Species

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Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)

Macrocera pruinòsa Say, 1837:405, ♂♀. ♂, ♀, United States; Hurd & Linsley, 1964Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477.:453, presumably destroyed. - As Peponapis pruinosa: - Mitchell, 1962Mitchell, T.B. 1962. Bees of the Eastern United States. Volume II. Technical bulletin (North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station) 152:1-557. (distribution); Hurd & Linsley, 1964Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477. (distribution); Krombein et al., 1979Krombein, K.V., P.D. Hurd, D.R. Smith & B.D. Burks 1979. Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Volume 2. Apocrita (Aculeata). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. 1199-2209. (distribution); Ruíz-Cancino & Coronado-Blanco, 2002Ruíz-Cancino, E. & J.M. Coronado-Blanco 2002. Artrópodos terrestres de los estados de Tamaulipas y Nuevo León, México. Serie Publicaciones Cientificas No. 4:1-376. (distribution); Yáñez-Ordóñez & Hinojosa-Díaz, 2004Yáñez-Ordóñez, O. & I. Hinojosa-Díaz 2004. La colección himenopterológica (Insecta) del Museo de Zoología Alfonso L. Herrera de la Facultad de Ciencias, UNAM, México. Acta Zoológica Mexicana (nueva serie) 20 (1):167-197. (distribution); Ayala & Griswold, 2012Ayala, R. & T. Griswold 2012. Two new species of the bee genus Peponapis, with a key to the North and Central American species (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Eucerini). Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 83:396-406. (distribution); Owens et al., 2018Owens, B.E., L. Allain, E.C. van Gorder, J.L. Bossart & C.E. Carlton 2018. The bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) of Louisiana: An updated, annotated checklist. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 120 (2):272-307. (distribution); Esperanza de Pedro, 2021Esperanza de Pedro, D. 2021. . :. (distribution); Nava-Bolaños & Osorio-Olvera, 2022Nava-Bolaños, A. & L. Osorio-Olvera 2022. Estado del arte del conocimiento de biodiversidad de los polinizadores de México. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 93:1-77. (distribution). - As Peponapis pruinose: - Esperanza de Pedro, 2021Esperanza de Pedro, D. 2021. . :. (distribution). - As Xenoglossa pruinosa: - Cockerell, 1896Cockerell, T.D.A. 1896. New bees of the genera Xenoglossa and Podalirius (Anthophora). The Canadian Entomologist 28:191-197. (distribution); Cockerell, 1899Cockerell, T.D.A. 1899. Notes on american bees (Concluded from p. 129). The Entomologist 32:154-159. (distribution); Cockerell, 1901Cockerell, T.D.A. 1901. Contributions from the New Mexico Biological Station. - X. Observations on bees collected at Las Vegas, New Mexico, and in the adjacent Mountains. II. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 7: v. 7:125-131. (distribution); Cockerell, 1906Cockerell, T.D.A. 1906. The North American bees of the family Anthophoridae. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 32 (1):63-116. (distribution); Cockerell, 1906Cockerell, T.D.A. 1906. The bees of New Mexico. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 32:289-314. (distribution); Cockerell, 1907Cockerell, T.D.A. 1907. The bees of Boulder County, Colorado. University of Colorado Studies 4:239-259. (distribution); Cockerell, 1911Cockerell, T.D.A. 1911. Records of bees. The Canadian Entomologist 43 (11):389-391. (distribution); Cockerell, 1913Cockerell, T.D.A. 1913. Names applied to the Eucerine bees of North America. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 43:261-273. (distribution); Cockerell, 1914Cockerell, T.D.A. 1914. Descriptions and records of bees. - LVII. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 8: v. 13 (75):277-286. (distribution); Lutz & Cockerell, 1920Lutz, F.E. & T.D.A. Cockerell 1920. Notes on the distribution and bibliography of North American bees of the families, Apidae, Meliponidae, Bombidae, Euglossidae, and Anthophoridae. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist 42 (15):491-641. (distribution); Bequaert, 1920Bequaert, J.C. 1920. Hymenoptera collected near Boston, Mass., with description of a variety of Bombus affinis. Psyche 27 (1):6-12. (distribution).
