Dasypoda (Dasypoda) riftensis Michez & Pauly, 2012

Michez, Denis & Pauly, Alain, 2012, A new species of the palaearctic genus Dasypoda Latreille 1802 (Hymenoptera: Dasypodaidae) from the Great Rift Valley in Ethiopia, Zootaxa 3181 (1), pp. 63-68 : 64-66

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3181.1.5

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C317AD02-FFE7-FFB0-FF2E-3B2AFCB7235E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Dasypoda (Dasypoda) riftensis Michez & Pauly
status

 

Description of Dasypoda (Dasypoda) riftensis Michez & Pauly View in CoL sp. nov.

Type material. Holotype male: Ethiopia, Great Rift Valley, Gallo, on small road between Ziway and Ziwa, 07°59'47"N 38°38'46"E, 1690m, on flowers of Launaea cornuta (Asteraceae) , leg. A. Pauly & J.-L. Boevé (Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels).

Paratypes: 2 males and 5 females, idem holotype (Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels; Zoological Natural History Museum of Addis Ababa) .

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the locus typicus of the species in the Great Rift Valley.

Diagnosis. D. riftensis sp. nov. shows most of the diagnostic features of the subgenus Dasypoda s.s.: galea matt and densely punctured; maxillary palpus 0.7 times as long as galea; malar area shorter than pedicel; base of gonostylus without spine; gonostylus subdivided in two parts united by a membraneous bridge; S 8 male with anterior spine; S 6 male nearly hairless; clypeus female fully punctured; scopa entirely reddish; pygidial plate hairless. Male and female of D. riftensis can be distinguished from all species of the subgenus Dasypoda by the hind tibia and basitarsus with testaceous cuticle ( Figs 2a–d View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 ). Female with whitish prepygidial fimbria like in D. albipila Spinola , D. sinuata Pérez , D. tubera Warncke and D. warnckei Michez ; T2 with interrupted apical hair band like in D. sinuata and D. warnckei ; T3 with continuous apical hair band like in D. albipila and D. warnckei ( Figs 2a, c View FIGURE 2 ). Male with unique shape of genitalia and S7 latero-apical structures ( Figs 4a–c, e View FIGURE 4 ). Inner face of hind tibia with unique shape of apical plate ( Fig. 3b View FIGURE 3 ).

Description. Male & female. Black cuticle except mediotarsi, distitarsi, hind tibia and hind basitarsus testaceous. Antenna with black dorsal side and reddish ventral side. Galea matt and densely punctured (i<d). Malar area shorter than the pedicel. Clypeus fully punctured. Inner edges of compound eyes subparallel. Scutum sculptured between punctures. Fore wing with prefurcal nervulus, apical part darker than fore part. Male ( Figs 2b, d View FIGURE 2 , 4 View FIGURE 4 ). Body length (vertex-T7): 10.8mm. Head. L= 2.9mm. W= 3.4mm. Pilosity reddish. Mesosoma. L= 3.6mm. W (between tegulae)= 2.4mm. Pilosity reddish. Hind basitarsus hairs twice longer than basitarsus width. Fore and middle legs without particular shape or apical structures. Hind femur with inner apical plate and apical inner face slightly depressed. Lateral inner apical part of hind tibia crenelate. Metasoma. L= 6.3mm. W= 3.5mm. Pilosity reddish except disc of T6–7 and S5 with black hairs. T3-6 with white apical hair band. S6-8 and genitalia like in Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 . Female ( Figs 2a, c View FIGURE 2 ). Body length (vertex-T7): 12mm. Head. L= 3.1mm. W= 3.5mm. Face and genal area with white reddish hairs; vertex with black hairs. Mesosoma. L= 4.2mm. W (between tegulae)= 3.1mm. Pilosity reddish (including legs); scutum with reddish and black hairs mixed. Scutum, scutellum and metanotum densely punctured (i=d); propodeum sculptured and shiny. Metasoma. L= 6.3mm. W= 4.2mm. Disc of T1 and marginal zone of sterna with reddish hairs; disc of T2–5 with black hairs; prepygidial fimbria white; pygidial fimbria black; marginal zone of T1 hairless; T2 with interrupted apical hair band; T3–4 with continuous apical hair band.

Floral visits. All male and female specimens were collected on Launea cornuta (Oliv. & Hiern.) (Asteraceae) . Oligolectism of D. riftensis needs to be confirmed by palynological analysis but all species of the subgenus Dasypoda have been so far described as oligolectic on Asteraceae ( Michez et al. 2008) .

Biotope. The specimens were collected in an extensive culture of cereals with many nearby Asteraceae in an Acacia woodland and at an altitude of 1690m ( Figs 2e–f View FIGURE 2 ).

Distribution. Ethiopia. Only known from the locus typicus.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Melittidae

Genus

Dasypoda

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