2urn:lsid:arphahub.com:pub:45048D35-BB1D-5CE8-9668-537E44BD4C7Eurn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:91BD42D4-90F1-4B45-9350-EEF175B1727AZooKeysZK1313-29891313-2970Pensoft Publishers10.3897/zookeys.520.61856185Research ArticleColletidaeBiodiversity & ConservationAustraliaDNA barcoding of euryglossine bees and the description of new species of Euhesma Michener (Hymenoptera, Colletidae, Euryglossinae)HogendoornKatjakatja.hogendoorn@adelaide.edu.au1StevensMark2LeijsRemko2School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, The University of Adelaide, SA 5005South Australian Museum, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5000School of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA 5000
2015160920155204159FFB4FFDB-FF91-4443-8F5E-FFE31374FFE484C4DD1F-9C5D-4768-A9BA-2ED0E7D068485791571302201524082015Katja Hogendoorn, Mark Stevens, Remko LeijsThis is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.http://zoobank.org/84C4DD1F-9C5D-4768-A9BA-2ED0E7D06848
This paper launches an open access DNA barcoding project “AUSBS” under the
Barcoding of Life Datasystems
(BOLD). The aims of the project are to help scientists who lack the necessary morphological knowledge to identify known species using molecular markers, to aid native bee specialists with the recognition of species groups that morphologically are difficult to define, and, eventually, to assist with the recognition of new species among known species. Using integrative taxonomy, i.e. morphological comparison to type specimens in Australian museum collections combined with phylogenetic analysis of a fragment of the
mitochondrial DNA cytochrome c oxidase subunit I
(mtCOI) gene sequences led to the recognition of four new species of Euhesma Michener (Hymenoptera: Colletidae: Euryglossini) collected during intensive surveys in remote Australian conservation areas, which are described. The new species are E.micans, E.lyngouriae, and E.aulaca in a species group associated with Eremophila flowers, and E.albamala in the walkeriana species group.
barcodingspecies discoveryeuryglossine beesBush Blitz surveyconservationAustralian Biological Resources Study, Australian GovernmentCitation
Hogendoorn K, Stevens M, Leijs R (2015) DNA barcoding of euryglossine bees and the description of new species of Euhesma Michener (Hymenoptera, Colletidae, Euryglossinae). ZooKeys 520: 41–59. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.520.6185
Introduction
Australia is facing a dramatic and unprecedented loss of biodiversity (Ritchie et al. 2013). However the main substance for this contention is derived from data on native vegetation (Bradshaw 2012) and vertebrates (Department of the Environment 2009). Despite the numerical dominance of invertebrates, their fundamental importance in natural ecosystems and their services to agricultural production (Tscharntke et al. 2012), changes in their biodiversity are not well documented in Australia. This lack of information about the conservation status of Australian invertebrates is at least partly caused by a lack of knowledge of taxonomy, distribution and population dynamics of Australian invertebrate fauna (New and Sands 2004). What is not known cannot be monitored.
Australian native bees serve as a case in point. Despite their environmental and economic importance as pollinators of native plants (e.g. Houston et al. 1993), and as ecosystem services providers for crop pollination worldwide (Garibaldi et al. 2013) and in Australia (Keogh et al. 2010), only an estimated two-thirds of the Australian bee species are as yet known to science (Batley and Hogendoorn 2009). Opportunities to ameliorate this situation are constrained by a shortage of funding and career prospects for taxonomists. Hence, species may become extinct before they have been recognized.
To make native bees more accessible to the scientific community, an open access project “AUSBS” has been initiated in the Barcoding of Life Datasystems (BOLD, Ratnasingham and Hebert 2007). The aim of the project is twofold. Firstly, it will allow scientists with molecular capability but insufficient knowledge of bee taxonomy and systematics to recognize species and document local biodiversity of native bees. Secondly, for Australian native bee taxonomists, it contributes to integrative taxonomic approaches, such as elucidation of related species and clarification of problematic species groups, association of the sexes within one species, the association of larvae with adults and the identification of new species (Gibbs 2009; 2011; Packer et al. 2009; Schmidt et al. 2015).
Naturally, this initiative will only be successful if there is a wide coverage of species in the barcoding database. It is intended to regularly update the database with entries of additional species. So far, 271 sequences have been added to the project, covering 120 species in four of the five Australian bee families (Megachilidae, Apidae, Colletidae and Halictidae) that were collected during Bush Blitz surveys – intensive short-term surveys of remote, protected areas funded by the Australian Federal Government (Department of the Environment 2010).