Xenoglossa spruina Howard, 1901:pl. VIII, fig. 2, Hurd & Linsley, 1964Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477.:453, Type (U. S. National Museum). - Hurd & Linsley, 1964Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477.:450 ( listed as synonym of Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)); Krombein et al., 1979Krombein, K.V., P.D. Hurd, D.R. Smith & B.D. Burks 1979. Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Volume 2. Apocrita (Aculeata). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. 1199-2209.:2138 ( listed as synonym of Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)).
Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902:103, ♂♀. 1 ♂, San Diego, Calif., August 10; 3 ♀♀, 8 ♂♂, Los Angeles, California, July 22; 3 ♂♂, Los Angeles Co., July 15; Hurd & Linsley, 1964Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477.:453, location of type unknown. - Cockerell, 1905Cockerell, T.D.A. 1905. The bees of southern California. - VII. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences 4 (1):13-15. (distribution); Cockerell, 1906Cockerell, T.D.A. 1906. The North American bees of the family Anthophoridae. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 32 (1):63-116. (distribution); Cockerell, 1913Cockerell, T.D.A. 1913. Names applied to the Eucerine bees of North America. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 43:261-273. (distribution); Cockerell, 1916Cockerell, T.D.A. 1916. New and little known bees from California. Pomona Journal of Entomology and Zoology 8 (2):43-64. (distribution); Lutz & Cockerell, 1920Lutz, F.E. & T.D.A. Cockerell 1920. Notes on the distribution and bibliography of North American bees of the families, Apidae, Meliponidae, Bombidae, Euglossidae, and Anthophoridae. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist 42 (15):491-641. (distribution); Cockerell, 1924Cockerell, T.D.A. 1924. Anthophorid bees in the collection of the California Academy of Sciences. The Pan-Pacific Entomologist 1 (2):49-56. (distribution); Cockerell, 1926Cockerell, T.D.A. 1926. Descriptions and records of bees. - CXIII. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 9: v. 18 (108):621-627. (distribution); Hurd & Linsley, 1964Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477.:452 ( listed as synonym of Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)); Krombein et al., 1979Krombein, K.V., P.D. Hurd, D.R. Smith & B.D. Burks 1979. Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Volume 2. Apocrita (Aculeata). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. 1199-2209.:2138 ( listed as synonym of Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)).
Xenoglossa howardi Cockerell, 1918:420, ♂♀. Holotype ♂, Federal District, Mexico (U.S. Nat. Museum, leg. J.R. Inda). - Cockerell, 1918Cockerell, T.D.A. 1918. Descriptions and records of bees. - LXXXI. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 9: v. 2 (11):418-425. (distribution); Lutz & Cockerell, 1920Lutz, F.E. & T.D.A. Cockerell 1920. Notes on the distribution and bibliography of North American bees of the families, Apidae, Meliponidae, Bombidae, Euglossidae, and Anthophoridae. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist 42 (15):491-641. (distribution); Krombein et al., 1979Krombein, K.V., P.D. Hurd, D.R. Smith & B.D. Burks 1979. Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Volume 2. Apocrita (Aculeata). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. 1199-2209.:2138 ( listed as synonym of Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)).
Xenoglossa pruinosa lutzi Cockerell, 1923:205, ♂♀. 2 ♀♀, 25 ♂♂, Grand Junction, Colorado, August 3, 1920 (leg. Lutz). - Hurd & Linsley, 1964Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477.:452 ( listed as synonym of Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)); Krombein et al., 1979Krombein, K.V., P.D. Hurd, D.R. Smith & B.D. Burks 1979. Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Volume 2. Apocrita (Aculeata). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. 1199-2209.:2138 ( listed as synonym of Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)).

