Scientific Frontline: "At a Glance" Summary: Discovery of Andrena cenizophila
- Main Discovery: Entomologists have identified a new species of solitary mining bee, Andrena cenizophila, which exhibits an exceptionally exclusive biological relationship with the native Texas purple sage shrub, also known as cenizo.
- Methodology: Researchers extracted DNA from the legs of a female specimen for genome sequencing and combined this genetic data with a comparative morphological analysis of physical features, including antennae and reproductive organs, alongside field observations of collected pollen.
- Key Data: The ground-dwelling bee measures less than one inch in length and gathers its entire pollen supply exclusively from the Texas purple sage during the shrub's brief, roughly one-week mass bloom following regional rains.
- Significance: Andrena cenizophila is currently the only known mining bee globally to rely solely on one specific species of shrub, highlighting an extreme case of floral specialization and an unusually tight developmental window for native pollinators.
- Future Application: Paratype specimens will be preserved in Washington State University's M.T. James Entomological Collection and the Smithsonian Institution to serve as the baseline genetic and morphological reference for identifying and cataloging future biological discoveries.
- Branch of Science: Entomology, Taxonomy, Evolutionary Biology
- Additional Detail: The physical nesting sites of Andrena cenizophila remain undiscovered, presenting an ongoing biological mystery regarding how the species sustains its developmental life cycle and feeds its young during the extensive periods when its host plant is not blooming.
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