In this publication the results of DNA barcoding are focused on species within the Euryglossinae (Colletidae). This subfamily has been relatively well studied through descriptions of new species by Houston (1992) and numerous revisions of genera by Exley (1998; 2001; 2002; 2004) and keys to the species are available for several genera and species groups. The DNA sequence data submitted to BOLD was used to assist in delineating species into species-groups in the genus Euhesma (Michener), (1965) and to identify the sexes that comprise a species. Subsequent morphological comparison with type specimens allowed the recognition of four new species, which are described. The species selected for description belong to two well-delineated species groups within Euhesma: the walkeriana species group (Exley 2001), and the group associated with Eremophila (Myoporaceae; Exley 1998). Brief morphological characteristics of these groups are given below.
Methods
The bee specimens studied in this paper were collected during six intensive short term (1–2 week) Bush Blitz surveys (Department of the Environment 2010), at various remote locations in Australia (AUSBS 2014). Coordinates of the locations are given in decimal degrees (Suppl. material 1, Table 1). The species were caught mainly on flowering plants using a hand net, but on occasion a vehicle net or malaise traps were used. The bees were killed by freezing, pinned within a day of capture and sorted into morpho-species.
For DNA analyses a single middle leg was removed from up to five specimens per morpho-species. These legs were stored in 100% ethanol to allow preservation of the DNA, and submitted to BOLD for DNA barcoding using the cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 gene. Specimen details, including collecting dates and locality information can be accessed in BOLD under the project Australian Bee Survey (accession numbers AUSBS001-12 to 190-12 and AUSBS191-13 to 380-13, e.g. http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_RecordView?processid=AUSBS131-12, and http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_RecordView?processid=AUSBS205-13). Using only BOLD BIN compliant sequence data (Ratnasingham and Hebert 2007) as input, species were delineated using Neighbor-joining trees generated by BOLD and uncorrected sequence divergence data were calculated using PAUP* version 4.0b8 (Swofford 2001). A phylogenetic tree of the barcoded data was generated using MrBayes version 3.2 (Ronquist et al. 2012).
We attempted to key all collected euryglossine specimens to species. The specimens were compared to all type specimens and all other relevant reliably named material at the Queensland Museum, the Western Australian Museum, the Australian National Insect Collection, and the South Australian Museum. Based on these morphological comparisons, several species, including four species in the genus Euhesma, were identified as new. These four species are described here.
The descriptions of the species and the morphological terminology follow the format used by Exley (2001) for the walkeriana species group and Exley (1998) for the species associated with Eremophila (Myoporaceae), to allow easy comparison with the other species in the same species groups. Stereomicroscope with step-less zoom and an eyepiece micrometer were used to take relative measurements of the head (following Houston 1990), whereby head width was set to 50 units.
Abbreviations
BOLD
Barcoding of Life Database
SAMA
South Australian Museum, Adelaide
WAM
Western Australian Museum
ResultsMolecular delineation of the taxa
BOLD barcoding of Euryglossinae resulted in DNA barcode data for 87 specimens comprising 40 species. Of these, morphological examination resulted in the identification of 17 species, 6 species were recognized as new and 17 species were identified to genus or species group level (Suppl. material 2, Fig. 1). The molecular delineation matched the morphologically identified genera and species groups for the species in the genera Euryglossa, Euryglossula, Euryglossina, Pachyprosopis, Hyphesma, Xanthesma, Pachyprosopis, and some species groups within Euhesma. However, Euhesma and Callohesma appear to be paraphyletic (Suppl. material 2, Fig. 1).
Phylogenetic relationships among Euhesma species collected on Eremophila flowers, based on BOLD sequence data, analysed using MrBayes (GTR-inv+gamma, partitioned by codon, 8M generations). Posterior probabilities for nodes are shown when > 0.7. The species described in this publication are underlined. The three digits preceding taxon names refer to Barcoding of Life Database: AUSBS###-12/13 specimens (AUSBS 2014).
https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/57105New species
A number of specimens were identified to belong to Euhesma species groups that previously were revised by Exley (1998, 2001). Morphological comparison of these specimens with species descriptions and with type material in the above mentioned Australian museum collections showed that, among a number of known species, five of the Euhesma species did not match with any of the descriptions nor with any of the examined type specimens. Molecular and morphological data showed that four of these species belong to existing species groups. These four species are described in the systematics section of this paper.