FotoID: 8744
Species: Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)
Attribution: USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab from Beltsville, Maryland, USA / Public domain
Location: USA, Pennsylvania

FotoID: 8743
Species: Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)
Attribution: USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab from Beltsville, Maryland, USA / Public domain
Location: USA, Pennsylvania

FotoID: 8741
Species: Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)
Attribution: USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab from Beltsville, Maryland, USA / Public domain
Location: USA, Pennsylvania

FotoID: 8742
Species: Peponapis pruinosa (Say, 1837)
Attribution: USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab from Beltsville, Maryland, USA / Public domain
Location: USA, Pennsylvania

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Area distribution map

map of Peponapis pruinosa     (Say, 1837)

Distribution

CANCanada
(Ayala & Griswold, 2012)
MEXMexico
(Lutz & Cockerell, 1920 [as Xenoglossa howardi Cockerell, 1918]; Krombein et al., 1979; Ayala & Griswold, 2012; Nava-Bolaños & Osorio-Olvera, 2022)
MEX-BaCMexico - Baja California
(Esperanza de Pedro, 2021; Esperanza de Pedro, 2021)
MEX-DiFMexico - Distrito Federal (Mexico City)
(Cockerell, 1918 [as Xenoglossa howardi Cockerell, 1918])
MEX-MorMexico - Morelos
(Yáñez-Ordóñez & Hinojosa-Díaz, 2004)
MEX-NuLMexico - Nuevo León
(Ruíz-Cancino & Coronado-Blanco, 2002)
MEX-OaxMexico - Oaxaca
(Cockerell, 1918 [as Xenoglossa howardi Cockerell, 1918])
MEX-TamMexico - Tamaulipas
(Ruíz-Cancino & Coronado-Blanco, 2002)
USAUnited States
(Say, 1837; Ayala & Griswold, 2012)
USA-AZUnited States - Arizona
(Cockerell, 1906; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-CAUnited States - California
(Cockerell, 1902 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Cockerell, 1905 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Cockerell, 1906 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Cockerell, 1913 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Cockerell, 1916 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Cockerell, 1924 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Cockerell, 1926 [as Xenoglossa angelica Cockerell, 1902]; Hurd & Linsley, 1964; Krombein et al., 1979)
USA-COUnited States - Colorado
(Cockerell, 1907; Cockerell, 1913; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Cockerell, 1923 [as Xenoglossa pruinosa lutzi Cockerell, 1923]; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-CTUnited States - Connecticut
(Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-GAUnited States - Georgia
(Mitchell, 1962; Krombein et al., 1979)
USA-IAUnited States - Iowa
(Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-IDUnited States - Idaho
(Hurd & Linsley, 1964; Krombein et al., 1979)
USA-ILUnited States - Illinois
(Mitchell, 1962)
USA-INUnited States - Indiana
(Mitchell, 1962)
USA-KSUnited States - Kansas
(Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-LAUnited States - Louisiana
(Owens et al., 2018)
USA-MAUnited States - Massachusetts
(Cockerell, 1911; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Bequaert, 1920; Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-MDUnited States - Maryland
(Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-MEUnited States - Maine
(Krombein et al., 1979)
USA-MIUnited States - Michigan
(Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-MOUnited States - Missouri
(Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-NCUnited States - North Carolina
(Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-NEUnited States - Nebraska
(Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-NHUnited States - New Hampshire
(Mitchell, 1962)
USA-NJUnited States - New Jersey
(Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-NMUnited States - New Mexico
(Cockerell, 1899; Cockerell, 1901; Cockerell, 1906; Cockerell, 1914; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-NVUnited States - Nevada
(Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-NYUnited States - New York
(Cockerell, 1896; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-OHUnited States - Ohio
(Lutz & Cockerell, 1920)
USA-PAUnited States - Pennsylvania
(Cockerell, 1896; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-RIUnited States - Rhode Island
(Mitchell, 1962)
USA-TNUnited States - Tennessee
(Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-TXUnited States - Texas
(Cockerell, 1906 new; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-UTUnited States - Utah
(Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)
USA-VAUnited States - Virginia
(Cockerell, 1913; Lutz & Cockerell, 1920; Mitchell, 1962; Hurd & Linsley, 1964)

