Abstract

AugochloraSmith, with 127 valid species, is the most widespread genus of Augochlorini bees, ranging from Argentina to southern Canada, including the Caribbean islands. The genus is divided into three subgenera,Augochloras. str.,OxystoglossellaEickwort, and the fossilElectraugochloraEngel. The extant subgenera were traditionally diagnosed by their nesting substrate, social behavior and morphology. However, accumulating evidence suggests that these features are not reliable for their separation, especially with the discovery of an enigmatic species sharing characteristics from both subgenera. Our objective is to provide a phylogenetic hypothesis to evaluate the monophyly of the extant subgenera and to place a new species, Augochlora (Augochlora) intermedia sp. nov. For this purpose, we compiled 110 unordered characters for 40 species ofAugochloraplus seven outgroup species and analyzed under parsimony and Bayesian inference. Topologies were very similar under both frameworks, allowing us to consistently characterize a few major lineages. Our results demonstrate that the extant subgenera correspond to monophyletic groups and the new species is sister group to remainingAugochloras. str. species. Both subgenera are widespread in the Western Hemisphere, with species groups differing in range and distributional patterns. Our interpretation is thatAugochloraarose in South America, subsequently colonizing Mesoamerica, the Caribbean and North America several times. Facultative social behavior can be found in both subgenera and in most lineages, indicating that the exclusive solitary behavior found inAugochlora purais an exception. Based on morphological clues we interpret that the habit of nesting out of the soil arose once inAugochloras. str.

Highlights

  • Augochlorini Beebe is restricted to the western hemisphere, representing a major component of the Neotropical bee fauna (Eickwort 1969; Danforth and Eickwort 1997; Engel 2000; Pinheiro-Machado et al 2002)

  • The relationships among species are stable among analyses and two main clades are found, the A. iphigenia and A. morrae species groups

  • Each species group has three synapomorphies, with the basal elevation of the labrum slightly produced in A. iphigenia group and orbicular in A. morrae group

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Summary

Introduction

Augochlorini Beebe is restricted to the western hemisphere, representing a major component of the Neotropical bee fauna (Eickwort 1969; Danforth and Eickwort 1997; Engel 2000; Pinheiro-Machado et al 2002). Lepeco and Gonçalves: Phylogeny of Augochlora behavior, cleptoparasitism and capacity of using decaying wood as nesting substrate are often found among its representatives (Eickwort 1969; Michener 1990, 2007; Engel 2000) Each of these characteristics evolved independently at least two times in different lineages within the tribe, somewhere during the Cenozoic (Gonçalves 2016). These bees exhibit many levels of social organization, including solitary species with small nests and primitively eusocial species with large multifemale nests (Michener and Lange 1958; Ordway 1965; Stockhammer 1966; Danforth and Eickwort 1997; Gonzalez et al 2014). Even though many of these aspects have been investigated since the last century, the elucidation of their evolutionary pathways is still unclear, since species-level phylogenies are lacking for the speciose genera

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