Aphelagathis verticalis (Cresson) Cresson, 2015

Sharkey, Michael J. & Chapman, Eric G., 2015, The Nearctic genera of Agathidinae (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) with a phylogenetic analysis, illustrated generic key, and the description of three new genera, Zootaxa 4000 (1), pp. 49-72 : 58

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4000.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:4EDD31E6-72A7-4A70-B80E-4EE8EA74D5D8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6107254

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0010879E-536D-9675-C6F3-FF1AFD2B7900

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Aphelagathis verticalis (Cresson)
status

comb. nov.

Aphelagathis verticalis (Cresson) NEW COMBINATION

( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ).

Microdus verticalis Cresson 1872

Notes. The type specimen of this species is lost. It was not found by Muesebeck (1927) for his revision of North American Agathidinae (as Braconinae), nor has it been discovered since, which is not unusual for Cresson types. In the University of Kentucky Collection there is a specimen of A. verticalis collected in 1894 and identified by Ashmead as Microdus verticalis . This specimen and others that appear to be conspecific with it fit the Cresson (1872) description very closely, including details on patches of melanic color, size, and sculpture. We therefore take the opportunity to designate a neotype for the species. The original type was collected in Texas by G.W. Belfrage, but no further information is included in Cresson’s (1872) original description. We do not have a series of specimens collected in Texas and since we believe it desirable to include COI barcode data, when possible, for type specimens we selected a recently collected specimen from Kentucky ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), rather than older specimens that are closer to Texas, e.g., Louisiana.

Presently we do not fully understand the limits of the species. As mentioned above, a series of specimens from Louisiana was reared from Ancyloxypha numitor , the least skipper. The distribution of the host extends from Florida in the southeast to east Texas and northwestern Mexico in the southwest, north to southeastern Saskatchewan and east to the Atlantic provinces of Canada. Presumably pale (mostly yellow), gracile specimens of Aphelagathis in this range belong to A. verticalis . The northern extent of specimens of A. verticalis in our possession is southern Ohio and Illinois, and we have seen no specimens from the northwestern range of the host. However any pale colored specimens captured in the Midwest or north will presumably belong to A. verticalis .

Difficulties in species delimitation begin in the southwest just outside the range of the host. In Arizona for example, there are specimens with similar coloration, size, shape etc. but which differ in subtle characters. We are presently barcoding many of these specimens and intend to revise the genus in the near future.

The following diagnosis will differentiate our present concept of A. verticalis , which excludes specimens outside of the range of the one known host.

Diagnosis. This is the only predominantly yellow species of Aphelagathis that resides in the middle and eastern regions of the USA. The only other relatively common species in the southeastern USA is undescribed; it is larger, and the head and mesosoma are entirely black. For specimens in the southwestern USA and Mexico the species limits are not clear, and resolution of this problem must await a molecular approach. This species is yellow except for black as follows: antenna, patch on dorsal region of head extending from antennal bases to inside ocellar triangle, apex of hind femur and apex of hind tibia, most of hind tarsus. The preceding is the most common color combination but specimens may also have black in the following areas: entire vertex and occiput, base of hind tibia, propleuron and anteroventral patch of pronotum. Black color on the body of the head may be completely absent, or absent except for small patches on the frons at the base of the antennae. Male specimens from southern Illinois (and Tennessee) are more melanic with the propodeum mostly to entirely black ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 b), first metasomal median tergite slightly darkened, and apical terga (5-8) mostly melanic. These specimens also have more extensive black on the head and mesosoma , but both the meso and metasoma are predominantly yellow in all specimens. A specimen from Tennessee has about 1/3 of the mesopleuron weakly melanic.

Material examined. Neotype ♀. USA, Kentucky, Hopkins Co., Thomas Farm, 37° 20.357N, 87°41.281’W, M[alaise]T[rap] 4: swamp 2, 13-29.ix.2010, H7739 ( HIC).

Other specimens: 34 specimens from the neotype locality are deposited in HIC as are 10 specimens from a swamp in southern Illinois and one specimen from Tennessee. Specimens collected in Florida are deposited in FSCA, UCFC and CAS. The series of specimens from Louisiana reared from Ancyloxypha numitor are deposited in the USNM.

Molecular data. H7463 ( COI: ATRMK 461-11); H7697 ( COI: ATRMK 434-11, 28S: KP943715 View Materials ); H7739 ( COI: ATRMK 458-11); H11323 ( COI: KP943636 View Materials ).

HIC

Hymenoptera Institute Collection, University of Kentucky

FSCA

Florida State Collection of Arthropods, The Museum of Entomology

UCFC

University of Central Florida

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

USNM

Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History

COI

University of Coimbra Botany Department

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Braconidae

Genus

Aphelagathis

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