One of the four new species described here belongs to the Euhesmawalkeriana-species group (Exley 2001, Suppl. material 2, Fig. 1). The pairwise uncorrected sequence divergence between the new species (E.albamala sp. n.) and the only other barcoded species (E.bronzusExley 2001) in this group varied between 5.0–6.9%.
Three other new species belong to a group of Euhesma species that are associated with flowers of Eremophila (Exley 1998). Pairwise uncorrected sequence divergence between phylogenetic sister species in this group are: E.sulcataExley 1998 vs. E.aulaca sp. n. 5.0-6.1%; E.lyngouriae sp. n. vs. E.micans sp. n. 5.8–6.1%; and, E.aurataExley 1998 vs. E.micans sp. n. 6.0–6.3%. Because the data sets for the above species groups are incomplete, the presented divergence values are not necessarily comparisons with phylogenetically closest sister species.
While the molecular results group a fifth species of Euhesma, represented by a single barcoded male (RL1788A-AUSBS065) and some additional male and female specimens, with Euhesma species caught on Eremophila, it has a number of characters that are not consistent with this group, i.e. head and mouth parts not elongated and not caught on Eremophila. Thus, this species did not fit into any of the other known Euhesma groups and therefore the description was deferred until additional data allow improved justification for the position of this species relative to other Euhesma species.
SystematicsFour new species of Euhesma Michener
Within the subfamily Euryglossinae, the genus Euhesma Michener contains a large number (65) of highly diverse species (Michener 2007). The genus was erected by Michener (2000) as a “dumping ground” (Exley 2001) for species that do not fit easily elsewhere. As a result, the genus is difficult to delineate (Exley 2001, 2004). To provide more structure and delineation within the genus, Exley (1998, 2001, 2004) divided the genus into a series of species groups, which so far account for approximately half of the species included in the genus. These groups include the walkeriana species group (15 species; Exley 2001), the acantha species group (three species; Exley 2004), and three groups associated with the plant Eremophila (Exley 1998): the atra, alicia and coppinensis species groups (20 species combined).
A new species of Euhesma in the walkeriana species group
The fifteen known species in the walkeriana species group (Exley 2001) are small (4–6 mm), black and or with metallic sheen, often marked with yellow. Heads are wider than long with antennae low down on the face so that subantennal sutures are absent or almost so. While similar to Xanthesma (subgenusChaetohesma), the walkeriana group differs from this subgenus in the following characters: the facial foveae are straight and do not curve towards lateral ocelli, the pronotum is relatively short and the basitarsi of the forelegs do not bear long, stiff setae (Exley 2001).
As only a single species is added to this group, we do not produce a modified key, but suggest modifying the key produced by Exley (2001) by inserting additional couplets after couplet 3 as follows:
Holotype: ♀, RL1807C, Cane River Conservation Park, Western Australia, 22.0936°S, 115.3507°E, 26 June 2011, R. Leijs, on flowers of a red flowering Grevillea (WAM). BOLD: AUSBS082-12. Paratypes: ♂, RL1811, same date and locality as holotype (WAM). BOLD: AUSBS009-12; 4♀, all same date and locality as holotype (SAMA 32-033287, -288, -289, -290).
Diagnosis.
Most like E.spinola; however, the combination of the white mandibles with dark tips and the simple claws distinguishes this from all other species. The absence of both pothook and clubbed setae is a character shared with E.lobata, E.spinola and E.walkeriana.
Description.
Female. Length approximately 5.0 mm; wing length about 3.2 mm. Head width 1.5 mm. Relative head measurements: width 50, length 41; clypeal length 11; lower interocular distance 30; upper interocular distance 28; interantennal distance 8; antennocular distance 7; interocellar distance 10; ocellocular distance 8.
Supraclypeal area, frons and mesosoma with metallic bronze-green sheen; mandibles translucent white with dark tips; labrum brown; legs amber with coxae and tibiae dark brown, and hind basitarsi pale yellow; face with long white hairs; forelegs with coxal lobes weakly developed with long hyaline unbranched setae; clubbed and pothook setae absent; hind basitibial plate with carina; hind-tibia with a row of tubercles beyond basitibial area; claws simple; metasoma brown with posterior margins of terga translucent, creating a banded effect; pygidial plate broadly spathulate.
