Bombus avinoviellus (Skorikov)

Williams, Paul H., Huang, Jiaxing, Rasmont, Pierre & An, Jiandong, 2016, Early-diverging bumblebees from across the roof of the world: the high-mountain subgenus Mendacibombus revised from species’ gene coalescents and morphology (Hymenoptera, Apidae), Zootaxa 4204 (1), pp. 1-72 : 41-43

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4204.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C050058A-774D-49C0-93F9-7A055B51C2A0

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5625295

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE6754-7C45-3326-B090-A29FA08FF9D0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bombus avinoviellus (Skorikov)
status

 

6. Bombus avinoviellus (Skorikov) View in CoL

( Figs 3 View FIGURES 1 ‒ 6 , 16 View FIGURES 15 ‒ 23 , 29 View FIGURES 24 ‒ 35 , 46 View FIGURES 36 ‒ 55 , 61 View FIGURES 56 ‒ 67 )

Mendacibombus avinoviellus Skorikov 1914:126 View in CoL , type-locality citation (Cyrillic) ‘[along the river Sind above Sonamarg, … Baltal … pass Zodji-La]’. Lectotype queen by present designation ZISP examined, ( Cyrillic ) ‘[along the river Sind upstream of Sonamarg ]’ ( Great Himalaya , Kashmir, India). Note 1.

[ Mendacibombus avinoviellus var. eriophoroides View in CoL , var. cremeus Skorikov 1914:126 , infrasubspecific.] Bombus niveatus View in CoL <subsp.> callophenax Cockerell 1917:122, type-locality citation ‘Kashmir’. Holotype queen by monotypy USNM examined ( Williams , 1991), ‘ Kashmir’ ( Kashmir , India). Synonymised with Bombus avinoviellus (Skorikov) View in CoL by Williams (1991).

Mendacibombus avinoviellus Skorikov; Skorikov 1923 View in CoL :149; Skorikov 1933:2.

Bombus (Mendacibombus) avinoviellus (Skorikov) View in CoL ; Richards 1930:635; P.H. Williams 1991:39; P.H. Williams & Cameron 1993:126; P.H. Williams 1998:99; P.H. Williams 2004:no. 25; Cameron et al. 2007:165; Suhail et al. 2009:3 [not seen]; P.H. Williams et al. 2010:124.

[ Bombus (Mendacibombus) avinoviellus Var. View in CoL nov. subtunicatus Richards, 1930:635, infrasubspecific.]

[ Mendacibombus afghanus (Reinig) ; Tkalců 1969:193, misidentification: see below.]

Bombus (Sibiricobombus) avinoviellus View in CoL (Skorikov [cited as Cockerell]); Burger et al. 2009:457.

Bombus avinoviellus (Skorikov) View in CoL ; Sabir et al. 2011:160 [not seen].

Note 1 ( avinoviellus ). Skorikov’s original description of several females of the taxon avinoviellus cites the type locality as the Sind valley above Sonamarg up to the Zoji-La pass in the Great Himalaya. The ZISP collection studied by Skorikov contains a queen that agrees with the original description and carries the labels: (1) white, handwritten ( Cryrillic ) ‘[[ Along the river Sindu, upstream of] / Sonomarga, 2400‒3000 mt / G. Jakobson] 9‒10.VI.12 ’; (2) white, printed (Cyrillic) ‘[k. Skorikova]’; (3) red, printed ‘ Holotypus ’; (4) white, handwritten ‘avinoviellus’; (5) red, handwritten ‘ Lectotypus Mendaci- / Bombus avinoviel- / lus Skorikov / design. Podbolotsk. ’ (M. Podbolotskaya, unpublished); (6) green, printed ‘ Mendacibombus / MD# 3528 det. PHW’; (7) red, printed ‘ LECTOTYPE [female] / Mendacibombus / avinoviellus / Skorikov, 1914 / det. PH Williams 2012’; (6) white, printed ‘[female] Bombus / ( Mendacibombus ) / avinoviellus / det . PH Williams 2012’. This specimen, which is complete, is regarded as one of Skorikov’s syntypes and is designated here as the lectotype in order to reduce uncertainty in the identity and application of the name.

