for preceding; BOLD seq: 6876H07; PW: ML23 GoogleMaps . – Xizang Province • 1 ♀ (queen); Sugela [Shogu La]; 29.9154° N, 90.1421° E; 24 Jun. 1999; K. Huber leg.; BOLD seq: 1552A09; OLML: ML202 View Materials GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Milashan ; 29.85301° N, 92.33378° E; 27 Jul. 2018; Z. Ren leg.; KIB seq: MLSM101022; KIB: ML564 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Yelashan ; 30.16394° N, 97.2860° E; 22 Jul. 2018; Z. Ren leg.; KIB seq: YLSH101083; KIB: ML565 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Xizang ; Z. Ren leg.; KIB seq: CLiBE035; KIB: ML575 1 ♀ (worker); Yelashan ; 30.1639° N, 97.2860° E; 22 Jul. 2018; Z. Ren leg.; KIB: YLSH101083 ; KIB: ML576 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Anjiulashan ; 29.9229° N, 96.67203° E; 23 Jul. 2018; Z. Ren leg.; KIB seq: AJLSM101016; KIB: ML577 GoogleMaps .

Description

Female (holotype worker)

Habitus illustrated in Fig. 207 View Figs 207–208 . Body size medium (body length of queens 17–20 mm, workers 10–14 mm), hair (pubescence) moderately short and even, wings clear. Mandible with the distal notch anterior to the posterior tooth (incisura) very shallow and hardly marked. Oculo-malar area (‘cheek’ sensu Williams et al. 2014; not the gena) of medium length, 1.05 × as long as (length measured between the ventral edge of the compound eye and the edge of the malar area at the articulation of the mandible midway between the mandibular condyles) the breadth of the mandible at its base (breadth between and including the mandibular condyles). Clypeus weakly swollen, its raised area nearly flat, the central area with scattered large, medium and small punctures, few punctures medially and ventrally adjacent to the labrum. The area between the inner edge of the compound eye and the outer edge of the lateral ocellus occupied in just more than its outer half by a broad band of mostly large punctures, many spaced by more than their own widths, the smaller punctures between the larger punctures more abundant laterally near the eye margin. Mid basitarsus with the distal posterior corner broadly rounded; hind tibia outer surface with a corbicula, the surface sculpturing weakly reticulate so that the surface appears slightly matt; hind basitarsus in the distal three quarters densely covered with short branched decumbent and overlapping hairs with golden reflections; T6 posteriorly truncate and very shallowly divided medially. Colour pattern of the hair of the body predominantly black. Head entirely black except for orange hairs anteriorly on the labrum. Thoracic dorsum with broad anterior and posterior yellow bands of nearly equal breadth, about equal in breadth to the black band between the wing bases and without black hairs intermixed, the black band between the wing bases without yellow hairs intermixed; side of the thorax (mesepisternum) predominantly black, in its dorsal half yellow. T1–2 yellow without any black hairs; T3 entirely black; T4–6 entirely orange-red.

Male (ML225)

Body size medium (body length 12–15 mm), hair (pubescence) moderately short and even, wings clear. Colour pattern of the hair of the body predominantly black. Head black except for yellow in a tuft on the face ventral to the antennal base, on the vertex, and posteriorly around the base of the proboscis. Thoracic dorsum with broad anterior and posterior yellow bands of nearly equal breadth and without black hairs intermixed, the black band between the wing bases without yellow hairs intermixed; side of the thorax (mesepisternum) yellow anterior to the wing base; legs with the long hairs intermixed black and pale. T1–2 yellow without any black hairs; T3 entirely black; T4–7 entirely orange-red. Genitalia ( Fig. 200 View Figs 199‒204 ) with the gonostylus shorter than broad, its inner basal projection reduced to a short stub; volsella with the inner distal corner broadly produced but without a narrow hook.

Global distribution

(Qinghai-Tibetan-Plateau species) East Asia: CHINA: Xizang, Qinghai. (IAR, IOZ, NHMUK, OLML, PW.) This species is often common relative to other bumblebees ( Fig. 212 View Figs 211–212 ).

This is one of the highest recorded bumblebees in the world, at an elevation of ca 5640 m a.s.l. ( Williams 2018: along with B. tanguticus ). Specimens in the NHMUK collection labelled “ Sikkim ” are actually from Xizang (“Kampa Dzong” = Gampa Dzong, 28.271° N, 88.513°E).

Behaviour

Food-plant generalists (PW, ZR unpublished records). The male mate-searching behaviour is expected to resemble the patrolling behaviour of B. keriensis s. str.

PW

Paleontological Collections

OLML

Oberösterreichisches Landesmuseum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Apidae

Genus

Bombus

Loc

Bombus tibeticus Williams

Williams, Paul H., Altanchimeg, Dorjsuren, Byvaltsev, Alexandr, Jonghe, Roland De, Jaffar, Saleem, Japoshvili, George, Kahono, Sih, Liang, Huan, Mei, Maurizio, Monfared, Alireza, Nidup, Tshering, Raina, Rifat, Ren, Zongxin, Thanoosing, Chawatat, Zhao, Yanhui & Orr, Michael C. 2020
2020
Loc

Bombus keriensis

Williams P. H. 1998: 134
Reinig W. F. 1935: 341
Morawitz F. F. 1887: 199
1935
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