Male. Length approximately 3.8 mm; wing length approximately 3 mm. Head width 1.2 mm. Relative head measurements: width 50, length 45; clypeal length 10; lower interocular distance 30; upper interocular distance 30; interantennal distance 8; antennocular distance 7; interocellar distance 10; ocellocular distance 8. Coloration and pubescence as in female, but pronotum with metallic purple sheen; metasoma dark brown with posterior margins of terga translucent. The apical five flagellar segments of the male look crumpled, however this could be an artifact. Terminalia as in Fig. 3A–D.
Euhesmaalbamala sp. n.: A–D Holotype female: A dorsal B lateral C head lateral D head frontal E–H Allotype male: E dorsal F lateral G tergites H head frontal. Fore coxae female.
Euhesmaalbamala sp. n.: A–D Allotype male genital structures: A genital ventral B genital dorsal C S7+S8 ventral D S7+S8 dorsal. Scale bars: 200 µm.
https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/57107Etymology.
The specific name refers to the white mandibles.
Three new species of Euhesma associated with Eremophila
The bees in the three known species groups associated with Eremophila, the atra (eight species), the alicia (eight species) and the coppinensis (four species) species groups, have modified heads and/or labial palps that suggest foraging on narrow, tubular flowers (Exley 1998). The distinction between the species groups is based on the total length of the labial palps, and on the relative length of segment 2 and 4 of these palps (Exley 1998). Of the three new species with similar adaptations described here, two species, i.e. E.micans and E.lyngouriae belong in the atra species group. The remaining new species, E.aulaca, belongs in the alicia species group.
To allow easy identification of the Euhesma species associated with Eremophila, Exley’s (1998) key to the species of Euhesma collected on Eremophila is modified to incorporate the three new species.
Key to the species of Euhesma collected on Eremophila
1
Labial palps enormously extended, nearly as long as or longer than head
2
–
Labial palps much shorter than head
atra-group 14
2(1)
Labial palps with segment 2 much shorter than segment 4
alicia-group 6
–
Labial palps with segment 2 subequal to or longer than segment 4
coppinensis-group 3
3(2)
Supraclypeal area and clypeus medianly concave; body length about 5 mm
E.walkeri
–
Neither supraclypeal area nor clypeus medianly concave; body length about 6 mm
4
4(3)
Labial palps with segments 2 and 4 subequal in length
5
–
Labial palps with segment 2 clearly longer than segment 4
E.coppinensis
5(4)
Labial palps longer than head
E.macrayae
–
Labial palps as long as head
E.newmanensis
6(2)
Labial palp segment 3 clearly longer than segment 4
7
–
Labial palp segment 3 not clearly longer than segment 4
8
7(6)
Supraclypeal area, clypeus medianly and frons medianly concave
E.pantoni
–
Supraclypeal area, clypeus and frons not concave
E.alicia
8(6)
Labial palp segments 3 and 4 together much shorter than head
9
–
Labial palp segments 3 and 4 together about as long as head
11
9(8)
Upper margin of clypeus indistinct
E.aulaca sp. n.
–
Upper margin of clypeus distinct
10
10(9)
Body length about 5 mm
E.yellowdinensis
–
Body length about 6 mm
E.wiluna
11(8)
Tibiae of all legs golden
E.cuneifolia
–
Tibiae of all legs mostly dark brown
12
12(11)
Fronto-clypeal suture clearly evident
E.meeka
–
Fronto-clypeal suture not clearly evident
13
13(12)
Clypeus with a median longitudinal furrow
E.sulcata
–
Clypeus without a median longitudinal furrow
E.granitica
14(1)
Only known from Northern Territory and Queensland
E.sturtiensis
–
Only known from Western Australia and South Australia
15
15(14)
Tibiae, tarsi and terminal gastral terga golden brown
16
–
Tibiae, tarsi and terminal gastral terga predominantly dark brown
17
16(15)
First recurrent vein distal to first submarginal crossvein
E.aurata
–
First recurrent vein interstitial with first submarginal crossvein
E.lyngouriae sp. n.
