Acanthophotopsis falciformis Schuster, 1958
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3587.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:91FCB387-5D4F-4F12-ABDC-B06D7F60A271 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5627468 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038187E5-160F-FFA1-FF09-E8E7FAF8FEF8 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Acanthophotopsis falciformis Schuster, 1958 |
status |
|
Acanthophotopsis falciformis Schuster, 1958
Acanthophotopsis falciformis falciformis Schuster, 1958: 108 ,
3. Holotype: California, Palm Springs (UMIC).
Acanthophotopsis falciformis furcisterna Schuster, 1958: 111 ,
3. Holotype: Arizona, Tucson (UMIC).
Diagnosis. MALE. This species is easily distinguished from other nocturnal velvet ants by the presence of a fourth mandibular tooth, which is found along the internal margin and projects posteriorly over the apex of the clypeus (see Tanner et al. 2009: Fig. 6 View FIGURES 2 – 11 ). This species also has 1) the dorsal carina of the mandible extending from the base of the mandible to the innermost tooth; 2) the base of the clypeus slightly raised, although it is neither carinate nor tuberculate and is not horizontally produced; 3) the frons coarsely punctate while the vertex moderately punctate; 4) the length of flagellomere 1 is 2 × its width; 5) the head behind the eyes strongly convergent; 6) the length of the stigma slightly shorter (~0.8 ×) than the length of the marginal cell along the costa; and 7) the paramere in lateral view equally broad throughout its length except for the apex, which narrows to an acute angle, and the paramere is as broad as the cuspis medially (see Pitts et al. 2009: Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ). FEMALE. Unknown.
Material examined. Type material. Holotypes: A. falciformis falciformis : California, Palm Springs, fall 1932, T. Zschokke ( UMIC) ; A. falciformis furcisterna : Arizona, Tucson, 5 October 1935, O. Bryant ( UMIC) . Other material. Nevada, Nye Co., AMNWR: Non-dune site 2: 1 ♂, LT, 12–14.V.2009, NFB ; Non-dune site 5: 8 ♂, LT, 12–14.V.2009, NFB.
Distribution. USA (Arizona, California and Nevada), northern Mexico.
Activity. Males were active in mid-spring (May 09).
Remarks. Acanthophotopsis falciformis were too rarely encountered to determine their habitat preference. Nine A. falciformis males were collected on the same night in May at light traps. Eight specimens of A. falciformis were found at the NTS from June through August via hand collecting at incandescent and UV lights, as well as two specimens in pitfall traps ( Ferguson 1967, Allred 1973). This species seems to be rare throughout its range.
UMIC |
University of Mississippi |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Acanthophotopsis falciformis Schuster, 1958
Boehme, Nicole F., Tanner, David A., Williams, Kevin A. & Pitts, James P. 2012 |
Acanthophotopsis falciformis falciformis
Schuster 1958: 108 |
Schuster 1958: 111 |