Bombus wurflenii


Bombus wurflenii, also known as Shaggy Bumblebee, is a species of bumblebee found in West Asia.

Description

This bumblebee has a very short proboscis, powerful, toothed mandibles, and a short head. The queen has a body length of, a wing span of and a black, shaggy fur with the three last terga. The workers, which have body lengths ranging from and wing spans from, look like the queen, except for the lesser length. The males are in length, have a wing span from and are otherwise similar to the females.
Females have wings that are nearly clear with dark brown veins. Their body hair is long. The oculo-malar area is shorter than it is broad. The clypeus is flat and not raised in the center, with a shallow transverse groove that is not interrupted. The central area of the clypeus has many small, uniform punctures and is not shiny. The hair on the top of the thorax is black, with bands of grey-white hair at the front and usually at the rear.
Males also have nearly clear wings with dark brown veins and long body hair. The male genitalia are distinctive; the gonostylus is long and convexly rounded at the tip, with its outer side about a quarter as long as its inner side. The penis-valve head is strongly recurved into a hook that is much longer than broad and is broadly rounded at the end. The hair on the top of the thorax between the wing bases is either predominantly pale cream-yellow or has many pale cream-yellow hairs intermixed.
The species exhibits some color pattern variation from north to south in its range. In Turkey and the Caucasus, females display a white-banded, red-tailed color pattern. This pattern is interpreted as a form of mimicry, allowing them to resemble more abundant bumblebee species in the area, such as B. incertus and B. eriophorus.

Ecology

The species is mainly found in mountainous areas. In Turkey it’s present at altitudes ranging from to. The nest is small, containing 80 to 150 individuals.
The bumblebee predominantly forages on flowers such as Vaccinium, Lamiaceae, Scrophulariaceae and Fabaceae. According to Goulson, this species is an opportunistic nectar robber. The bees cut a hole into the back of the flower to access nectar, and so they do not participate in pollination.

Distribution

B. wurflenii is found in West Asia, including Turkey, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Iran. Its range also extends into Russia, specifically the Caucasus and the Ural Mountains.