Lasioglossum (Sphecodogastra) seillean Gibbs and Packer, 2013

Gibbs, Jason, Packer, Laurence, Dumesh, Sheila & Danforth, Bryan N., 2013, Revision and reclassification of <i> Lasioglossum </ i> (<i> Evylaeus </ i>), <i> L. </ i> (<i> Hemihalictus </ i>) and <i> L. </ i> (<i> Sphecodogastra </ i>) in eastern North America (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Halictidae), Zootaxa 3672 (1), pp. 1-116 : 92-95

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3672.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:2F022557-512C-4372-AD72-FF83302FBCC2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D121A9DA-2D12-4EA1-9369-039AA611249F

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:D121A9DA-2D12-4EA1-9369-039AA611249F

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Lasioglossum (Sphecodogastra) seillean Gibbs and Packer
status

sp. nov.

Lasioglossum (Sphecodogastra) seillean Gibbs and Packer , new species

( Figs. 5P View FIGURE 5 , 43G View FIGURE 43 , 44G View FIGURE 44 , 45G View FIGURE 45 , 46G View FIGURE 46 , 68 View FIGURE 68 , 69 View FIGURE 69 , 79F View FIGURE 79 , 81D View FIGURE 81 , 87D View FIGURE 87 )

Holotype. Male. CANADA, Newfoundland , Division 1: Colliers, blueberry farm of Martin Walsh, 26 July 2006 (M. Baird) [ PCYU]; DNA Barcode voucher 06-NF-1012.

Diagnosis. Female L. seillean can be recognised by the combination of head long (L/W ratio = 1.02–1.04) ( Fig. 43G View FIGURE 43 ); mesepisternum finely rugulose (as in Fig. 76D View FIGURE 76 ); inner metatibial spur pectinate, basal teeth longer than width of rachis ( Fig. 5P View FIGURE 5 ); propodeum with lateral carina distinct, extending to dorsal margin, oblique carina strong ( Fig. 79F View FIGURE 79 ); T1 dull due to microsculpture; and T2–T3 without dense apical fimbriae ( Fig. 81D View FIGURE 81 ). In the east, L. seillean is most similar to L. boreale , L. comagenense , and L. quebecense . Lasioglossum boreale and L. comagenense have short teeth on the inner metatibial spur, not exceeding the width of the rachis ( Figs. 5M, 5N View FIGURE 5 ) and T1 polished due to lack of microsculpture ( Figs. 81A, 81B View FIGURE 81 ). Lasioglossum comagenense has a noticeably shorter head (L/W ratio = 0.93–0.96) ( Fig. 43C View FIGURE 43 ). The female of L. boreale has fine propodeal carinae ( Fig. 79C View FIGURE 79 ). Lasioglossum seillean is nearly indistinguishable from L. quebecense but averages smaller in size (5.8–6.5 mm vs. 6.5–7.0 mm).

Male L. seillean can be recognised by the combination of clypeus with yellow on distal half ( Fig. 44G View FIGURE 44 ); mandible short, not extending much beyond opposing clypeal angle; F2 long, subequal to scape; propodeal lateral carina strong; metasomal sterna nearly bare, hairs present but very short (as in Fig. 85A View FIGURE 85 ); S2–S3 with sparse punctures (as in Fig. 88A View FIGURE 88 ); metatibial base brown or with small yellow spot; and basitarsi bright yellow ( Fig. 69 View FIGURE 69 ). Males of L. boreale and L. comagenense have a large yellow patch on the metatibial base ( Figs. 54 View FIGURE 54 , 57 View FIGURE 57 ). The clypeal maculation is smaller on L. seillean ( Fig. 44G View FIGURE 44 ) than on L. boreale , L. comagenense and L. quebecense ( Figs. 44B, 44C, 44F View FIGURE 44 ). The unique shape of the retrorse lobe ( Figs. 87D, 87F View FIGURE 87 ), which is long, gently curved, parallel-sided to a rounded apex, is the most reliable character for distinguishing L. seillean males from L. boreale , L. comagenense , and L. quebecense ( Figs. 87A, 87B, 87C, 87E View FIGURE 87 ).

