Neolarra cockerelli explained

Neolarra cockerelli is a species of cuckoo bee in the family Apidae.[1] [2] It is quite small and extremely rare.[3] It is distributed from Texas to Tennessee and Georgia in the United States.[4] The wing has only one submarginal cell.

Morphology

Female

Female bees of this species are 3.5 mm long, with a mainly-black head and thorax and a testaceous (brick-colored) abdomen darkening at the tip. Their mandibles are yellowish, narrowly red on the apex; their antennae are yellowish beneath and brownish above. The basal (lower) segments of the legs are dark, and the tibiae and tarsi segments are also testaceous. The mid and hind spurs are pale yellowish. The wings are subhyaline, or imperfectly transparent, with yellowish to pitch-colored veins.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Report: Neolarra cockerelli . 2024-08-17 . Integrated Taxonomic Information System.
  2. Web site: Neolarra cockerelli (Crawford, 1916) . 2024-08-17 . Global Biodiversity Information Facility . en.
  3. Book: Droege, Sam . The Very Handy Manual: How to Catch and Identify Bees . September 2015 . USGS.
  4. Book: Mitchell, Theodore B. . Bees of the Eastern United States . North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station . 1962 . Raleigh.