Publications by authors named "Manuel Dehon"

Article Synopsis
  • Bumble bees are a diverse group within the corbiculate lineage, consisting of around 260 species divided into 15 subgenera, primarily found in temperate and alpine ecosystems.
  • Their fossils are often poorly documented, leading to challenges in understanding their evolutionary relationships to modern bumble bees.
  • Recent re-examinations of these fossil specimens using morphological analysis and geometric morphometrics indicated that many Eocene and Oligocene fossils belong to the stem-group Bombini, while Miocene fossils show increased affinities with contemporary subgenera, supporting ideas of diversification over time.
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Shape is a natural phenomenon inherent to many different lifeforms. A modern technique to analyse shape is geometric morphometrics (GM), which offers a whole range of methods concerning the pure shape of an object. The results from these methods have provided new insights into biological problems and have become especially useful in the fields of entomology and palaeontology.

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A new species of fossil bumble bee (Apinae: Bombini) is described and figured from Early Miocene (Burdigalian) deposits of the Most Basin at the Bílina Mine, Czech Republic. , is placed within the subgenus Cullumanobombus Vogt and distinguished from the several species groups therein. The species is apparently most similar to the Nearctic B.

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Bees (Anthophila) are one of the major groups of angiosperm-pollinating insects and accordingly are widely studied in both basic and applied research, for which it is essential to have a clear understanding of their phylogeny, and evolutionary history. Direct evidence of bee evolutionary history has been hindered by a dearth of available fossils needed to determine the timing and tempo of their diversification, as well as episodes of extinction. Here we describe four new compression fossils of bees from three different deposits (Miocene of la Cerdanya, Spain; Oligocene of Céreste, France; and Eocene of the Green River Formation, U.

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Although bees are one of the major lineages of pollinators and are today quite diverse, few well-preserved fossils are available from which to establish the tempo of their diversification/extinction since the Early Cretaceous. Here we present a reassessment of the taxonomic affinities of Melitta willardiCockerell 1909, preserved as a compression fossil from the Florissant shales of Colorado, USA. Based on geometric morphometric wing shape analyses M.

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