Description. FEMALE. Length 5.8–6.5 mm. Head length 1.67–1.91 mm. Head width 1.61–1.88 mm. Wing length 4.6–5.4 mm. (n=3)

Colour. Head and mesosoma black. Antenna black, except ventral surface of flagellum reddish brown-orange. Tegula dark reddish brown. Legs dark brown, except medio- and distitarsi reddish brown. Wing membrane hyaline, faintly dusky. Pterostigma orange-brown. Metasomal terga black-brown.

Structure. Head long (L/W ratio = 1.02–1.04). Clypeus 1/2 - 2/3 below suborbital line. Eyes convergent below (UOD:LOD = 1.09–1.16). Gena subequal to eye width. Ocelli normal. Pronotum smoothly rounded. Protibial spur with apical serrations as long as width of malus. Inner metatibial spur pectinate, teeth six, basal teeth slightly longer than width of rachis. Propodeal lateral carina reaching dorsal margin, oblique carina high, separating dorsolateral slope from posterior surface.

Surface sculpture. Supraclypeal area polished medially, punctures sparse (i=1–2.5d). Gena lineolate, postgena smoother. Mesoscutum weakly imbricate to polished; punctures dense (i≤d), except posteromedially (i=1–1.5d). Mesepisternum finely rugulose, smoother ventrally. Metapostnotum carinate-rugose. Propodeum imbricatetessellate. Metasomal terga mostly coriarious, T1 polished; punctures dense, sparser posteromedially, T2 apical impressed area impunctate medially.

Pubescence. Head and mesosoma with sparse plumose hairs. Metafemoral scopa with dense plumose hairs. Metasomal terga with relatively dense, medially-interrupted apical fimbriae. T1 with sparse, erect plumose hairs. T2–T4 basally with sparse, tomentum. Metasomal sterna with plumose scopa.

MALE. Length 5.9–7.0 mm. Head length 1.62–1.88 mm. Head width 1.55–1.80 mm. Wing length 4.2–4.9 mm. (n=3)

Colour. Head and mesosoma black. Clypeus yellow apically. Mandible brown. Labrum yellow basally. Antenna black, except ventral surface of flagellum orange, less so on F10–F11. Legs dark brown, except tarsi and apex of protibia yellow, anterior surface of protibia infused with testaceous, metatibia rarely with small yellow spot. Wing membrane hyaline. Pterostigma orange-brown. Metasomal terga dark brown, apical margins pale brown.

Structure. Head long (L/W ratio = 1.04–1.06). Clypeus 2/3–3/4 below suborbital tangent. Mandible short, reaching opposing clypeal angle. Flagellomeres, except F1, elongate, F2 longer than F1 and pedicel combined. Eyes strongly convergent below (UOD:LOD = 1.2 8–1.46). Gena clearly narrower than eye. Pronotum smoothly rounded. Propodeal lateral carina reaching dorsolateral slope.

Surface sculpture. Supraclypeal area imbricate, with sparse, shallow punctures (i=1–1.5d). Gena and postgena lineolate. Mesoscutum weakly polished, reticulate anteriorly; punctures dense (i≤d) but clearly separated posteromedially (i=1–1.5d). Mesepisternum rugulose, weakly so ventrally. Metapostnotum anastomosingly rugose. Propodeum rugulose, posterior surface rugose. Metasomal terga polished; punctures deep, close basally. T2–T6 apical impressed areas impunctate. Metasomal sterna sparsely, obscurely punctate (i=2–5d).

Pubescence. Head and mesosoma with sparse plumose hairs. Face below antennal sockets with dense tomentum, lower paraocular area obscured, supraclypeal area and clypeus partially obscured, clypeus bare on distal half. Propodeum largely bare, with scattered plumose hairs. Metasomal terga nearly bare, without apical fimbriae. T2 with narrow, basolateral patch of tomentum. Metasomal sterna nearly bare, with sparse, short, plumose hairs (≤1 OD).

Terminalia . As shown in Figs. 45G View FIGURE 45 , 46G View FIGURE 46 , 87D, 87F View FIGURE 87 . Gonostylus moderately-sized, with short setae. Retrorse lobe long, gently curved but not reflexed, with apex rounded ( Fig. 87F View FIGURE 87 ).

