Abstract

BackgroundOnly one species of large carpenter bee, Xylocopa virginica (Linnaeus, 1771), has been recorded from Canada, albeit restricted to southern Ontario and Quebec. However, a single female specimen identified by Hurd in 1954 as X. varipuncta Patton, 1879 from British Columbia is in the C.A. Triplehorn Insect Collection at The Ohio State University (OSUC), suggesting that this species was accidentally introduced into coastal western Canada. As wood-nesters, many large carpenter bees are likely capable of expanding their range great distances by natural and unnatural transport methods while nesting inside suitable substrates, the presumed mode of transport into western Canada, and likely elsewhere. The ease at which the nests are transported has likely contributed to the nomenclatural and distributional ambiguity surrounding this species due to morphological similarities of specimens from North America, Hawaii, and several South Pacific islands.New informationBy comparing DNA barcodes of specimens from the western United States to specimens from Hawaii, we confirm the early opinion of P.H. Timberlake (Timberlake 1922) that specimens long established on the Hawaiian Islands are the same X. varipuncta from continental North America. Furthermore, these DNA barcode sequences also match those of specimens identified as X. sonorina Smith, 1874 from the French Polynesian and Samoan Islands, thus fully supporting the opinion of Groom et al. (2017) that all are likely conspecific. As X. sonorina, a species described from and likely introduced to Hawaii is the oldest name available, X. varipuncta is here placed into synonymy. Additional research will be needed to trace the timing and pathway of introduction and establishment of X. sonorina; it is presumed that the species is native to the southwestern United States but has been established in Hawaii since the mid-1800s. It is also established in French Polynesia, the Samoan Islands, and likely other south Pacific islands, with additional records of occurrence from Java, New Zealand, and now Canada.

Highlights

  • The large carpenter bees, genus Xylocopa Latreille, 1802 (Hymenoptera: Apidae, Xylocopinae), are large bumble bee sized bees that typically excavate nesting cavities into wood, bamboo, or the woody stems of plants (Hurd 1958a, Hurd 1958b, Hurd 1978a, Hurd 1978b, Gerling et al 1989, Minckley 1998) though members of the subgenus Proxylocopa Hedicke, 1938 nest in the ground (Michener 2007)

  • Triplehorn Insect Collection at The Ohio State University (OSUC), a single female identified as X. varipuncta Patton, 1879, collected from Capilano Canyon near Vancouver, British Columbia by R.C

  • To supplement existing DNA barcodes for Xylocopa in the Barcode of Life Data (BOLD) System (Ratnasingham and Hebert 2007), including sequences from GenBank accessible through BOLD, we obtained sequences from recent material collected in the continental United States (Arizona), and material collected in Hawaii held in the collection of the Royal Saskatchewan Museum (RSKM)

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Summary

Background

One species of large carpenter bee, Xylocopa virginica (Linnaeus, 1771), has been recorded from Canada, albeit restricted to southern Ontario and Quebec. Timberlake (Timberlake 1922) that specimens long established on the Hawaiian Islands are the same X. varipuncta from continental North America These DNA barcode sequences match those of specimens identified as X. sonorina Smith, 1874 from the French Polynesian and Samoan Islands, fully supporting the opinion of Groom et al (2017) that all are likely conspecific. Additional research will be needed to trace the timing and pathway of introduction and establishment of X. sonorina ; it is presumed that the species is native to the southwestern United States but has been established in Hawaii since the mid-1800s It is established in French Polynesia, the Samoan Islands, and likely other south Pacific islands, with additional records of occurrence from Java, New Zealand, and Canada.

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