Bombus argillaceus explained

Bombus argillaceus is a bumblebee species of the subgenus Megabombus, distributed from south and south-eastern Europe to western Asia.[1]

Description

A large bumblebee, the queen has a body length of 24mm28mm with a long proboscis, a very oblong head[2] and dark wings. The males and workers are considerably smaller than the queen. The thorax is yellow with a broad, median, black band. The abdomen of the queen is completely black, while the males and workers have the first tergite (abdominal segment) and the centre of the second yellow, the middle part black and the tail white, except the last tergite, which is black.[3]

Ecology

In Turkey, it lives in the mountains, usually at heights between 900mand1870mm (3,000feetand6,140feetm) above sea level. It has, however, been found as high as 2855m (9,367feet).

Its major food sources are flowering plants from the Boraginaceae (forget-me-not family), Asteraceae (aster family), Lamiaceae (mint family), and Fabaceae (pea family).

Distribution

B. argillaceus is found from the eastern Mediterranean to the Alps in France, Italy, Switzerland, and Austria, over Hungary north to Cluj in Romania. In the east, it reaches eastern Kazakhstan, and in the south and south-east the Balkans, Greece,[4] Cyprus, Turkey, the Caucasus, and northern Iran.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bombus (Megabombus) argillaceus (Scopoli, 1763) . Pierre Rasmont . 12 January 2013 . Université de Mons . 3 December 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131203085951/http://zoologie.umh.ac.be/hymenoptera/pagetaxon.asp?tx_id=3033 . dead .
  2. Web site: Tonerdhummel – Bombus argillaceus . Wildbienen . 27 January 2013 . de .
  3. Web site: Bombus (Megabombus) argillaceus (Scopoli, 1763) . Pierre Rasmont . 27 January 2013 . Atlas Hymenoptera – Bombus of Turkey . Université de Mons.
  4. Anagnostopoulos. Ioannis Th.. 2005. The bumblebee fauna of Greece: An annotated species list including new records for Greece (Hymenoptera: Apidae, Bombini). Linzer Biologische Beiträge. 37. 2. 1013–1026.