Merodon cupreus Hurkmans, 1993
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.3897/zookeys.1203.118842 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C1A2654B-7DC3-4451-91B7-49B29304FBED |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11373362 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EA5FF18B-8936-52B8-8AC7-B7928DE3CFBE |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Merodon cupreus Hurkmans, 1993 |
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Merodon cupreus Hurkmans, 1993 View in CoL
Merodon cupreus Hurkmans, 1993: 179. View in CoL
Type locality.
Turkey, “ Kars ”. Original description was based on a male holotype and a high number of male and female paratypes (all in RMNH) ( Hurkmans 1993: 179). Holotype (designated by Hurkmans): male, Turkey, Kars ( RMNH), [specimen dry pinned]. Original labels: [ Turkey, Kars, Handere 2100–2200 m, 20 km W of Saricamiş, 1. viii. 1983, leg. J. A. W. Lucas], [Holotype of Merodon cupreus Hurkmans ] (examined).
Diagnosis.
Bumble bee mimic species (similar to species from clavipes species group) with pile on scutum longer than basoflagellomere (shorter in other species of the pruni species group); mesonotum with whitish pile except for broad black-pilose fascia between wing bases (Fig. 27 B View Figure 27 ); tergum 2 black (mostly reddish yellow in other species of the pruni group); tergum 2 with whitish to yellow pile, and terga 3 and 4 covered with yellow to reddish pilosity (Fig. 26 C View Figure 26 ); legs black; calcar on metatrochanter distinct; metafemur curved and covered with long, dense pilosity (Fig. 25 B View Figure 25 ); sternum 3 medially with distinct pilosity (Fig. 30 B View Figure 30 : marked with arrow); sternum 4 in Fig. 28 B View Figure 28 . Male genitalia in Fig. 35 View Figure 35 . Similar to Merodon clavipes and M. quadrinotatus from which it clearly differs by its short basoflagellomere, which is as long as broad (as on Fig. 24 A View Figure 24 ) (basoflagellomere> 2 × longer than wide in M. clavipes (Fig. 2 A View Figure 2 ) and M. quadrinotatus (Fig. 2 C View Figure 2 )).
Distribution and biology.
The species is solely distributed in Turkey (Fig. 34 View Figure 34 ; Suppl. material 2), including the eastern Pontic and Taurus mountains belonging to the Irano-Anatolian hotspot. These chains of high mountains form a natural barrier between the Mediterranean Basin and the dry plateaux of Western Asia. This topographically complex and extensive system of mountains and closed basins includes major parts of central and eastern Turkey. Historically, the mountains have served both as refuge and corridor between the eastern Mediterranean and western Asia, giving rise to multiple patches of local endemism. The principal habitat of the species inside the hotspot is mountainous forest steppe, supporting oak-dominant ( Quercus spp. ) deciduous forests ( CEPF 2022). Flight period: June / August. Developmental stages: not described.
RMNH |
National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis |
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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Merodon cupreus Hurkmans, 1993
Vujić, Ante, Radenković, Snežana, Likov, Laura, Tubić, Nataša Kočiš, Popov, Grigory, Gilasian, Ebrahim, Djan, Mihajla, Milosavljević, Marina Janković & Ačanski, Jelena 2024 |
Merodon cupreus
Hurkmans W 1993: 179 |