17(15)
Labial palp longer than antennal flagellum
18
–
Labial palp not longer than antennal flagellum
19
18(17)
Supraclypeal area almost glabrous and highly polished
E.symmetra
–
Supraclypeal area neither glabrous nor polished
E.nalbarra
19(17)
Dorsal surface of clypeus concave medianly (indented)
E.atra
–
Dorsal surface of clypeus with a slight median longitudinal furrow
E.scoparia
–
Dorsal surface of clypeus in no way concave
20
20(19)
Labial palps clearly longer than maxillary palps
E.leonora
–
Labial palps and maxillary palps about equal in length
Holotype: ♀, SAMA 32-03385, Bon Bon Station, South Australia, 30.5250°S, 135.5917°E, 27 October 2010, R. Leijs, on flowers of Acaciavictoriae (SAMA). BOLD: AUSBS135-12. Paratype: ♂, SAMA 32-03386, same date and locality as holotype (SAMA). BOLD: AUSBS136-12.
Diagnosis.
Most like E.leonora; however this is the only species in which the frons above the antennae is shining, and the facial fovae are narrow and not curved towards the ocelli.
Description.
Female. Length approximately 4.5 mm; wing length approximately 3.1 mm. Head width 0.9 mm. Relative head measurements: width 50; length 64, clypeal length 17; lower interocular distance 32; upper interocular distance 33; interantennal distance 13; antennocular distance 5; interocellar distance 16; ocellocular distance 10. Anterior margin of clypeus truncate, upper margin slightly concave; other areas of clypeus and frons convex with depressions centrally, around the anterior ocelli and antennal implants; lower part of facial fovae broadened, upper part narrow, not bent towards ocelli; antennal scapes anteriorily flattened; malar space short; labial palp segments increasing in length in the order 2, 1, 3, 4. Clypeus and frons above antennae shiny with punctures wide apart; facial fovae, interocellar area and scutum with dense reticulation and dull.
Head black; antennae brown with flagella yellowish ventrally; labial palp segments 1,2 dark brown, segments 3, 4 light brown; legs yellowish with femora dark brown. First recurrent vein of forewing interstitial with first submarginal crossvein. Scattered long white hairs on frons, clypeus, antennal scapes, vertex, mandibles, posterior genae, sides of thorax, venter and gastral tergum 5.
Male. Length approximately 3.6 mm; wing length approximately 2.6 mm. Head width 0.8 mm. Relative head measurements: width 50; length 57, clypeal length 24; lower interocular distance 29; upper interocular distance 34; interantennal distance 10; antennocular distance 9; interocellar distance 14; ocellocular distance 10. Forewings and labial palps as in female; final three flagellar segments with indentations ventrally; inner hind tibial spur finely pectinate; frons above antennae shining with punctures wide apart. All labial segments dark; legs dark brown with fore tibia and all tarsae yellowish. Terminalia as in Fig. 5A–E.
Euhesmamicans sp. n.: A–E Holotype female: A dorsal B lateral C head lateral D head frontal E mouthparts F–I Allotype male: F dorsal G lateral H head lateral I head frontal.
Euhesmamicans sp. n.: A–E Allotype male genital structures: A genital dorsal B genital ventral C S7 dorsal D S7 ventral E S8 dorsal. Scale bars: 200 μm.
Holotype: ♀, SAMA 32-033284, Bon Bon Station, South Australia, 30.2389°S, 135.5098°E, 26 October 2010, R. Leijs, on flowers of Swainsonastipularis (SAMA). BOLD: AUSBS137-12.
♂, unknown.
Diagnosis.
Most like E.aurata, however, forewing first recurrent vein interstitial with first submarginal crossvein, margin between clypeus and supraclypeal area lacking furrow, all abdominal segments amber, lacking brown bands.
Description.
Female. Length approximately 6.0 mm; wing length approximately 3.5 mm. Head width 1.6 mm. Relative head measurements: width 50; length 50; clypeal length 14; lower interocular distance 28; upper interocular distance 32; interantennal distance 12; antennocular distance 6; interocellar distance 12; ocellocular distance 8. Anterior margin of clypeus truncate, upper margin slightly concave, lacking median furrow; frons with median area elevated; facial fovae broad, upper part slightly bent towards ocelli; antennal scapes anteriorily flattened; malar space short; labial palp segments increasing in length in the order 1 = 3, 2. Clypeus and frons above antennae; facial fovae interocellar area and scutum with dense reticulation and dull. Head black; antennae brown with flagella yellowish ventrally; labial palp segments 1 dark brown, 2 and 3 yellowish; legs and gaster amber, tergal fovae and fore femora posteriorly dark brown. First recurrent vein of forewing interstitial with first submarginal crossvein. Scattered long white hairs on frons, clypeus, antennal scapes, vertex, mandibles, posterior genae, sides of thorax, venter and gastral tergum 5.
