New records and range extensions of several species of native bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) from Mississippi, United States
Última versión Publicado por Biodiversity Data Journal en 31 de agosto de 2021 Biodiversity Data Journal

Currently published literature includes 184 species of bees that occur within the state of Mississippi. The geographic ranges of seven additional species are extended into the state of Mississippi: Andrena (Melandrena) obscuripennis Smith, 1853, Anthemurgus passiflorae Robertson, 1902, Dieunomia bolliana (Cockerell, 1910), Diadasia enavata (Cresson, 1872), Peponapis crassidentata (Cockerell, 1949), Triepeolus subnitens Cockerell and Timberlake, 1929, and Brachynomada nimia (Snelling and Rozen, 1987). These records raise the total number of published species known from the state to 191. Anthemurgus and Brachynomada are also genera new to Mississippi.

GBIF DwC-A EML RTF Versiones Derechos
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El publicador y propietario de los derechos de este trabajo es Biodiversity Data Journal. To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the Public Domain (CC0 1.0). Users may copy, modify, distribute and use the work, including for commercial purposes, without restriction.

Registro GBIF

Este recurso ha sido registrado en GBIF con el siguiente UUID: e32779b0-d923-4b84-8a11-a78c13abcad5.  Biodiversity Data Journal publica este recurso, y está registrado en GBIF como un publicador de datos avalado por Participant Node Managers Committee.

Palabras Clave

Bee; Biodiversity; Hymenoptera; Apidae; Andrenidae; Halictidae ; Occurrence; Specimen

Contactos

¿Quién creó el recurso?:

Katherine Parys
Research Entomologist
USDA ARS Southern Insect Management Research Unit
141 Experiment Station Road
38776 Stoneville
MS
(662) 686-5275
https://www.ars.usda.gov/southeast-area/stoneville-ms/southern-insect-management-research/people/katherine-parys/

¿Quién puede resolver dudas acerca del recurso?:

Katherine Parys
Research Entomologist
USDA ARS Southern Insect Management Research Unit
141 Experiment Station Road
38776 Stoneville
MS
(662) 686-5275
https://www.ars.usda.gov/southeast-area/stoneville-ms/southern-insect-management-research/people/katherine-parys/

¿Quién documentó los metadatos?:

Harold Ikerd
Database Manager
USDA-ARS POLLINATING INSECTS RESEARCH UNIT
5310 Old Main Hill
84322 Logan
Utah
US
435-797-2526
https://www.ars.usda.gov/people-locations/person/?person-id=39335

¿Quién más está asociado con el recurso?:

Autor
Katherine Parys
Research Entomologist
USDA ARS Southern Insect Management Research Unit
141 Experiment Station Road
38776 Stoneville
MS
(662) 686-5275
https://www.ars.usda.gov/southeast-area/stoneville-ms/southern-insect-management-research/people/katherine-parys/
Cobertura Geográfica

The native bee fauna of Mississippi, USA has been historically poorly sampled, but is of particular relevance to determine range limits for species that occur in the southern United States. Additions to the list of native bees known for Mississippi are reported with notes on range, ecology, and resources for identification.

Coordenadas límite Latitud Mínima Longitud Mínima [30,107, -91,802], Latitud Máxima Longitud Máxima [35,317, -87,935]
Cobertura Taxonómica

Hymenoptera: Apoidea

Superfamilia  Apoidea
Datos del Proyecto

The native bee fauna of Mississippi is poorly known and sampled, but is of particular relevance to determining range limits of many species (Smith et al. 2012). Mississippi is composed of four distinct ecoregions: the Southeastern Plains, the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, the Mississippi Valley Loess Plains, and the Southern Coastal Plain (Chapman et al. 2004). The majority of the recorded bee species currently known from Mississippi are from Mitchell, who summarized state level distributions across the eastern United States, and recorded 122 species from Mississippi (Mitchell 1960, Mitchell 1962). The majority of the records included therein are those from collections made by Michener in the 1940s near Hattiesburg, MS, in the Southeastern Plains (Michener 1947). Smith et al. (2012) listed 53 more records from the Black Belt Prairies, also part of the Southeastern Plains, while Rightmyer (2008) listed an additional five species in a revisionary study of the cleptoparasite Triepeolus Robertson. An additional series of papers (MacGown and Scheifer 1992, Cane et al. 1996, Colla et al. 2011, Parys et al. 2015) each added singular records, bringing the published total number of species reported from the state of Mississippi to 184. Of the four ecoregions that occur within the state, the Mississippi Alluvial Plain is of particular interest as it is almost completely un-sampled for native bee fauna with the exception of Parys et al. (2015), and is part of the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) which also includes portions of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Missouri. This region of Mississippi is colloquially referred to as the "Delta" of the state. The MAV is the largest floodplain in the United States, comprising over 10 million hectares of historically bottomland hardwood forest that was seasonally flooded (Frederickson 2005). Today, the majority of the floodplain has been controlled with a system of levees constructed during the twentieth century, allowing the majority of the landscape to be converted to commercial agriculture (Faulkner et al. 2011). Landscapes fragmented by agriculture generally have less biodiversity than those left as natural habitats, though mass flowering crops can influence the densities of generalist pollinators (Westphal et al. 2003, Potts et al. 2010). Baseline data on the presence and distribution of native bee species of these previously unsampled areas across the MAV can inform decision making by land managers, and potentially be used to assess risks from agricultural practices.

Título New records and range extensions of several species of native bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) from Mississippi, USA
Descripción del Área de Estudio Collections of bees from a variety of habitats across the Mississippi Delta were made between 2015 and 2017. Locations sampled included commercial agricultural operations, research farms operated by the United State Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service and local universities, and two national wildlife refuges. Commercial farms in the Mississippi Delta typically plant a combination of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.), corn (Zea mays L.), and soybeans (Glycine max (L.) Moench.). Many of the commercial farms also plant smaller fields of sunflowers (Helianthus annuus L.), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.), rice (Oryza sativa L.), and sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam. Collection methods at all of the locations included multiple methods from the following: modified pan traps (blue, yellow, and white "bee bowls"), blue and yellow vane traps, malaise traps, netting, sweeping, and examining bycatch from other collection methods.
Descripción del Diseño Identifications were completed by the authors using a variety of primary literature (e.g. Cockerell 1910, Mitchell 1960, Mitchell 1962, Snelling and Rozen 1987, Michener 2007, Rightmyer 2008, Ayala and Griswold 2012, Bouseman and LaBerge 1978, Sipes 2001). 

Personas asociadas al proyecto:

Autor
Terry Griswold
Métodos de Muestreo

Collection methods at all of the locations included multiple methods from the following: modified pan traps (blue, yellow, and white "bee bowls"), blue and yellow vane traps, malaise traps, netting, sweeping, and examining bycatch from other collection methods.

Área de Estudio Sampling occurred throughout Mississippi.

Descripción de la metodología paso a paso:

  1. n/a
Datos de la Colección
Nombre de la Colección U.S. National Pollinating Insects Collection
Identificador de la Colección http://grbio.org/cool/q49p-qw3v
Identificador de la Colección Parental Not applicable
Métodos de preservación de los ejemplares Montado con alfileres
Metadatos Adicionales
Identificadores Alternativos e32779b0-d923-4b84-8a11-a78c13abcad5
http://ipt.pensoft.net/resource?r=mississippibees