@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref21862,
author = {Victor H. Gonzalez and Terry L. Griswold},
title = {Wool carder bees of the genus Anthidium in the Western Hemisphere (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae): diversity, host plant associations, phylogeny, and biogeography},
year = {2013},
keywords = {Anthophila; Anthidiini; Apoidea; glandular trichomes; nototribic flowers},
doi = {10.1111/zoj.12017},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Bees are among the most important pollinators of flowering plants in most ecosystems. Recent concerns about
population decline worldwide have highlighted the urgent societal need for species-level systematic work that
facilitates assessments of the status of pollinators and pollination services. This is a comprehensive, broadly
comparative study on the diversity, biology, biogeography, and evolution of Anthidium Fabricius, 1804, one of the
most diverse megachilid genera, containing more than 160 species worldwide. Herein, the Western Hemisphere
species are revised. All 92 recognized species, including the two adventive species Anthidium oblongatum(Illiger, 1806)and Anthidium manicatum(Linnaeus, 1758), are described and illustrated. A neotype for Anthidium emarginatum (Say, 1824) and lectotypes for 16 names are designated; five names are relegated to synonymy, three names are revalidated,
previously unknown males of three species are described, and 21 new species are proposed. Identification keys as well as information on the distribution, seasonality, nesting biology, and host plants are provided. The relationships of the Anthidium subgenera and all Western Hemisphere species are explored using a cladistic analysis based on adult external morphological characters. The subgenus Callanthidium Cockerell, 1925, renders Anthidium s.s. paraphylectic in the
analysis, and is here synonymized. The resulting phylogenetic hypothesis is used to examine possible biogeographical
patterns, origins of the Western Hemisphere fauna, and the evolution of morphological traits associated
with foraging for pollen from nototribic flowers and exudates from glandular trichomes. To facilitate the transfer
of knowledge to non-specialists, some digital outputs and web-based products, including a geo-referenced specimen
database consisting of more than 20 000 records, species pages, and interactive digital keys, were also developed
during this study.}
}
Citation for Study 14050

Citation title:
"Wool carder bees of the genus Anthidium in the Western Hemisphere (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae): diversity, host plant associations, phylogeny, and biogeography".

Study name:
"Wool carder bees of the genus Anthidium in the Western Hemisphere (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae): diversity, host plant associations, phylogeny, and biogeography".