Holotype: ♀, SAMA 32-033281, Bon Bon Station, South Australia, 30.8440°S, 135.5389°E, 27 October 2010, R Leijs (SAMA). BOLD: AUSBS133-12.
Paratype(male). ♂, SAMA 32-033282, same date and locality as holotype. Paratypes: 3♀, Bon Bon Station, South Australia, 30.7416°S, 135.3665°E, on Eremophilascoparia; 1♀, Bon Bon Station, South Australia, 30.5250°E, 135.5917°E; 7♀+1♂ in ethanol RL1636 all same date as holotype (SAMA). BOLD: AUSBS131,2,4-12.
Diagnosis.
The species is most like E.yellowdinensis, but the clypeus has a distinctive deep median furrow and the total length of the labial palps is only slightly shorter than the head.
Description.
Female. Length approximately 5.5 mm; wing length approximately 3.5 mm. Head width 1.6 mm. Relative head measurements: width 50; length 50; clypeal length 14; lower interocular distance 28; upper interocular distance 32; interantennal distance 12; antennocular distance 6; interocellar distance 12; ocellocular distance 8. Clypeus with deep median furrow, anterior margin truncate, upper margin indistinct; facial fovae broad, upper part slightly bent towards ocelli; malar space short; labial palp segments increasing in length in the order 1,2,3=4. Clypeus and frons above antennae, interocellar area and scutum with dense reticulation; clypeus and supraclypeal area shining, frons, paraocular areas and scutum dull. Head black; antennae brown with flagella yellowish ventrally; labial palp segments 1 and 2 dark brown, 3 and 4 ribbon-like, yellowish; all femora and tibiae of middle and hind legs medially dark brown, fore tibiae, all tarsi and remaining parts yellow; gaster dark brown. Marginal zones of metasoma wide and translucent. Forewing with first recurrent vein almost interstitial with first submarginal crossvein. Scattered long white hairs on frons, clypeus, antennal scapes, vertex, mandibles, posterior genae, sides of thorax, venter and gastral tergum 5, pygidial fimbria pale orange.
Male. Length approximately 5.2 mm; wing length approximately 3.6 mm. Head width 1.2 mm. Relative head measurements: width 50; length 60, clypeal length 17; lower interocular distance 22; upper interocular distance 30; interantennal distance 8; antennocular distance 5; interocellar distance 12; ocellocular distance 9. Forewings, labial palps and other characters as in female; inner hind tibial spur roughly pectinate; Terminalia as in Fig. 8A–E.
Euhesmaaulaca sp. n.: A–D, I Holotype female: A dorsal B lateral C head lateral D head frontal I mouthparts E–H: Allotype male E dorsal F lateral G head ventral H head frontal.
Euhesmaaulaca sp. n.: A–E Allotype male genital structures: A genital dorsal B genital ventral C genital lateral D S7 dorsal E S8 dorsal. Scale bars: 200 μm.
https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/57112Remarks.
Exley (1998) distinguishes the species from group 1 (the alicia species group) from those of groups 2 and 3 on the basis of the length of the labial palps, which are substantially shorter than the head in the species of group 1, and longer than the head in groups 2 and 3. Although the labial palps of female E.aulaca are shorter than the head, the difference in length is only slight, while the shape and length of the labial palp segments are like other species in the alicia species group. Based on molecular and morphological data, E.aulaca has been classified in the alicia species group, and the first couplet of the key has been modified to include this species.
Etymology.
The specific name means ‘with a furrow’, referring to the deep median furrow in the clypeus.
Discussion
DNA barcoding has been used to associate the sexes of species. Furthermore, we used integrative taxonomy (Gibbs 2009; 2011) was used to identify species that were new to science. Four new species of Euhesma were found and described.
Despite the small size of the present molecular database, both in terms of numbers of species and numbers of nucleotides involved, it provides some insights with respect to validity of the Euhesma groups described by Exley (1998, 2001), of Euhesma as a genus, and of some other euryglossine clades.
