Andrena schencki Morawitz, 1866

Gérard, Maxence, Fiordaliso, William, Ferrais, Louise, Fournier, Chloé, Hairault, Malo, Lheureux, Lise, Rosa, Paolo & Ghisbain, Guillaume, 2025, Wild bee diversity of the National Park of the Semois Valley (Belgium), Biodiversity Data Journal 13, pp. e 144223-e 144223 : e144223-

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.13.e144223

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14855236

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0BC3DF53-9CCB-55B8-8CEC-7EF193DFCA61

treatment provided by

Biodiversity Data Journal by Pensoft (2025-02-12 07:28:09, last updated by Admin 2025-02-12 19:52:01)

scientific name

Andrena schencki Morawitz, 1866
status

 

Andrena schencki Morawitz, 1866 View in CoL

Conservation status

EN

Distribution

This species is found in Europe, in the Middle East and as far east as Turkmenistan ( Tomozei 2014). Andrena schencki was widespread in Belgium during the first half of the last century, but is now limited to the Ardenne and the Belgian Lorraine ( Pauly 2024). Given its preference for oligotrophic grasslands, this species may benefit from the restoration of extensive agricultural practices and the reduction of nitrogen inputs.

Notes

This species is described as associated with oligotrophic grasslands ( Westrich 2018). The only specimen we collected was found in a mesic grassland with an intermediate nutrient concentration. This observation suggests the species may occupy a broader ecological niche and that extensively managed grasslands, even with moderately elevated nutrient levels, can support its habitat requirements. Nests are typically excavated in compact, sparsely vegetated soils, such as pathways, although they can occasionally be found in lighter soils. Nests may be solitary or form aggregations of up to 100 individuals ( Westrich 2018). Females are polylectic, foraging on flowers from at least five plant families: Asteraceae , Cornaceae , Brassicaceae , Dipsacaceae , and showing a preference for Fabaceae ( Radchenko 2015) . Andrena schencki is univoltine, flying from April to July ( Peeters 2012).

Diagnosis

Andrena schencki is one of the few Belgian Andrena characterised by a red-marked metasoma (Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ). Both sexes are relatively large, measuring over 10 mm. Females lack plumose hairs on their hind tibiae and possess a shiny, strongly punctuated and short-haired second tergite, along with a dull and densely punctate clypeus. Males have a pale clypeus and pale para-ocular areas, as well as elongated mandibles that cross apically when closed ( Wood 2023).

Pauly A. Andrena - Belgique. http://www.atlashymenoptera.net/page.aspx?id=267 2024-12 - 04 T 00: 23: 57 + 00: 00

Peeters T. M. 2012 De Nederlandse bijen Knnv Uitgeverij Zeist 544 9789050114479

Radchenko V. 2015 Andrena schencki (Europe assessment). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species; e: T 19199232 A 21312675.

Tomozei B. 2014 Andrena spp (Europe assessment). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014. e. T 19199029 A 21309181. Accessed on 10 December 2024

Westrich P. 2018 Die Wildbienen Deutschlands Ulmer 824 9783818601232

Wood Thomas James 2023 The genus Andrena in Belgium: revisions, clarifications, and a key for their identification (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae) Belgian Journal of Entomology 135 1 64 http://zoobank.org/c0de84c9-606a-4f7e-9a2c-303b00f8479d

Gallery Image

Figure 4. Andrena schencki, ♀. Habitus in lateral view and head in oblique view. Scale bar: 5 mm. Photo credit: Paolo Rosa.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Andrenidae

Genus

Andrena