Biology:Exomalopsis

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Short description: Genus of bees

Exomalopsis
Exomalopsis similis female.jpg
Exomalopsis similis
Scientific classification e
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Apidae
Tribe: Exomalopsini
Genus: Exomalopsis
Spinola, 1853
Species

~90

Exomalopsis is a genus of bees in the family Apidae. They occur in the Western Hemisphere (Neotropical and Nearctic realms).[1]

Exomalopsis analis
Exomalopsis mellipes

Biology

Bees of this genus build communal nests. Several examples have been documented in the literature. E. aburraensis, for example, has been known to build its nest alongside the beekeepers' honeybee hives. It excavates a tunnel over a meter deep which then branches into many underground pathways that lead to cells where larvae hatch and develop.[1] The California species E. nitens enters cracks in dry soil and digs chambers underground. There it creates a pile of food provisions and lays eggs on top. The larvae eat the food pile and then pupate.[2] Both E. globosa and E. similis have been noted nesting in dirt roads made of gritty red clay. The gravid female piles food in a terminal cell and then molds it into a neat loaf. She lays an egg on it and then seals the cell to allow the larva to develop within.[3]

Several Exomalopsis are associated with kleptoparasites, especially cuckoo bees. Kleptoparasitic cuckoo bees of the genera Brachynomada, Nomada, Paranomada, and Triopasites have been found using Exomalopsis nests. The newly described cuckoo bee Nomada medellinenses moves into the nests of E. aburraensis and lays its eggs there.[1]

Some species are hosts for parasitoid wasps of the family Mutillidae. E. solani is parasitized by the wasp Pseudomethoca bethae and E. fulvofasciata is host to at least two species of Timulla.[4]

Taxonomy

As of 2007 there were nearly 90 described species in the genus.[5] There are many more species known that are still undescribed.[1]

Species include:[6]

Exomalopsis pulchella
  • Exomalopsis aburraensis[1]
  • Exomalopsis aequabilis
  • Exomalopsis aequalis
  • Exomalopsis affabilis
  • Exomalopsis alexanderi
  • Exomalopsis amoena
  • Exomalopsis analis
  • Exomalopsis apicalis
  • Exomalopsis arcuata
  • Exomalopsis atlantica
  • Exomalopsis aureosericea
  • Exomalopsis auropilosa
  • Exomalopsis badioventris
  • Exomalopsis bahamica
  • Exomalopsis bakeri
  • Exomalopsis bartschi
  • Exomalopsis bechteli
  • Exomalopsis bicellularis
  • Exomalopsis binotata
  • Exomalopsis birkmanni
  • Exomalopsis boharti
  • Exomalopsis bomanii
  • Exomalopsis bruesi
  • Exomalopsis byersi
  • Exomalopsis callura
  • Exomalopsis campestris
  • Exomalopsis collaris
  • Exomalopsis comitanensis
  • Exomalopsis compta
  • Exomalopsis dasypoda
  • Exomalopsis digressa
  • Exomalopsis dimidiata
  • Exomalopsis diminuta
  • Exomalopsis fernandoi
  • Exomalopsis fulvihirta
  • Exomalopsis fulvipennis
  • Exomalopsis fulvofasciata
  • Exomalopsis fumipennis
  • Exomalopsis heteropilosa
  • Exomalopsis hurdi
  • Exomalopsis iridipennis
  • Exomalopsis jenseni
  • Exomalopsis limata
  • Exomalopsis lissotera
  • Exomalopsis mellipes
  • Exomalopsis mexicana
  • Exomalopsis minor
  • Exomalopsis morelosensis
  • Exomalopsis mourei
  • Exomalopsis neglecta
  • Exomalopsis nigrihirta
  • Exomalopsis nigrior
  • Exomalopsis notabilis
  • Exomalopsis otomita
  • Exomalopsis paitensis
  • Exomalopsis paraguayensis
  • Exomalopsis pilosa
  • Exomalopsis planiceps
  • Exomalopsis pubescens
  • Exomalopsis pueblana
  • Exomalopsis pulchella
  • Exomalopsis robertsi
  • Exomalopsis rufipes
  • Exomalopsis rufitarsis
  • Exomalopsis similis
  • Exomalopsis snowi
  • Exomalopsis solani
  • Exomalopsis solidaginis
  • Exomalopsis solitaria
  • Exomalopsis sororcula
  • Exomalopsis spangleri
  • Exomalopsis subtilis
  • Exomalopsis tarsalis
  • Exomalopsis tepaneca
  • Exomalopsis testacea
  • Exomalopsis testaceinervis
  • Exomalopsis tibialis
  • Exomalopsis tomentosa
  • Exomalopsis trifasciata
  • Exomalopsis vernoniae
  • Exomalopsis vincentana
  • Exomalopsis ypirangensis

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Velez-Ruiz, R. I. and A. H. Smith-Pardo. (2013). New species of Exomalopsis and its associated cleptoparasite Nomada from Colombia with description of the nest (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila: Apidae). ISRN Entomology 2013 865059 10 pp.
  2. Rozen, J. G. and R. R. Snelling. (1986). Ethology of the bee Exomalopsis nitens and its cleptoparasite (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae). Journal of the New York Entomological Society 94(4) 480-88.
  3. Raw, A. (1977). The biology of two Exomalopsis species (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae) with remarks on sociality in bees. Rev Biol Trop 25(1) 1-11.
  4. Aranda, R. and G. Graciolli. (2013). First report of Exomalopsis fulvofasciata (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae) as host of two Timulla species (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae). Biota Neotropica 13(4) 382-38.
  5. Michener, C. D. The Bees of the World The Johns Hopkins University Press, London. 2007. Cited in Velez-Ruiz, R. I. and A. H. Smith-Pardo. (2013). New species of Exomalopsis and its associated cleptoparasite Nomada from Colombia with description of the nest (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila: Apidae). ISRN Entomology 2013 865059 10 pp.
  6. Exomalopsis. Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS)

Further reading

Timberlake, P. H. Review of North American Exomalopsis (Hymenoptera, Anthophoridae). University of California Press. 1980. Wikidata ☰ Q4038441 entry