Biology. One of us (LP) excavated two nests of this species at the blueberry barrens in Sydney, Nova Scotia. The brood cells were gathered in a cluster, but the entire nest was in sandy soil with densely matted roots making detailed architectural study impossible. Both nests appear to have been solitary. The range of L. seillean is apparently limited to high latitudes with short flight seasons that would preclude the formation of annual eusocial colonies.

A chromosome count was obtained from a larva using the methods of Imai et al. (1977) and provided an n of 4, though given the possibility of cleptoparasitism by an unidentified species of Sphecodes that was common in the area, it cannot be stated with certainty that the count obtained was not of the parasite. This is the smallest chromosome number yet reported for halictid bees ( Packer & Owen 1989).

DNA barcodes. Ten individuals were sequenced (maximum intraspecific p-distance: 1.2%). The minimum interspecific p-distance separating L. seillean from L. comagenense and L. quebecense is 6.0% and 5.8%, respectively. Lasioglossum seillean differs from the other fulvicorne-fratellum species included here by 24 fixed substitutions: 48(T), 78(C), 141(C), 156(T), 180(T), 183(T), 204(A), 291(T), 309(A), 322(A), 333(C), 336(C), 351(A), 354(C), 375(C), 399(T), 417(C), 498(C), 538(C), 594(C), 600(C), 609(T), 633(T), and 651(T) (see Table 2).

Range. Fig. 70 View FIGURE 70 .

Paratypes. 177 (59 females, 119 males). Deposited in ACNS, CNC, CUIC, PCYU, and ROMent .

CANADA. ALBERTA: Bow R. [3 ♂♂] ; NEW BRUNSWICK: Charlotte Co.: St. Andrews; Gloucester Co. : Haut-Shippagan [1 ♀ ACNS]; Haut Tilley Rd. [3 ♀♀ ACNS]; Northumberland Co. : Neguac [1 ♀ 1 ♂ ACNS] ; NEWFOUNDLAND: Terra Nova N.P. [27 ♀♀ 7 ♂♂ PCYU]; Division 4: Harmon Field [16 ♀♀ CNC]; Division 10: Goose Bay ; [13 ♂♂ CNC] ; NORTHWEST TERRITORIES: Fort Simpson [1 ♂ CNC]; Hwy 3, nr. Rae [1 ♀ PCYU] ; NOVA SCOTIA: Sydney Barrens [1 ♀ 1 ♂ PCYU]; Inverness Co.: French Mt. , Highlands N.P. [2 ♀♀ CUIC] ; ONTARIO: Cochrane Dist.: Hearst [1 ♂ PCYU, 7 ♂♂ ROMent]; Iroquois Falls; [5 ♂♂ ROMent]; Porquis [1 ♂ ROMent]; Kenora Dist. : Red Lake [1 ♀ 1 ♂ ROMent]; Rainy River Dist. : Quetico Park [1 ♀ ROMent]; Thunder Bay Dist. : Linko [1 ♂ CUIC, 1♀ 2 ♂♂ ROMent]; Upsala [1 ♂ CUIC, 11 ♂♂ ROMent]; Timiskaming Dist. : Kirkland Lk. [1 ♀ ROMent] ; PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND: Kings Co.: Albion Cross [5 ♀♀ 2 ♂♂ ACNS]; Queens Co. : Dromore [1 ♂ ACNS]; Glenroy [1 ♀ 1 ♂ ACNS]; St. Andrews [2 ♀♀ 3 ♂♂ ACNS] ; QUEBEC: Côte-Nord Reg.: Forestville [2 ♀♀ 55 ♂♂ CNC]; Gaspésie-Îles-de-la-Madeleine Reg.: Ste. Anne des Monts ; [1 ♀ CNC] .

USA. MICHIGAN: Alger Co.: Grand Marais [4♀♀ CUIC] .

Floral records. Lasioglossum seillean is a frequent visitor of Vaccinium (Ericaceae) . Large numbers of females have been collected in blueberry fields. It has also been collected on Taraxacum (Asteraceae) and Melilotus albus Medik (Fabaceae) .

Etymology. The specific epithet is a noun in apposition and is taken from the Scots Gaelic word “seillean”, which means “ bee ”.

PCYU

The Packer Collection at York University

ACNS

Agriculture Canada Nova Scotia

CNC

Canadian National Collection of Insects, Arachnids, and Nematodes

CUIC

Cornell University Insect Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Halictidae

Genus

Lasioglossum

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