Redivivoides eardleyi, Kuhlmann, 2012
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2012.34 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B4F3BFEB-60AE-4F15-BB1D-41B3E7BEC299 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14647708 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/543F31E2-5A26-4D78-A07A-674CA7997F19 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:543F31E2-5A26-4D78-A07A-674CA7997F19 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Redivivoides eardleyi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Redivivoides eardleyi View in CoL sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
Diagnosis
Females of R. eardleyi sp. nov. can be separated from other Redivivoides species by a combination of the following characters: metasomal terga black to brown, T2 sparsely punctate with minute punctures and surface between punctures smooth and shiny, white apical tergal hair bands present ( Fig. 5D View Fig ), prepygidial and pygidial fimbria dark brown to black ( Fig. 5D View Fig ). The male is unknown.
Etymology
Named after Connal D. Eardley, Pretoria, who collected this species and to honour his outstanding contribution to African bee taxonomy.
Type material ( 3 specimens)
Holotype ♀, 13 Sep. 2011, C. Eardley ( SANC). SOUTH AFRICA: N. Cape, 6 km E Pofadder , 29°06’26” S, 19°27’13” E. GoogleMaps
Paratypes SOUTH AFRICA: 1 ♀, same date as holotype ( RCMK) GoogleMaps ; 1 ♀, N. Cape, 21.6 km E Springbok [ 29°34’ S, 18°04’ E], 1006 m, 13 Sep. 2011, L. Packer ( LPCT) GoogleMaps .
Description
Female
BODY LENGTH. 11.0 mm.
HEAD. Head wider than long. Integument black. Face sparsely covered with long, whitish-grey, erect hairs, along the inner eye margins and on vertex intermixed with black hairs ( Fig. 5B View Fig ). Clypeus convex in profile, apically impunctate; medially covered with fine punctures that become gradually smaller and denser towards the clypeal margins; surface between punctures smooth and shiny ( Fig. 5B View Fig ). Malar area medially narrow, almost linear. Antenna black.
MESOSOMA. Integument black. Mesoscutal disc between punctures smooth and shiny; disc densely (i = 0.5-1.0 d) and finely punctate ( Fig. 5C View Fig ). Mesoscutum, scutellum, metanotum, mesepisternum and propodeum covered with long yellowish-white erect hairs, on the disc of mesoscutum intermixed with black hairs.
WINGS. Yellowish-brown; wing venation reddish brown.
LEGS. Integument black. Vestiture whitish to brown, scopae yellowish to dark brown.
METASOMA. Integument black, apical margins of T2 – T4 narrowly reddish-brown ( Fig. 5D View Fig ). T1 with a few long erect whitish hairs; discs of T2 – T4 sparsely covered with very short erect white to dark brown hairs; apical tergal hair bands on T1 – T4 broad and white; prepygidial and pygidial fimbriae black ( Fig. 5A, D View Fig ). T1 almost impunctate, polished and shiny, T2 – T4 shiny, with very fine, superficial and sparse punctation that becomes progressively denser on apical tergae ( Fig. 5D View Fig ).
Male
Unknown.
Distribution
There is only a single record of this species from the Karoo in the summer rainfall area ( Fig. 9 View Fig ).
Floral hosts
Unknown.
Seasonal activity
September.
SANC |
Agricultural Research Council-Plant Protection Research Institute |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Melittinae |
Tribe |
Melittini |
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