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Amegilla kuleni Eardley

(Life: Kingdom: Metazoa (animals); Phylum: Arthropoda; Class: Hexapoda; Order: Hymenoptera; Superfamily: Apoidea; Family: Apidae; Subfamily: Apinae; Tribe: Anthophorini; Genus: Amegilla)

Amegilla kuleni Eardley, 1994.

Female

Male

Distribution

Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa.

Biology

Solitary, nests are constructed in clay-rich soils. Females collect water to soften the clay enabling excavation of a burrow. A turret entrance, up to 7cm in length, is constructed above the burrow. They sleep in aggregations with their jaws embedded in grass stems (Eardley & Urban, 2010).

References

Eardley, C.D. 1994. The Genus Amegilla Friese in southern Africa (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae). Entomology Memoir No. 91, Department of Agriculture, Republic of South Africa 68 pp.

Eardley, C & Urban, R. 2010. Catalogue of Afrotropical bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Apiformes). Zootaxa 2455: 1-548.

Eardley, C, Finnamore, A.T. & Michener, C.D. 1993. Superfamily Apoidea (pp. 279-357). In GOULET, H. & HUBER, J. (eds). Hymenoptera of the World: an identification guide to families. Research Branch, Agriculture Canada, Ottawa, Canada, 668 pp.

Eardley C.,Kuhlmann M., Pauly A. 2010. The Bee Genera and Subgenera of sub-Saharan Africa. Abc Taxa vol 7: i-vi, 138 pp.

Michener, C.D. 2000. The Bees of the World. Johns Hopkins University Press. 953 pp.

Credits

Photographs © Connal Eardley (ARC).

Map illustration © Simon van Noort (Iziko Museums of South Africa).


Web author Simon van Noort (Iziko South African Museum)

 

Citation: van Noort, S. 2024. WaspWeb: Hymenoptera of the World. URL: www.waspweb.org (accessed on <day/month/year>).

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