A second queen collected at Baltal on the upper Sind river by Jakobson in 1912 (MD#598, NHM, sent by Skorikov as part of an exchange with the NHM in 1934), which is closely similar in morphology, is designated here as a paralectotype and is interpreted as conspecific.

Etymology. The species is named after A. Avinoff, a Russian entomologist who prior to 1914 had been collecting in Central Asia. After the Russian revolution he emigrated to the USA and later became Director of The Carnegie Museum.

Taxonomy and variation. The interpretation of this species is based here on the form of the female clypeus and labrum and of the male genitalia (and between species on DNA). This disagrees with earlier concepts ( Tkalců, 1969), diagnosed originally in terms of the hair colour pattern ( Skorikov, 1910b), because the species appears to be much more variable in colour pattern than was previously understood.

Skorikov (1914) described females of the taxon avinoviellus s. str. from the Kashmir Great Himalaya as having all of the pale bands grey-white, with an indistinctly-delimited black band between the wing bases (MD#3528). The taxon callophenax has a similar colour pattern with only a slightly more distinct black band between the wing bases. In the mountains around the Vale of Kashmir, the black band between the wings varies from broad and distinct (MD#405) to almost absent, as a small black spot (MD#397).

Our COI tree shows that specimens from further east in the Himalaya (Uttarakhand MD#286 and Nepal MD#265, 266) have a similar but undescribed colour pattern in which the pale bands are brownish yellow. These have very short branch lengths between them and specimens of the taxon avinoviellus s. str. ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 : the yellowbanded taxon ‘yellowbanded’ MD#265, 266, 286 and the white-banded taxon avinoviellus s. str. MD#3863). The yellow-banded individuals are interpreted here as conspecific, as parts of B. avinoviellus s. l.. Individuals from north-western Kashmir, in Pakistan, are also yellow-banded. Some individuals from Gulmarg and similar sites in the outer Pir Panjal range appear to be intermediate, with white hair on the thorax but yellow hair on T1‒2. Grouping of specimens with these three colour patterns is supported by the associated males, which match in being yellow- or white-banded and in sharing the same diagnostic form of the male genitalia. For this COI group B. avinoviellus s. l., the form of the female labrum and clypeus is also diagnostic.

Williams (1991) reports a specimen (MD#732) from Banidas, Pakistan (in the Karakorum mountains at the north-western end of the range), that is morphologically closely similar to B. avinoviellus , but which has a colour pattern of the hair similar to B. marussinus . This, and two further specimens from the same site with a similar colour pattern (MD#4058, 4059), were in Tkalců’s collection (recently transferred to OLL) have now been examined. The darker wings, predominantly black hair of T6, and colour pattern of these specimens match the description of a series of specimens from the Karakorum by Tkalců (1969), misidentified (we believe) under the name Mendacibombus afghanus (see the comments on B. marussinus ). No male specimens with this unbanded yellow colour pattern are known from this region from which to check their distinctive genital morphology. The samples MD#4058, 4059 were sequenced, but yielded fragments with only the first 96 bp. Of the six uniquely diagnostic nucleotides for B. avinoviellus ( Table 5), only those at positions 34(A) and 79(A) are within this fragment, but both of these samples match B. avinoviellus at both positions. In contrast, diagnostic nucleotides within this range for the other nine species of Mendacibombus show no other complete matches, with only partial matches (1/2 diagnostic nucleotides) for two species: B. waltoni (position 22A) and B. margreiteri (position 59C). Both species are morphologically distinctly different from B. avinoviellus . Consequently, these results are consistent with the yellow unbanded bees being parts of B. avinoviellus , possibly as an ancestral colour pattern shared with B. marussinus .

