Andrena (incertae sedis) hulae Pisanty, 2022

Pisanty, Gideon, Scheuchl, Erwin, Martin, Teresa, Cardinal, Sophie & Wood, Thomas James, 2022, Twenty-five new species of mining bees (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae: Andrena) from Israel and the Levant, Zootaxa 5185 (1), pp. 1-109 : 87-88

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5185.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:D34A7F04-8EAD-4441-A859-CFD79F7740D2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7255259

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9C1E87C4-C737-FF82-FF0B-FA0CFEF4B3C0

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Andrena (incertae sedis) hulae Pisanty
status

sp. nov.

Andrena (incertae sedis) hulae Pisanty View in CoL sp. nov.

( Figs. 210–213 View FIGURES 204 –212 View FIGURES 213–221 )

Female ( Fig. 210 View FIGURES 204 –212 ).

Body length: 8.5 mm.

Colour. Head and mesosoma dark brown to black ( Figs. 210–212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Anterior side of flagellomeres 3–10 orange. Legs and metasoma brown ( Figs. 210 View FIGURES 204 –212 , 213 View FIGURES 213–221 ). Last tarsal segment orange. Wings hyaline, veins brown, stigma dark orange to brown ( Fig. 210 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Tergal marginal zones reddish basally, yellowish apically ( Fig. 213 View FIGURES 213–221 ).

Pubescence. Clypeus with short and thin whitish hair. Paraocular area with medium-lengthed white hair. Scape with short white hair. Frons with short white hair. Foveae with short whitish hair. Vertex with medium yellowishwhite hair ( Figs. 211–212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Genal area with short to medium white hair. Mesonotum, scutellum and metanotum with short to medium yellowish-white hair, mostly on periphery ( Figs. 210, 212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Mesepisternum with long white hair. Propodeal corbicula incomplete, posterodorsal fringe with long white plumose hairs, corbicular surface with medium to long white plumose hairs. Leg hair white to golden. Flocculus complete, white. Tibial scopal hairs simple, white ( Fig. 210 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Tergal discs almost hairless medially, laterally with short whitish hairs. Tergal marginal zones 2–4 with broadly interrupted bands of white hair. Terminal fringe golden ( Fig. 213 View FIGURES 213–221 ).

Head ( Figs. 211–212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). 1.2 times broader than long. Galea shagreened, matt. Labral process smooth, much broader than long, apical margin slightly arched. Clypeus moderately protuberant, strongly arched, basal half strongly and finely shagreened, apical half gradually smooth, punctation fine and dense, distance between punctures 1–1.5 puncture diameters ( Fig. 211 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Malar area length 0.2 times width of mandible base. Flagellomere 1 longer than 2+3. Frons longitudinally striated, interspersed with sparse, shallow fine punctures. Facial foveae broad, occupying slightly more than half distance between compound eye and lateral ocellus ( Figs. 211–212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Distance of fovea from lateral ocellus 1.5 times width of lateral ocellus. Ocelloccipital distance 1.4 ocellus diameters. Vertex carinate. Genal area 1.2 times as broad as compound eye ( Fig. 212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ).

Mesosoma ( Fig. 212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Dorsolateral angle of pronotum not elevated, pronotum not carinate. Mesonotum strongly and uniformly shagreened, weakly shiny, with dense, shallow but distinct, coarse crater-like punctures, distance between punctures 0.5–1 puncture diameters. Scutellum shagreened peripherally, shiny and weakly shagreened centrally, with regular (not crater-like) punctures, distance between punctures 1 puncture diameter ( Fig. 212 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Mesepisternum finely alveolate, densely and shallowly punctured, punctures merging onto underlying sculpture. Propodeal corbicula finely reticulate. Posterior part of propodeum clearly divided into basal, moderately sloping part, and apical vertical part. Posterolateral part of propodeum finely alveolate, shallowly, obliquely punctured. Propodeal triangle narrow, rugose basally, finely alveolate apically. Inner side of hind femur not carinate. Inner hind tibial spur almost straight, of uniform width. Hind pretarsal claw bidentate. Nervulus interstitial ( Fig. 210 View FIGURES 204 –212 ). Submarginal crossvein 1 meets marginal cell 4 vein widths from stigma.

Metasoma ( Fig. 213 View FIGURES 213–221 ). Tergal discs impunctate, 1–2 finely shagreened, 3–4 weakly, finely shagreened and shiny. Tergal marginal zones similarly sculptured, smooth near apex, 2–4 slightly depressed, centrally occupying 1/3–1/2 of tergum length. Pygidial plate finely alveolate, rounded apically, without elevated central area.

Male. Unknown.

Diagnosis. Andrena hulae is most similar to A. ramosa Wood , recently described from southern Spain, which is morphologically related to the subgenus Planiandrena ( Wood et al. 2022) . However, recent molecular findings show that the COI barcode of A. ramosa falls closest to species of Euandrena , questioning its subgeneric placement (TJW, unpublished results). We therefore place both A. hulae and A. ramosa as incertae sedis for the time being. Andrena hulae is similar to Planiandrena species in its short and broad labral process and its relatively broad propodeal triangle with short longitudinal rugae basally, but its fovea is substantially broader, the hind tibial spur is not broadened submedially, and the pygidial plate lacks a centrally elevated area. Compared to A. ramosa , A. hulae can be separated by its smaller body size of 8.5 mm (12 mm in A. ramosa ), its broad foveae that occupy over half the space between the compound eye and the lateral ocellus (occupying 1/3 of this space, separated from lateral ocellus by over two times diameter of lateral ocellus in A. ramosa ), propodeal triangle with short basal longitudinal rugae (without rugae basally in A. ramosa ), its flat and centrally alveolate pygidial plate (pygidial plate with smooth surface, with weakly raised longitudinal ridge in A. ramosa ), and by its weakly plumose hairs on the mesepisternum, propodeal corbiculae, flocculus, and femoral scopae (these areas with extremely long and extremely plumose hairs in A. ramosa ).

Distribution: Northern Israel.

Flight period: March.

Flower records: None.

Holotype: ISRAEL: Sde Eliezer [Sede Eli’ezer], N Rosh-Pina, 19.iii.1995, R. Kasher, ♀ ( SMNHTAU:367741).

Paratypes: ISRAEL: same as holotype (1♀) ( SMNHTAU) .

Etymology. Named after the Hula Valley in northern Israel, where the species was collected. The species epithet is an adjective.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Andrenidae

Genus

Andrena

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