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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Diadasia
Diadasia bee on opuntia blossom
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Apidae
Tribe: Emphorini
Genus: Diadasia
Patton, 1879

Diadasia is a genus of bees in family Apidae. Species of Diadasia are oligolectic, specialized on a relatively small number of plant species.

Their host plants include asters, bindweeds, cacti, mallows, and willowherbs, although mallows are the most common and likely ancestral host plant for the whole genus. Its tribe is Emphorini.[1] In the Sonoran Desert, Diadasia rinconis is considered the "cactus bee" as it feeds almost exclusively on a number of Sonoran Desert cactus species, its life cycle revolving around the flowering of the native species of cacti.[2] Members of this genus suffer attacks from a variety of parasitoids, including these families: Bombyliidae, Mutillidae, Ripiphoridae, Meloidae. [3]


Species

These 42 species belong to the genus Diadasia.[4][5][6]

  • Diadasia afflicta (Cresson, 1878)
  • Diadasia afflictula Cockerell, 1910
  • Diadasia albovestita Provancher, 1896
  • Diadasia andina (Holmberg, 1903)
  • Diadasia angusticeps Timberlake, 1939
  • Diadasia australis (Cresson, 1878)
  • Diadasia baeri (Vachal, 1904)
  • Diadasia baraderensis (Holmberg, 1903)
  • Diadasia bituberculata (Cresson, 1878)
  • Diadasia bosqi (Moure, 1947)
  • Diadasia chilensis (Spinola, 1851)
  • Diadasia consociata Timberlake, 1939
  • Diadasia diminuta (Cresson, 1878) (globe mallow bee)
  • Diadasia distinguenda (Spinola, 1851)
  • Diadasia enavata (Cresson, 1872) (sunflower chimney bee)
  • Diadasia friesei Cockerell, 1898
  • Diadasia hirta (Jörgensen, 1912)
  • Diadasia knabiana Cockerell, 1917
  • Diadasia laticauda Cockerell, 1905
  • Diadasia lutzi Cockerell, 1924
  • Diadasia lynchii (Brèthes, 1910)
  • Diadasia martialis Timberlake, 1940
  • Diadasia megamorpha Cockerell, 1898
  • Diadasia mendozana (Brèthes, 1910)
  • Diadasia mexicana Timberlake, 1956
  • Diadasia nigrifrons (Cresson, 1878)
  • Diadasia nitidifrons Cockerell, 1905
  • Diadasia ochracea (Cockerell, 1903) (ochraceous chimney bee)
  • Diadasia olivacea (Cresson, 1878)
  • Diadasia opuntiae Cockerell, 1901
  • Diadasia palmarum Timberlake, 1940
  • Diadasia patagonica (Brèthes, 1910)
  • Diadasia pereyrae (Holmberg, 1903)
  • Diadasia piercei Cockerell, 1911
  • Diadasia rinconis Cockerell, 1897
  • Diadasia ruficruris (Vachal, 1909)
  • Diadasia sphaeralcearum Cockerell, 1905
  • Diadasia toluca (Cresson, 1878)
  • Diadasia tropicalis (Cockerell, 1918)
  • Diadasia tuberculifrons Timberlake, 1939
  • Diadasia vallicola Timberlake, 1940
  • Diadasia willineri (Moure, 1947)

References

  1. ^ Sipes, Sedonia D.; Tepedino, Vincent J. (2005). "Pollen-host specificity and evolutionary patterns of host switching in a clade of specialist bees (Apoidea: Diadasia)". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 86 (4): 487–505. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2005.00544.x.
  2. ^ "Bees".
  3. ^ Linsley, E. G.; MacSwain, J. W. (Fall 1957). "The Nesting Habits, Flower Relationships, and Parasites of Some North American Species of Diadasia (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae)". Wasmann Journal of Biology. University of San Francisco. 15 (2).
  4. ^ "Diadasia Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  5. ^ "Diadasia Overview". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  6. ^ "Browse Diadasia". Catalogue of Life. Archived from the original on 2018-03-05. Retrieved 2018-03-04.


This page was last edited on 30 January 2024, at 10:41
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