Bombus (Alpigenobombus) kashmirensis Friese, 1909

Williams, Paul H., An, Jiandong, Dorji, Phurpa, Huang, Jiaxing, Jaffar, Saleem, Japoshvili, George, Narah, Jaya, Ren, Zongxin, Streinzer, Martin, Thanoosing, Chawatat, Tian, Li & Orr, Michael C., 2023, Bumblebees with big teeth: revising the subgenus Alpigenobombus with the good, the bad and the ugly of numts (Hymenoptera: Apidae), European Journal of Taxonomy 892 (1), pp. 1-65 : 33-35

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.892.2283

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:07D215E7-FB43-4640-BB5B-D1AF50269AF1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10023214

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1A438786-790F-0417-9ECA-FB43FDBFFD62

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Bombus (Alpigenobombus) kashmirensis Friese, 1909
status

 

3. Bombus (Alpigenobombus) kashmirensis Friese, 1909 View in CoL View at ENA

Figs 2–3 View Figs 1‒9 , 35‒48 View Figs 19–105 , 108 View Figs 106–115

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] kashmirensis Friese, 1909 View in CoL [September: Tkalců 1974]: 673. Note 1.

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] stramineus Friese, 1909 View in CoL [September: Tkalců 1974]: 673.

Bombus tetrachromus Cockerell, 1909 View in CoL [November: Tkalců 1974]: 397.

Alpigenobombus pulcherrimus Skorikov, 1914: 128 View in CoL .

Bombus (Mastrucatobombus) mastrucatus subsp. meinertzhageni Richards, 1928: 335 View in CoL .

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] kashmirensis View in CoL ‒ redescribed by Friese & von Wagner 1910: 47.

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] stramineus View in CoL ‒ redescribed by Friese & von Wagner 1910: 47.

Alpigenobombus pulcherrimus var. [not subsp.] albidocaudatus ‒ Skorikov 1914: 129, infrasubspecific.

NOTE 1. Acceptance of B. kashmirensis as the valid name in preference to B. stramineus follows Skorikov (1923) as the First Reviser ( ICZN 1999: Article 24).

Species-taxon concept and variation

The taxon concept of the species B. kashmirensis here agrees with the recent interpretation (Williams 2022a) that it is separate from the taxon concept of the species B. rainai (see the comments below on B. rainai ), based on: (1) our PTP analysis supports independent species-level coalescents in the COI gene ( Fig. 12 View Fig ); corroborated by (2) diagnostic morphological character states (see the keys).

The PTP and morphological results ( Fig. 12 View Fig , keys) support the interpretation that the divergent colour patterns of the taxa kashmirensis s. str., stramineus , and meinertzhageni are parts of a single species ( Williams 1991). The other named taxa ( tetrachromus , pulcherrimus ) appear to be re-descriptions of this species.

Variation in the colour-pattern diagrams of B. kashmirensis in Figs 35‒48 is arranged approximately from the Hengduan and outer Himalayan ranges (e.g., Pir Panjal: Figs 35‒37, 42‒44) to the trans-Himalaya (e.g., Zanskar: Figs 39‒41, 46‒48). Bombus kashmirensis , with the white-banded colour pattern in the south (Himalaya) and east (Hengduan) more mesic parts of its range, appears to mimic the abundant B. (Melanobombus) rufofasciatus Smith, 1852 , and B. (Ml.) prshewalskyi Morawitz, 1880 ( Williams 2007: fig. 5g), whereas the yellow-banded colour pattern in the north-west (trans-Himalayan mountains) more arid parts of its range appears to mimic the abundant B. (Ml.) keriensis Morawitz, 1887 , and similar species ( Williams 2007: fig. 5j).

Type material

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] kashmirensis Friese, 1909 [September: Tkalců 1974]: 673. Lectotype by designation of Tkalců 1974: ♀ (queen) Kashmir , India ( ZMHB). Examined .

Morphological diagnosis

Female

Wings nearly clear with veins dark brown, hair medium to long, oculo-malar area shorter than broad, clypeus adjacent to the labrum slightly raised in the centre so that the transverse anterior groove is interrupted, this central area with few small punctures and more shining than the surrounding areas, oculo-ocellar area in almost its outer half with large and medium punctures (cf. B. rainai ); hair of the side of the thorax in at least its upper half and the scutellum either white or yellow, hair of T5 orange with white tips.