Diagnostic description. Wings lightly clouded with brown (cf. B. himalayanus , B. marussinus ). Hair short, even and dense. Female hair colour pattern: generally black, but with pale hair (yellow and/or grey-white) intermixed especially as short hairs on the face, in a transverse band anteriorly on the thoracic dorsum and extending laterally and ventrally as white hair to the midleg base, in a transverse band posteriorly on the thoracic dorsum (scutellum; so the thoracic dorsum between the wing bases may have the hair entirely black, but usually has black and many pale hairs strongly intermixed, cf. B. himalayanus and B. marussinus , or sometimes with the pale hairs predominant), on T1, on T2 anteriorly and medially (T1 is more often yellow than T2 and the thoracic bands, so that individuals often have both yellow and white) or more rarely all of T2 pale except for a few black hairs intermixed medially along the posterior margin, T3 varying from orange only as a narrow posterior fringe to orange except for some black hairs anteriorly, and T4‒6 orange, T6 medially with black hair and often entirely black. Hindleg tibia with the corbicular fringes black, often a few hairs with orange tips. Female morphology: labrum with the basal depression very broad, the transverse ridge narrower medially than the basal depression, in the median third consistently convex throughout, not subsiding or interrupted and with few scattered punctures, slightly angled between the lateral ends, the lateral tubercles with few punctures ( Fig. 16 View FIGURES 15 ‒ 23 ) (cf. B. himalayanus , B. marussinus ). Clypeus in its central half with few scattered punctures, many more small than large punctures (cf. B. marussinus ), the small punctures spaced by about their own widths (cf. B. himalayanus ), the anterior depressions with a broad band of dense punctures that are many punctures in breadth (cf. B. himalayanus ). Male morphology: genitalia ( Fig. 29 View FIGURES 24 ‒ 35 ) with the volsella distally rounded (finger-shaped) and curled back dorsally but not anteriorly; volsella at its broadest near the midpoint of its length, the dorsal surface just distal to this point without a raised curved ridge just inside the inner margin. Gonostylus distally strongly dorso-ventrally flattened and plate-like. Penis-valve inner shoulder located at Ĺ 0.5× the length of the penis valve from the distal end to the broadest point of the spatha; penis valve proximal to the outer shoulder> 2× as broad as the penis-valve head; penis-valve head strongly laterally compressed.

Material examined. 31 queens 74 workers 70 males, from India, Nepal, and Pakistan ( Fig. 61 View FIGURES 56 ‒ 67 : NHM, NME, OLL, PW, RR, ZISP), with 8 specimens sequenced (interpretable sequences listed in Figs. 11–13 View FIGURES 11 ‒ 12 View FIGURE 13 ).

Habitat and distribution. Flower-rich alpine and subalpine grassland, at elevations 1881‒(2796)‒ 4080 m a.s.l.. A species of the Karakorum and west Himalayan mountains. Compared to B. himalayanus , the distribution of B. avinoviellus extends slightly less far to the north but further to the east and it tends to occur at lower elevation (the two species rarely occur together). Bombus avinoviellus replaces the eastern B. convexus in the lower alpine zone and wetter upper forest meadows of the western Himalaya. Regional distribution maps are available for Kashmir ( P.H. Williams 1991) and Nepal (P.H. Williams et al. 2010). The unbanded yellow taxon from the Karakorum appears to be very rare.

Food plants. Williams (1991).

Behaviour. Williams (1991), mate-searching male shown in Fig. 3. View FIGURES 1 ‒ 6 View FIGURE 7

ZISP

Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

NHM

University of Nottingham

NME

Sammlung des Naturkundemseum Erfurt

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Apidae

Genus

Bombus

Loc

Bombus avinoviellus (Skorikov)

Williams, Paul H., Huang, Jiaxing, Rasmont, Pierre & An, Jiandong 2016
2016
Loc

Bombus avinoviellus

Sabir 2011: 160
2011
Loc

Bombus (Sibiricobombus) avinoviellus

Burger 2009: 457
2009
Loc

Mendacibombus afghanus

Tkalcu 1969: 193
1969
Loc

Bombus (Mendacibombus) avinoviellus

Suhail 2009: 3
Cameron 2007: 165
Williams 1998: 99
Williams 1993: 126
Williams 1991: 39
Richards 1930: 635
1930
Loc

Bombus (Mendacibombus) avinoviellus

Richards 1930: 635
1930
Loc

Mendacibombus avinoviellus

Skorikov 1933: 2
Skorikov 1923: 149
1923
Loc

Mendacibombus avinoviellus

Skorikov 1914: 126
1914
Loc

Mendacibombus avinoviellus var. eriophoroides

Cockerell 1917: 122
Skorikov 1914: 126
1914
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