While Exley (1998) noted that the Euhesma species groups associated with Eremophila would not necessarily be monophyletic, the molecular data so far support monophyly. The limited molecular data (Fig. 1) also support the alicia (group 1) and atra (group 2) species groups as recognized by Exley (1998). However, it should be noted that molecular data are only available for six of the 23 described species, and do not as yet include any representatives of the coppinensis species group.
By contrast, and in spite of the fact that the database is far from complete, the COI phylogeny presented here (Suppl. material 2, Fig. 1) suggests that Euhesma as a genus is paraphyletic. This is not surprising, as the genus was erected by Michener (1965) to include species that did not fit elsewhere, and Michener himself (2007) suggested that Euhesma could be paraphyletic. It is envisaged that with the addition of identified species and additional DNA sequences based on mitochondrial as well as nuclear genes, eventually a robust molecular and morphological revision of euryglossine genera currently grouped with Euhesma should be possible.
Support was also found for some other euryglossine clades. Although results of phylogenetic analyses based on just a small fragment of mitochondrial DNA (used here as the ‘barcoding region’) are often not informative above genus level, some well supported clades (posterior probabilities > 0.8) combine species within the genera Euryglossula, Euryglossina and Pachyprosopis, of which their sister clade appears to be the Euhesmawalkeriana species group.
The creation of an open access molecular DNA barcoding project of Australian native bees enhances possibilities for scientists with molecular capabilities to document bee biodiversity (Schmidt et al. 2015) and will encourage and facilitate taxonomic work. The accession codes can also be included in other databases, such as Atlas of Living Australia and PaDil Australian Pollinators. The concatenation of molecular and morphological information for species discovery is becoming more accepted in recent years (e.g. Gibbs 2009; 2011; Schmidt et al. 2015), and will lead to better outcomes in our understanding of Australian native bees and their conservation.
Acknowledgements
This paper would not have been completed without the support of the Bush Blitz program provided through ABRS. We thank Jo Harding, Kate Gillespie, Mim Jambrecina and the other members of the Bush Blitz team for their fabulous support in the field. We thank Susan Wright (QM), Nicole Fisher (ANIC), Brian Hanich (WAM) and Terry Houston (WAM) for providing access to the collections, Alexis Tindall for excellent photographic assistance, and Wiebe Hogendoorn for linguistic advice. This work was supported by a Bush Blitz Tactical Taxonomy Grant from the Australian Government through ABRS.
ReferencesAUSBS (2014) http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_RecordView?processid=AUSBS131-12, and http://www.boldsystems.org/index.php/Public_RecordView?processid=AUSBS205-13 [accessed 30 July 2014] BatleyMHogendoornK (2009) Diversity and conservation status of native Australian bees.40: 347–354. doi: 10.1051/apido/2009018BradshawCJA (2012) Little left to lose: deforestation and forest degradation in Australia since European colonization.5: 109–120. doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtr038Department of the Environment (2009) http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/sprat/public/publicthreatenedlist.pl?wanted=fauna [accessed 30 July 2014] Department of the Environment (2010) http://www.bushblitz.org.au/ [accessed 30 July.2014] ExleyEM (1998) New Euryglossa (Euhesma) bees (Hymenoptera: Colletidae: Euryglossinae) associated with the Australian plant genus Eremophila (Myoporaceae).18: 419–437ExleyEM (2001) The walkeriana species-group of Euhesma Michener (Hymenoptera: Colletidae: Euryglossinae).40: 102–112. doi: 10.1046/j.1440-6055.2001.00214.xExleyEM (2002) Bees of the Euhesmacrabronica species-group (Hymenoptera: Colletidae: Euryglossinae).21: 203–211. ExleyEM (2004) A new group of Euryglossine bees from Australia (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Colletidae).77: 796–804. doi: 