Male

Wings nearly clear with veins dark brown, hair medium to long, oculo-malar area shorter than broad; genitalia ( Fig. 108 View Figs 106–115 ) with the gonostylus long and distally near its midline axis convexly rounded, length on its outer side about a quarter as long as on its inner side with the two inner corners of the distal lobe rounded, the margin between them nearly straight, penis-valve head strongly recurved, the recurved hook much longer than broad, but broad and narrowing only just before the apex (cf. B. rainai ); male eye distinctly enlarged relative to female eye; hair of the side of the thorax either yellow or white with the pale hair reaching to the midleg bases, hair of T3 usually predominantly black, hair at the side of T5‒6 orange at the base but white-tipped.

Material sequenced in Fig. 12 View Fig

CHINA • 1 ♀ (worker); Sichuan, Queer Mountain ; 31.8969° N, 99.1485° E; 5 Aug. 2018; Z. Ren et al. leg.; KIB seq: QESM302006; KIB: AG#083 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Xizang, Ailashan ; 31.6142° N, 98.4803° E; 4 Aug. 2018; Z. Ren et al. leg.; KIB seq: ALSM104001; KIB: AG#085 GoogleMaps 1 ♀ (worker); Qinghai, Kunlun Pass road; 35.6917° N, 94.0533° E; 19 Aug. 2013; PW seq: PWK1; IAR: AG#084 GoogleMaps .

PAKISTAN • 1 ♁; Baltistan [Olthingthang]; 34.7093° N, 76.1208° E; 16 Sep. 2016; S. Jaffar leg.; BOLD seq: 1555G02; PW: AG#082 GoogleMaps .

Additional sequences in Fig. 10 View Fig and haplotype duplicates

CHINA • 1 ♀ (worker); Xizang, Yelanshan ; 30.1489° N, 97.3091° E; 22 Jul. 2018; Z. Ren et al. leg.; KIB seq: YLSH308001; KIB: AG#130 GoogleMaps .

Global distribution

Himalaya and Hengduan: Pakistan, India (Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim), Nepal, China (Xizang, Qinghai, Sichuan, Gansu): IAR, IOZ, KIB, NHMUK, PW, RMNH, SC, ZMHB.

This species is recorded at elevations of 2400‒4800 m in the Himalaya and trans-Himalaya, and of 2272‒4700 m in the Hengduan mountains ( Williams 1991; Williams et al. 2009, 2010; An et al. 2014). In Kashmir, Sichuan, and Gansu, B. kashmirensis occurs primarily above the tree line and high into the alpine zone (queens have been seen to forage from flowers at 4000 m in Kashmir even when it was snowing heavily, PW pers. obs.) and even in the semi-arid trans-Himalaya ( Williams 1991; Williams et al. 2009).

Behaviour

Male eye slightly enlarged relative to female eye: males show ‘cruising’ behaviour when searching for mates in Kashmir ( Williams 1991).

ZMHB

Germany, Berlin, Museum fuer Naturkunde der Humboldt-Universitaet

PW

Paleontological Collections

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Apidae

Genus

Bombus

Loc

Bombus (Alpigenobombus) kashmirensis Friese, 1909

Williams, Paul H., An, Jiandong, Dorji, Phurpa, Huang, Jiaxing, Jaffar, Saleem, Japoshvili, George, Narah, Jaya, Ren, Zongxin, Streinzer, Martin, Thanoosing, Chawatat, Tian, Li & Orr, Michael C. 2023
2023
Loc

Bombus (Mastrucatobombus) mastrucatus subsp. meinertzhageni

Richards O. W. 1928: 335
1928
Loc

Alpigenobombus pulcherrimus

Skorikov A. S. 1914: 128
1914
Loc

Alpigenobombus pulcherrimus var. [not subsp.] albidocaudatus

Skorikov A. S. 1914: 129
1914
Loc

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] kashmirensis

Friese H. & von Wagner F. 1910: 47
1910
Loc

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] stramineus

Friese H. & von Wagner F. 1910: 47
1910
Loc

Bombus mastrucatus var. [subsp.] stramineus

Friese H. 1909: 33
1909
Loc

Bombus tetrachromus

Cockerell T. D. A. 1909: 33
1909
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