Osmia (Tergosmia) agilis Morawitz, 1875
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4778.2.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:61BA688B-E383-4A4C-A9F6-D4F53E55645A |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3847074 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9341B44A-1002-A15D-03E3-FD0AFDA2F915 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Osmia (Tergosmia) agilis Morawitz, 1875 |
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Osmia (Tergosmia) agilis Morawitz, 1875 View in CoL
Osmia agilis Morawitz, 1875: 88 View in CoL . Type material: Lectotype ♀, by designation of Zanden (1991a), “Tsjardara” ( Kazakhstan), Zoological Museum of Moscow University.
Literature records. TAJIKISTAN: Kathlon (Vakhsh), Sughd (Pendzhikent) ( Morawitz 1875; Popov 1967). TURK- MENISTAN: Balkan: Kara-Kala ( Tkalců 1974). UZBEKISTAN: Bukhara (Amu Darja), Jizzakh (Farish), Samarqand (Kara Tepe, Samarqand), Tashkent (Keles, Tashkent) ( Morawitz 1875, 1880; Tkalců 1974; Zanden 1991a).
New records. KAZAKHSTAN: South Kazakhstan: Darbaza , 40 km N Tashkent, 30.5.1994, 1♀ (leg. J. Hala- da) ; Zhambyl: Zalpak-Tobe , 42°51ʹN / 71°27ʹE, 9.5.1958, 1♀ (leg. P. Lehr) GoogleMaps . KYRGYZSTAN: Osh: 20 km N Aravan , 40.3°N / 72.5°E, 17.5.1994, 8♀, 6♂ (leg. J. Halada, M. Halada) GoogleMaps . TAJIKISTAN: Khatlon: Fakhrobod S Dushanbe, 20.5.1974, 1♀ (leg. M. Kocourek) . TURKMENISTAN: Ashgabad: Ashgabad env., 26.4.1993, 1♀ (leg. M. Halada) ; Balkan: Kara-Kala , 3.5.1989, 1♀ (leg. S. Becvar) ; Mary: Badkhyz Nature Reserve , 35°42ʹN / 61°49ʹE, 5.5.1990, 1♀ (leg. Sidtikov) GoogleMaps . UZBEKISTAN: Djizak: 5 km W Djizak, 39.9°N / 67.5°E, 23.5.1994, 1♀ (leg. J. Halada); Qashqadaryo: Derbent, 13 km SE Karchi, 1450 m, 2.5.1991, 2♂ (leg. J. Halada); Samarqand: Kara Tepe near Samarkand, 1000 m, 24.4.1978, 1♀ (leg. J. Strejcek); Sirdaryo: Czirczik, 41.1°N / 69.1°E, 28.5.1994, 1♀ (leg. J. Halada); Surxondaryo: S Babatag Mts. , 1000 m, 6.4.2003, 5♀ (leg. V. Gurko) GoogleMaps ; Tashkent: Akcza , 20 km SW Angren, 41.1°N / 70.0°E, 7.5.1994, 1♂ (leg. M. Halada) GoogleMaps .
Distribution. Central Asia (southern Turkmenistan including Kopet Dagh, eastern Uzbekistan, southern Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan).
Pollen hosts. Probably polylectic with strong preference for Fabaceae (Tab. 1); pollen hosts among the Fabaceae are species of Hedysareae (e.g. Onobrychis ) and other tribes. Additional plant families recorded in small quantities in the pollen loads analysed were Brassicaceae , Papaveraceae and Asteraceae ( Asteroideae , Cichorioideae ). The females of O. agilis possess long and apically curved bristles on the galeae of the proboscis. Such specialized bristles have evolved in several bee taxa for scraping pollen out of flowers which have their anthers concealed within narrow tubes ( Müller 1995, 2006; Parker & Tepedino 1982; Thorp 1979, 2000). However, none of the pollen hosts recorded for O. agilis so far possesses narrow-tubed flowers, rendering the function of these specialized bristles enigmatic.
Nesting biology. Unknown.
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Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Osmia (Tergosmia) agilis Morawitz, 1875
Müller, Andreas 2020 |
Osmia agilis
Morawitz, F. 1875: 88 |