Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae)

The new ichnospecies Celliforma curvata is described to include curved fossil bee cells from Argentina, Uruguay and the USA. The upper part of the cell (neck) of the new ichnospecies is curved, and accordingly, it can be attributed to bees of the subfamily Diphaglossinae (Colletidae). The oldest rec...

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Autores principales: Sarzetti, L.C., Dinghi, P.A., Genise, J.F., Bedatou, E., Verde, M.
Formato: INPR
Lenguaje:English
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00310239_v_n_p_Sarzetti
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spelling todo:paper_00310239_v_n_p_Sarzetti2023-10-03T14:41:10Z Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae) Sarzetti, L.C. Dinghi, P.A. Genise, J.F. Bedatou, E. Verde, M. Celliforma curvata isp. n Curved bee cells Diphaglossinae Minimum age Palaeodistribution The new ichnospecies Celliforma curvata is described to include curved fossil bee cells from Argentina, Uruguay and the USA. The upper part of the cell (neck) of the new ichnospecies is curved, and accordingly, it can be attributed to bees of the subfamily Diphaglossinae (Colletidae). The oldest record of C. curvata, from the early Eocene of North America (52-49 Ma), provides a minimum age for the appearance of this subfamily, in accordance with an already proposed calibrated phylogeny. It is also proposed that these fossil cells could be used for future calibrations of molecular clocks. C. curvata indicates that Diphaglossinae had a widespread distribution, from southern Utah to extra-Andean Patagonia at 42°S. In contrast, extant representatives reach only 38°S in this region. Diphaglossinae were more extended southwards in the past thanks to better environmental conditions in extra-Andean Patagonia. © The Palaeontological Association. Fil:Genise, J.F. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. INPR English info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00310239_v_n_p_Sarzetti
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
language English
orig_language_str_mv English
topic Celliforma curvata isp. n
Curved bee cells
Diphaglossinae
Minimum age
Palaeodistribution
spellingShingle Celliforma curvata isp. n
Curved bee cells
Diphaglossinae
Minimum age
Palaeodistribution
Sarzetti, L.C.
Dinghi, P.A.
Genise, J.F.
Bedatou, E.
Verde, M.
Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae)
topic_facet Celliforma curvata isp. n
Curved bee cells
Diphaglossinae
Minimum age
Palaeodistribution
description The new ichnospecies Celliforma curvata is described to include curved fossil bee cells from Argentina, Uruguay and the USA. The upper part of the cell (neck) of the new ichnospecies is curved, and accordingly, it can be attributed to bees of the subfamily Diphaglossinae (Colletidae). The oldest record of C. curvata, from the early Eocene of North America (52-49 Ma), provides a minimum age for the appearance of this subfamily, in accordance with an already proposed calibrated phylogeny. It is also proposed that these fossil cells could be used for future calibrations of molecular clocks. C. curvata indicates that Diphaglossinae had a widespread distribution, from southern Utah to extra-Andean Patagonia at 42°S. In contrast, extant representatives reach only 38°S in this region. Diphaglossinae were more extended southwards in the past thanks to better environmental conditions in extra-Andean Patagonia. © The Palaeontological Association.
format INPR
author Sarzetti, L.C.
Dinghi, P.A.
Genise, J.F.
Bedatou, E.
Verde, M.
author_facet Sarzetti, L.C.
Dinghi, P.A.
Genise, J.F.
Bedatou, E.
Verde, M.
author_sort Sarzetti, L.C.
title Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae)
title_short Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae)
title_full Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae)
title_fullStr Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae)
title_full_unstemmed Curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of Diphaglossinae (Apoidea, Colletidae)
title_sort curved fossil bee cells as tools for reconstructing the evolutionary history and palaeogeographical distribution of diphaglossinae (apoidea, colletidae)
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00310239_v_n_p_Sarzetti
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