UruguayRoselli 1938 andRosellichnus,N. Ichnogenus: Two ichnogenera for clusters of fossil bee cells
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Ichnos
- Vol. 4 (3) , 199-217
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10420949609380127
Abstract
The systematics of the fossil bee nest ichnogenus Uruguay from the Uruguayan Cretaceous or lower Tertiary is reviewed and two new ichnospecies of a new ichnogenus, Rosellichnus, are proposed for fossil bee nests from the Miocene of the United Arab Emirates and Patagonian Argentina. Uruguay contains U. auroranormae (the ich‐notype) and U. rivasi, which differs from the type ichnospecies in having clustered cells arranged in three rows, with one central and two marginal rows of subparallel cells. No bee nest architecture known to us unequivocally fits with any ichnospecies described herein. Uruguay was constructed in the subsoil and may be of halictid origin; however, its large cell size, thick cell walls, and the presence of a vestibular cell do not fit the architecture of nests of extant halictids. Rosellichnus arabicus lacks the complete cavity surrounding the cell cluster that is typical in nests of Old World halictids, but it may, nonetheless, still be of halictid origin. R. pa‐tagonicus has an architecture more similar to nests of anthophorine bees than to those of Neotropical Halictidae. Therefore, the ichnogenus Rosellichnus may include both halictid and anthophorine constructions. Although the smooth inner cell walls, spiral cell caps, and clustering of cells indicate that both Uruguay and Rosellichnus are trace fossils of bee origin, it is likely that both represent nest architectures that are no longer employed by extant bees, or those that are as yet unknown. The paleoenvironments of both the Argentine and Emirates species of Rosellichnus indicate that the trace‐makers of this ichnogenus constructed their nests in open ground sandy soils.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lower Eocene alluvial paleosols (Willwood Formation, Northwest Wyoming, U.S.A.) and their significance for paleoecology, paleoclimatology, and basin analysisPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- How wet is wet? Precipitation constraints on late quaternary climate in the southern Arabian PeninsulaJournal of Hydrology, 1995
- New Miocene scarabeid and hymenopterous nests and early miocene (santacrucian) paleoenvironments, patagonian ArgentinaIchnos, 1994
- A Social Wasp′s Nest from the Cretaceous Period, Utah, USA, and its Biogeographical SignificancePsyche: A Journal of Entomology, 1990
- A Classification of Nest Architecture of Bees in the Tribe Augochlorini (Hymenoptera: Halictidae; Halictinae), with Description of a Brazilian Nest of Rhinocorynura inflaticepsBiotropica, 1979
- Genesis of the HymenopteraPublished by Springer Nature ,1968
- Concerning the Antiquity of Social InsectsPsyche: A Journal of Entomology, 1941
- The Antiquity of Social InsectsPsyche: A Journal of Entomology, 1941
- PSEUDOMASARIS EDWARDSII CRESSON, ANOTHER POLLEN-PROVISIONING WASP, WITH FURTHER NOTES ON P. VESPOIDES (CRESSON)The Canadian Entomologist, 1929
- PSEUDOMASARIS VESPOIDES (CRESSON), A POLLEN PROVISIONING WASPThe Canadian Entomologist, 1927