Literature

  • Ayala, R. & T. Griswold 2012. Two new species of the bee genus Peponapis, with a key to the North and Central American species (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Eucerini). Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 83:396-406.
  • Bequaert, J.C. 1920. Hymenoptera collected near Boston, Mass., with description of a variety of Bombus affinis. Psyche 27 (1):6-12.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1896. New bees of the genera Xenoglossa and Podalirius (Anthophora). The Canadian Entomologist 28:191-197.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1899. Notes on american bees (Concluded from p. 129). The Entomologist 32:154-159.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1901. Contributions from the New Mexico Biological Station. - X. Observations on bees collected at Las Vegas, New Mexico, and in the adjacent Mountains. II. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 7: v. 7:125-131.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1902. The bee-genus Xenoglossa in California. Entomological News 13 (3):103.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1905. The bees of southern California. - VII. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences 4 (1):13-15.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1906. The bees of New Mexico. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 32:289-314.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1906. The North American bees of the family Anthophoridae. Transactions of the American Entomological Society 32 (1):63-116.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1907. The bees of Boulder County, Colorado. University of Colorado Studies 4:239-259.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1911. Records of bees. The Canadian Entomologist 43 (11):389-391.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1913. Names applied to the Eucerine bees of North America. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 43:261-273.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1914. Descriptions and records of bees. - LVII. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 8: v. 13 (75):277-286.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1916. New and little known bees from California. Pomona Journal of Entomology and Zoology 8 (2):43-64.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1918. Descriptions and records of bees. - LXXXI. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 9: v. 2 (11):418-425.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1923. Some Colorado bees. The Canadian Entomologist 55:205-206.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1924. Anthophorid bees in the collection of the California Academy of Sciences. The Pan-Pacific Entomologist 1 (2):49-56.
  • Cockerell, T.D.A. 1926. Descriptions and records of bees. - CXIII. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History ser. 9: v. 18 (108):621-627.
  • Esperanza de Pedro, D. 2021. . :.
  • Hurd, P.D. Jr. & E.G. Linsley 1964. The squash and gourd bees - genera Peponapis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith - inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35 (15):375-477.
  • Krombein, K.V., P.D. Hurd, D.R. Smith & B.D. Burks 1979. Catalog of Hymenoptera in America North of Mexico. Volume 2. Apocrita (Aculeata). Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C. 1199-2209.
  • Lutz, F.E. & T.D.A. Cockerell 1920. Notes on the distribution and bibliography of North American bees of the families, Apidae, Meliponidae, Bombidae, Euglossidae, and Anthophoridae. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist 42 (15):491-641.
  • Mitchell, T.B. 1962. Bees of the Eastern United States. Volume II. Technical bulletin (North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station) 152:1-557.
  • Nava-Bolaños, A. & L. Osorio-Olvera 2022. Estado del arte del conocimiento de biodiversidad de los polinizadores de México. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 93:1-77.
  • Owens, B.E., L. Allain, E.C. van Gorder, J.L. Bossart & C.E. Carlton 2018. The bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) of Louisiana: An updated, annotated checklist. Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 120 (2):272-307.
  • Ruíz-Cancino, E. & J.M. Coronado-Blanco 2002. Artrópodos terrestres de los estados de Tamaulipas y Nuevo León, México. Serie Publicaciones Cientificas No. 4:1-376.
  • Say, T. 1837. Descriptions of new species of North American Hymenoptera, and observations on some already described [Concluded from p. 305]. Boston Journal of Natural History 1 (4):361-416.
  • Yáñez-Ordóñez, O. & I. Hinojosa-Díaz 2004. La colección himenopterológica (Insecta) del Museo de Zoología Alfonso L. Herrera de la Facultad de Ciencias, UNAM, México. Acta Zoológica Mexicana (nueva serie) 20 (1):167-197.