This study is part of submission 14050
(Status: Published).
Citation
Gonzalez V.H., & Griswold T.L. 2013. Wool carder bees of the genus Anthidium in the Western Hemisphere (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae): diversity, host plant associations, phylogeny, and biogeography. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, .
Authors
-
Gonzalez V.H.
(submitter)
7853927667
-
Griswold T.L.
Abstract
Bees are among the most important pollinators of flowering plants in most ecosystems. Recent concerns about
population decline worldwide have highlighted the urgent societal need for species-level systematic work that
facilitates assessments of the status of pollinators and pollination services. This is a comprehensive, broadly
comparative study on the diversity, biology, biogeography, and evolution of Anthidium Fabricius, 1804, one of the
most diverse megachilid genera, containing more than 160 species worldwide. Herein, the Western Hemisphere
species are revised. All 92 recognized species, including the two adventive species Anthidium oblongatum(Illiger, 1806)and Anthidium manicatum(Linnaeus, 1758), are described and illustrated. A neotype for Anthidium emarginatum (Say, 1824) and lectotypes for 16 names are designated; five names are relegated to synonymy, three names are revalidated,
previously unknown males of three species are described, and 21 new species are proposed. Identification keys as well as information on the distribution, seasonality, nesting biology, and host plants are provided. The relationships of the Anthidium subgenera and all Western Hemisphere species are explored using a cladistic analysis based on adult external morphological characters. The subgenus Callanthidium Cockerell, 1925, renders Anthidium s.s. paraphylectic in the
analysis, and is here synonymized. The resulting phylogenetic hypothesis is used to examine possible biogeographical
patterns, origins of the Western Hemisphere fauna, and the evolution of morphological traits associated
with foraging for pollen from nototribic flowers and exudates from glandular trichomes. To facilitate the transfer
of knowledge to non-specialists, some digital outputs and web-based products, including a geo-referenced specimen
database consisting of more than 20 000 records, species pages, and interactive digital keys, were also developed
during this study.
Keywords
Anthophila; Anthidiini; Apoidea; glandular trichomes; nototribic flowers
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S14050
- Other versions:
Nexus
NeXML
- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref21862,
author = {Victor H. Gonzalez and Terry L. Griswold},
title = {Wool carder bees of the genus Anthidium in the Western Hemisphere (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae): diversity, host plant associations, phylogeny, and biogeography},
year = {2013},
keywords = {Anthophila; Anthidiini; Apoidea; glandular trichomes; nototribic flowers},
doi = {10.1111/zoj.12017},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Bees are among the most important pollinators of flowering plants in most ecosystems. Recent concerns about
population decline worldwide have highlighted the urgent societal need for species-level systematic work that
facilitates assessments of the status of pollinators and pollination services. This is a comprehensive, broadly
comparative study on the diversity, biology, biogeography, and evolution of Anthidium Fabricius, 1804, one of the
most diverse megachilid genera, containing more than 160 species worldwide. Herein, the Western Hemisphere
species are revised. All 92 recognized species, including the two adventive species Anthidium oblongatum(Illiger, 1806)and Anthidium manicatum(Linnaeus, 1758), are described and illustrated. A neotype for Anthidium emarginatum (Say, 1824) and lectotypes for 16 names are designated; five names are relegated to synonymy, three names are revalidated,
previously unknown males of three species are described, and 21 new species are proposed. Identification keys as well as information on the distribution, seasonality, nesting biology, and host plants are provided. The relationships of the Anthidium subgenera and all Western Hemisphere species are explored using a cladistic analysis based on adult external morphological characters. The subgenus Callanthidium Cockerell, 1925, renders Anthidium s.s. paraphylectic in the
analysis, and is here synonymized. The resulting phylogenetic hypothesis is used to examine possible biogeographical
patterns, origins of the Western Hemisphere fauna, and the evolution of morphological traits associated
with foraging for pollen from nototribic flowers and exudates from glandular trichomes. To facilitate the transfer
of knowledge to non-specialists, some digital outputs and web-based products, including a geo-referenced specimen
database consisting of more than 20 000 records, species pages, and interactive digital keys, were also developed
during this study.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 21862
AU - Gonzalez,Victor H.
AU - Griswold,Terry L.
T1 - Wool carder bees of the genus Anthidium in the Western Hemisphere (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae): diversity, host plant associations, phylogeny, and biogeography
PY - 2013
KW - Anthophila; Anthidiini; Apoidea; glandular trichomes; nototribic flowers
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zoj.12017
N2 - Bees are among the most important pollinators of flowering plants in most ecosystems. Recent concerns about
population decline worldwide have highlighted the urgent societal need for species-level systematic work that
facilitates assessments of the status of pollinators and pollination services. This is a comprehensive, broadly
comparative study on the diversity, biology, biogeography, and evolution of Anthidium Fabricius, 1804, one of the
most diverse megachilid genera, containing more than 160 species worldwide. Herein, the Western Hemisphere
species are revised. All 92 recognized species, including the two adventive species Anthidium oblongatum(Illiger, 1806)and Anthidium manicatum(Linnaeus, 1758), are described and illustrated. A neotype for Anthidium emarginatum (Say, 1824) and lectotypes for 16 names are designated; five names are relegated to synonymy, three names are revalidated,
previously unknown males of three species are described, and 21 new species are proposed. Identification keys as well as information on the distribution, seasonality, nesting biology, and host plants are provided. The relationships of the Anthidium subgenera and all Western Hemisphere species are explored using a cladistic analysis based on adult external morphological characters. The subgenus Callanthidium Cockerell, 1925, renders Anthidium s.s. paraphylectic in the
analysis, and is here synonymized. The resulting phylogenetic hypothesis is used to examine possible biogeographical
patterns, origins of the Western Hemisphere fauna, and the evolution of morphological traits associated
with foraging for pollen from nototribic flowers and exudates from glandular trichomes. To facilitate the transfer
of knowledge to non-specialists, some digital outputs and web-based products, including a geo-referenced specimen
database consisting of more than 20 000 records, species pages, and interactive digital keys, were also developed
during this study.
L3 - 10.1111/zoj.12017
JF - Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
VL -
IS -
ER -