Megachile pseudobrevis Mitchell, 1934

Megachile brevis pseudobrevis Mitchell, 1934 Holotype female, USA: Florida (NCSU).

Diagnosis.

Megachile pseudobrevis closely resembles Megachile brevis and Megachile onobrychidis . The differences between Megachile pseudobrevis and Megachile brevis are slight. Female Megachile pseudobrevis has less black appressed pubescence on T6 than Megachile brevis . Also the scopa of Megachile pseudobrevis has less black setae than Megachile onobrychidis, with black setae being restricted to S6. Megachile pseudobrevis has more black setae than Megachile brevis, which has often only a few black setae apically on S6.

Female. Body length9-11 mm. Mandible 4-toothed, with no angulation between teeth 3 and 4 (Figure 4A). T2-3 with deep transverse basal groove, T4 with shallow basal groove. T1-5 with apical fringes of white hair covering marginal zone; T1-2 with medially interrupted fringes of white hair. T1 with white discal pubescence; T2 discal pubescence white basally, black apically; T3-5 with black discal pubescence. T6 convex basally and concave apically in profile, concave laterally in dorsal view; with black erect setae basally and black appressed pubescence. S1-5 with ivory setae; S6 with black setae (Figure 5G).

Male. Body length7-9 mm. Mandible 3-toothed.Ocellocular distance equal to ocelloccipital distance (Figure 4D). T5 with complete apical fringe of white hair covering marginal zone. T6 with tomentum; transverse carina variable in shape, usually with indistinct medial notch and asymmetrical jagged projections; true apical margin with submedial teeth closer to lateral teeth than each other (Figure 6B). Genitalia and hidden sterna resemble those of Megachile brevis (Figures 7A1-A4).

Distribution of material examined.

USA: Florida: Alachua, Duval, Monroe and Orange Counties (Mar.-Sep.); 14 females, 16 males.

Ecology.

Packer (1987) observed Megachile pseudobrevis nesting in tufts of grass, creating nests of single cells. Megachile pseudobrevis preferred the commonest flowering plant Bidens pilosa ( Asteraceae) at the site as a source for cutting nesting material, but also used petals from Eustoma exaltatum ( Gentianaceae).Nests were parasitized by the meloid beetle Nemognatha punctulata LeConte (Packer 1987).

Flower records.

Balduina angustifolia ( Asteraceae), Bidens pilosa ( Asteraceae), Eriogonum tomentosum ( Polygonaceae), Eustoma exaltatum ( Gentianaceae), Lupinus cumulicola ( Fabaceae), Vitex agnus castus ( Verbenaceae).

Comments.

Megachile pseudobrevis was originally described as a variety of Megachile brevis . It was raised to species level by Sheffield et al. (2011). This species has a limited range occurring in the southeastern United States (Figure 15).