taxonID	type	description	language	source
262FD025AE2A6147FF32F2C3FCEC9101.taxon	description	The regression lines between the first shape PC and the isosize axis are clearly separated in both sexes (Figure 4). The PCA ratio spectrum separating the two species is documented in females by the ratio of eye length / interocular upper distance (EL / IDU) to labrum length / scutum-scutellum length (LL / SCL) and in males by the ratio of eye width / scutum-scutellum length (EW / SCL) to interocular lower distance / labrum width (IDL / LW). The variables flagellomere 2 (FL 2) and proximal length of the submarginal cell (CU 2 a) in females and in males are responsible for the differentiation of the shape PC 1.	en	Kratochwil, Anselm, Paxton, Robert J., Aguiar, Antonio F., Husemann, Martin (2025): Morphometric and molecular analyses support the species status of Amegilla teneriffensis (Cockerell, 1930) and A. maderae (Sichel, 1868) (Anthophila: Apidae: Anthophorinae). Zootaxa 5723 (3): 301-334, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1
262FD025AE2A6147FF32F093FD3F94AD.taxon	description	Figures 2 and 3 show the dorsal and lateral views of females and males of Amegilla quadrifasciata (European mainland), A. maderae (Madeira Archipelago) and A. teneriffensis (Canary Islands). Amegilla quadrifasciata (Figures 2 a, 2 b; 3 a, 3 b) has light brownish, partly yellowish, reddish mesoscutum hairs. The mesepisternum and the tergite bands are whitish to ivory. In contrast, A. maderae (Figures 2 c, 2 d; 3 c, 3 d) has much darker (black to reddish) hairs on the mesoscutum and mesepisternum. Furthermore, the tergite bands are reddish-orange-yellow. In contrast to A. quadrifasciata, the tergite bands of A. teneriffensis are a white and considerably broader, completely covering the entire tergite depression (Figures 2 e, 2 f; 3 e, 3 f).	en	Kratochwil, Anselm, Paxton, Robert J., Aguiar, Antonio F., Husemann, Martin (2025): Morphometric and molecular analyses support the species status of Amegilla teneriffensis (Cockerell, 1930) and A. maderae (Sichel, 1868) (Anthophila: Apidae: Anthophorinae). Zootaxa 5723 (3): 301-334, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1
262FD025AE2A6147FF32F65FFAA89285.taxon	description	The scatterplots between the first shape PC and the isosize axis are separated in females and males (Figure 4). The PCA ratio spectrum separating the two species is characterised in females by the ratio of eye length / interocular upper distance to head length / ocelloocular distance (EL / IDU: HL / OOD), and in males by the ratio of wing length / metasoma length to eye length / tegulae-scutum width (WL / MTL: EL / TSCW). The variables submarginal cell 2, length a (CU 2 a) and length of flagellomere 2 (FL 2) are responsible for the differentiation of shape PC 1 in females of the two species, and the variables length of flagellomere 2 (FL 2) and metasoma length (MTL) in males.	en	Kratochwil, Anselm, Paxton, Robert J., Aguiar, Antonio F., Husemann, Martin (2025): Morphometric and molecular analyses support the species status of Amegilla teneriffensis (Cockerell, 1930) and A. maderae (Sichel, 1868) (Anthophila: Apidae: Anthophorinae). Zootaxa 5723 (3): 301-334, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1
262FD025AE2A6147FF32F4CBFDD090BD.taxon	description	The regression lines between the first shape PC and the isosize axis are clearly separated in the two taxa for both sexes (Figure 4). The PCA ratio spectrum separating the two species is characterised in females by the ratio of interocular upper distance / interocular lower distance to labrum length / proximal length of the submarginal cell (IDU / IDL: LL / Cu 2 a), and in males by the ratio of head length / flagellomere 3 length to flagellomere 2 length / clypeus width (HL / FL 3: FL 2 / CLW).	en	Kratochwil, Anselm, Paxton, Robert J., Aguiar, Antonio F., Husemann, Martin (2025): Morphometric and molecular analyses support the species status of Amegilla teneriffensis (Cockerell, 1930) and A. maderae (Sichel, 1868) (Anthophila: Apidae: Anthophorinae). Zootaxa 5723 (3): 301-334, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1, URL: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5723.3.1
