Lasioglossum costulatum (Kriechbaumer, 1873)

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.14855376

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9C1A1C1B-B866-5D9E-9726-2714066C444B

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

Lasioglossum costulatum (Kriechbaumer, 1873)
status

 

Lasioglossum costulatum (Kriechbaumer, 1873) View in CoL

Conservation status

CR

Distribution

Lasioglossum costulatum reaches the septentrional edge of its distribution in Poland and Belgium, extending southwards to Morocco and as far east as Irkutsk ( Russia). In Belgium, this species has always been very rare and is now restricted to the Gaume Region ( Pauly and Vereecken 2018). Restoring this species’ habitat involves maintaining and expanding forest gaps in order to enhance the abundance and diversity of Campanulaceae ( Braun-Reichert et al. 2021) .

Notes

This species is mainly observed along forest edges, in thermophilic habitats such as nutrient-poor meadows, quarries and railway embankments - though one of the specimens was also collected on a wet grassland. Nests are constructed in soils rich in sand or loess ( Westrich 2018). The Campanulaceae are its preferred source of pollen ( Pesenko et al. 2000). However, we observed it on three other plant families, where it may have been foraging for nectar. Although L. costulatum is generally considered solitary, some evidence suggests it may form communal aggregations ( Pesenko et al. 2000). Females emerge from diapause in late April, while males begin flying from July onwards ( Westrich 2018).

Diagnosis

This species is one of the many Lasioglossum featuring tergites with dark hind margins and a carinate propodeum (Fig. 13 View Figure 13 ). Both males and females can be identified by the hexagonal shape of the posterior face of their propodeum, which features strong parallel wrinkles ( Pauly 2015 a).

Pauly A. 2015 a Clés Illustrées Pour L’identification des Abeilles de Belgique et des Régions Limitrophes (Hymenoptera: Apoidae) I. Halictidae. Working document for the BELBEES project. 118 p

Braun-Reichert Ralf, Rubanschi Sven, Poschlod Peter 2021 The importance of small natural features in forests — How the overgrowth of forest gaps affects indigenous flower supply and flower-visiting insects and seed sets of six Campanula species Ecology and Evolution 11 17 11991 12002 10.1002/ece3.7965

Pauly Alain, Vereecken Nicolas 2018 Les Abeilles sauvages des pelouses calcaires de Han-sur-Lesse (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) Belgian Journal of Entomology 61 1 39 http://zoobank.org/5a071f6e-1d67-4df4-8ac1-4564ba8ad879

Pesenko I. A., Banaszak J., Cierzniak T., Radchenko V. G. E. 2000 Bees of the family Halictidae (excluding Sphecodes) of Poland: taxonomy, ecology, bionomics University of Bydgoszcz, 348 pp 10.13140/RG.2.1.3185.5447

Westrich P. 2018 Die Wildbienen Deutschlands Ulmer 824 9783818601232

Gallery Image

Figure 13. Lasioglossum costulatum, ♀. 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

Halictidae

Genus

Lasioglossum