Odontophotopsis acmaea Viereck

Pitts, James P., Wilson, Joseph S., Williams, Kevin A. & Boehme, Nicole F., 2010, Nocturnal velvet ant males (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae) of Deep Canyon, California including four new species and a fifth new species from Owens Lake Valley, California, Zootaxa 2553, pp. 1-34 : 6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.196847

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5670751

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/504687FB-C758-FFA6-FF65-FE693D43F906

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Odontophotopsis acmaea Viereck
status

 

Odontophotopsis acmaea Viereck

Odontophotopsis acmaeus Viereck, 1904 . Amer. Ent. Soc., Trans. 30: 84. Male. Holotype data: Arizona, type no. 2304 (NMNH).

Odontophotopsis (Odontophotopsis) adonis acmaeus Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 54. Male. Odontophotopsis (Odontophotopsis) grata Schuster (nec Melander, nec Schuster 1958 p. 53, 57, 58), 1958. Ent. Amer. 37: 55. Male.

Diagnosis of male. This species is recognized by having the following combination of characters: the mandible is excised ventrally forming an angle ( Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ), but does not taper towards the apex; the apex of the mandible is slightly dilated; the mesosternum has only one pair of large distinct spines that have a posterior face that is longitudinally sulcate and have an apex that is bifid; the metasternum is bidentate; and the pygidium is granulate, but not defined laterally by carinae. The genitalia of this species are similar to those of O. aufidia (see Fig. 9 View FIGURES 1 – 12 of Pitts et al. 2009).

Female. Unknown.

Material examined. California, Riverside Co.: Deep Canyon, 2 males, 13.Apr.1968, coll. P. Rauch, 1 male, 16.May.1963.

Distribution. The Sonoran Desert of southern California and southwestern Arizona.

Remarks. This species is rare, but is found throughout southern California and extends into southern Arizona and northern Mexico. Schuster (1958) created some problems with this species in combination with O. grata (Pitts et al. 2009) .

Schuster (1958) placed this species as a subspecies of O. adonis . Mickel ( Krombein 1979) established this was not conspecific with O. adonis . This species clearly belongs in the O. parva species-group due to the weak ventral mandibular tooth, overall mandibular shape, the bidentate metasternum, the well developed sternal felt line, and the granulate pygidium. This species differs from all other species of the O. parva species-group due to the shape of the mesosternal processes, which are high, oblique, anteroposteriorly compressed, rectangular in outline, bidentate at the apex and separated by a ‘U’ shaped sinus. Only three other species, O. bellona , O. parva and an undescribed species, have similar, but not identical mesosternal processes. Of these, only O. bellona has been collected at Deep Canyon thus far; it has a large, rounded, ventral tooth on the mandible ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 1 – 12 ; see Fig. 17 View FIGURES 13 – 24 in Mickel & Clausen 1983). Odontophotopsis parva has the apex of the mandibles parallel, the pygidium distinctly margined, while O. acmaea has the apex of the mandibles dilated, the pygidium not margined. Furthermore the mesosternal processes are rounded at the apex and are separated by a ‘V’ shaped sinus. The undescribed species also has a margined pygidium, but the shape of the mandible, which could be described as dilated, is unique in having a dorsally directed lamella at the apex of the tridentate mandible that is similar in shape and size to normal tooth.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Formicidae

Genus

Odontophotopsis

Loc

Odontophotopsis acmaea Viereck

Pitts, James P., Wilson, Joseph S., Williams, Kevin A. & Boehme, Nicole F. 2010
2010
Loc

Odontophotopsis (Odontophotopsis) adonis acmaeus

Schuster 1958
1958
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