Neuroleon rapax Michel & Akoudjin

Michel, Bruno & Akoudjin, Massouroudini, 2012, Review of Neuroleon Navás of West Africa with descriptions of four new species (Neuroptera, Myrmeleontidae), Zootaxa 3519, pp. 32-52 : 46

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3519.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E7E9CC12-4ECF-4A13-8E81-F56803F9B0B6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6181916

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038AB609-FFB6-0C1B-FF5E-E5DAFC1EFB05

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Neuroleon rapax Michel & Akoudjin
status

 

Neuroleon rapax Michel & Akoudjin View in CoL , nov. sp.

( Figs. 46–56 View FIGURES 46 – 56 )

Diagnosis. Medium-sized species ( Fig. 46 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Tarsal claws capable of closing against last tarsomere. Tibial spurs well developed.

Description. Head. Face yellowish with median narrow longitudinal black line sometimes reduced to a dot. A dark line along base of labrum interrupted in middle. A black marking between antennae ( Fig. 48 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Frons black above antennae. Vertex with rows of black markings. Antennae longer than thorax, scape brown basally or with brown dot. Thorax. Pronotum with four brown markings, the anterior triangular, the posterior more or less commashaped, and two dots at transverse furrow ( Fig. 49 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Meso and metanotum with brown markings ( Fig 47, 49 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Legs ( Figs 50, 51 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Foreleg yellowish. Fore and middle legs with incomplete brown ring at basal third. Middle and hind legs yellow. Fore and middle femora with well-developed sensory seta, shorter than femur. Tibial spurs slightly longer than tarsomere 1, curved apically ( Fig. 52 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Basal tarsomere shorter than distal tarsomere in fore and middle legs, almost as long as distal tarsomere in hind leg. Setae of ventral brush of distal tarsomere tapered, not bend apically ( Fig. 50 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Claws long, slender. Wings. Narrow. Forewing 3 20 mm. Hind wing 3 19 mm, ♀ 21–24 mm. One to five crossveins in apical field. Membrane hyaline. Forewing with conspicuous cubital and rhegmal marks. Hind wing with a dark marking in apical third along posterior margin ( Fig. 46, 47 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). The markings darker in male ( Fig. 47 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Abdomen. Brown with a yellowish dot on segments III–VII ( Fig. 53 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Male. Ectoprocts rounded. Parameres hook-shaped. Gonosaccus with five or six long setae on each side ( Figs 54, 55 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ). Gonarcus U-shaped. Female. Ectoprocts with stout setae. Lateral gonapophyses with short stout setae and two brush-like tufts of long slender setae on posterior area ( Fig. 56 View FIGURES 46 – 56 ).

Type material examined. Holotype ♀ MALI Sikasso 30.X.1996, CMDT factory , collected in the morning under a lamp on a wall (attracted to light during the night) (Coll. CIRAD-CBGP) . Paratypes (1 3, 3 ♀♀) MALI Sikasso 1♀ no date ; 1♀ 28.X.1997, CRRAS in the morning on a wall under a lamp ; 1♀ 07.XI.1994. CAMEROON Guiring [10,6° N – 14,4° E] 13 28.IX.1998, Experimental Station of IRAD near Maroua , cotton field with small trees and grass, J.-C. Streito leg (All in coll. CIRAD-CBGP). GoogleMaps

Etymology. From the Latin adjective rapax = predator. Referring to the grasping legs.

Ecology. Unknown.

Distribution. Known from southern Mali and North Cameroon.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Neuroptera

Family

Myrmeleontidae

Genus

Neuroleon

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