Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Systropha

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Insecta

Superfamily
  
Apoidea

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Order
  
Hymenopterans

Subphylum
  
Hexapoda

Suborder
  
Apocrita

Family
  
Halictidae

Rank
  
Genus

Systropha httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Hymenopterans, Nomioides, Dufourea, Biastes, Melitturga

The genus Systropha comprises several species of Old World sweat bees, primarily specialist pollinators of plants in the genus Convolvulus. Males of the genus have unusual curled antennae, and females have pollen-carrying hairs covering almost the entire abdomen.

Contents

Distribution

Systropha species occur from Spain and Morocco east to Tadzhikistan, and north as far as southern Germany. They occur in both eastern and western parts of Africa, south to Namibia. Asian species range as far south as Sri Lanka and Thailand.

Life history

So far as is known, all species are oligolectic on flowers of Convolvulus, with unusual modifications of the scopa, such that almost the entire abdomen (including the dorsal surface) is used for carrying pollen, rather than the legs, as in most bees. Pollen is carried to nests in the ground, formed into pollen masses, on each of which a single egg is laid before the cell containing the pollen is sealed, and another cell is then constructed and provisioned.

Species

Species sccording to Catalogue of Life:

References

Systropha Wikipedia