Orectognathus
publication ID |
8127 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6297008 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/07AC852A-C372-4586-5698-F27AC9EEF8D7 |
treatment provided by |
Donat |
scientific name |
Orectognathus |
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Genus 6. HEPTACONDYLUS, Smith.
Head suborbiculate, wider than the thorax; eyes lateral and ovate; the stemmata placed in a triangle on the vertex; antennae geniculated, filiform, the scape nearly as long as the flagellum, placed forwards on the head at the base of the clypeus; the flagellum6-jointed, the joints clavate, except the apical one, which is cylindrical; the labial palpi 3-jointed, the maxillary palpi 3-jointed. Thorax ovate, gibbous; the scutellum very prominent; the metathorax armed with two acute spines (in the female), compressed and strangulated (in the workers); the superior wings with one marginal and one complete submarginal cell, the submarginal cell receiving the recurrent nervure; the superior angle of the discoidal cell touching the costal nervure. Abdomen ovate; the peduncle composed of two nodes.
This genus presents a remarkable deviation from the general rule, as exemplified in the aculeate Hymenoptera; thus the normal number of joints in the antennae of the females being 12, and 13 in the males, as a general rule, serves to discriminate the sexes: the workers also have usually 12-jointed antennae, but in the present genus both the female and worker have only 7 joints. The genus Orectognathus View in CoL HNS has only 5 joints in the antennae, but only workers are known. In Heptacondylus HNS , however, the female has the same reduced number of joints as the worker, and this must be considered the perfect condition of the species.
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.
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