10.2317/e-17.1GaribaldiLASteffan-DewenterIWinfreeRAizenMABommarcoRCunninghamSAKremenCCarvalheiroLGHarderLDAfikOBartomeusIBenjaminFBoreuxVCariveauDChacoffNPDudenhoefferJHFreitasBMGhazoulJGreenleafSHipolitoJHolzschuhAHowlettBIsaacsRJavorekSKKennedyCMKrewenkaKMKrishnanSMandelikYMayfieldMMMotzkeIMunyuliTNaultBAOtienoMPetersenJPisantyGPottsSGRaderRRickettsTHRundlofMSeymourCLSchueeppCSzentgyoergyiHTakiHTscharntkeTVergaraCHVianaBFWangerTCWestphalCWilliamsNKleinAM (2013) Wild Pollinators Enhance Fruit Set of Crops Regardless of Honey Bee Abundance.339: 1608–1611. doi: 10.1126/science.1230200GibbsJ (2009) Integrative taxonomy identifies new (and old) species in the Lasioglossum (Dialictus) tegulare (Robertson) species group (Hymenoptera, Halictidae)., 1–38. GibbsJ (2011) Revision of the metallic Lasioglossum (Dialictus) of eastern North America (Hymenoptera: Halictidae: Halictini)., 1-+. HoustonTF (1992) Three new monolectic species of Euryglossa Euhesma from Western Australia (Hymenoptera, Colletidae).15: 719–728. HoustonTFLamontBBRadfordSErringtonSG (1993) Apparent mutualism between Verticordianitens and V.aurea (Myrtaceae) and their oil-ingesting bee pollinators (Hymenoptera: Colletidae).41: 369–380. doi: 10.1071/BT9930369KeoghRRobinsonAMullinsI (2010) Pollination aware - The real value of pollination in Australia. In: RIRDC (Ed.) . RIRDC, Canberra. MichenerCD (1965) A classification of the bees of the Australian and South Pacific regions.130: 1–362. http://hdl.handle.net/2246/1124NewTRSandsDPA (2004) Management of threatened insect species in Australia, with particular reference to butterflies.43: 258–270. doi: 10.1111/j.1326-6756.2004.00434.xPackerLGibbsJSheffieldCHannerR (2009) DNA barcoding and the mediocrity of morphology.9: 42–50. doi: 10.1111/j.1755-0998.2009.02631.xRatnasinghamSHebertPDN (2007) BOLD: The Barcode of Life Data System (www.barcodinglife.org).7: 355–364. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-8286.2006.01678.xRitchieEGBradshawCJADickmanCRHobbsRJohnsonCNJohnstonELLauranceWFLindenmayerDMcCarthyMANimmoDGPossinghamHHPresseyRLWatsonDMWoinarskiJ (2013) Continental-Scale Governance and the Hastening of Loss of Australia’s Biodiversity.27: 1133–1135. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12189RonquistFTeslenkoMvan der MarkPAyresDDarling,AHöhnaSLargetBLiuLSuchardMHuelsenbeckJ (2012) Efficient Bayesian phylogenetic inference and model choice across a large model space.61: 539–542. doi: 10.1093/sysbio/sys029SchmidtSSchmid-EggerCMorinièreJHaszprunarGHebertPDN (2015) DNA barcoding largely supports 250 years of classical taxonomy: identifications for Central European bees (Hymenoptera, Apoidea partim).15: 985–1000. doi: 10.1111/1755-0998.12363SwoffordD (2001) . Sinauer, Sunderland, MA. TscharntkeTCloughYWangerTCJacksonLMotzkeIPerfectoIVandermeerJWhitbreadA (2012) Global food security, biodiversity conservation and the future of agricultural intensification.151: 53–59. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2012.01.068Supplementary materials10.3897/zookeys.520.6185.suppl1902780497EC587-D33C-5512-949F-F2A3F3450E3E
Type localities of new species
occurence
localities where type specimens where caught.
https://binary.pensoft.net/file/56703This dataset is made available under the Open Database License (http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/). The Open Database License (ODbL) is a license agreement intended to allow users to freely share, modify, and use this Dataset while maintaining this same freedom for others, provided that the original source and author(s) are credited.Katja Hogendoorn, Mark Stevens, Remko Leijs10.3897/zookeys.520.6185.suppl2902782792245C4-0934-53BE-8C17-93662928BD7A
Phylogenetic relationships of euryglossine species based on CO1 sequence data
gene tree
tree based on CO1 sequence data.
https://binary.pensoft.net/file/56704This dataset is made available under the Open Database License (http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/). The Open Database License (ODbL) is a license agreement intended to allow users to freely share, modify, and use this Dataset while maintaining this same freedom for others, provided that the original source and author(s) are credited.Katja Hogendoorn, Mark Stevens, Remko Leijs