Ropalidia amabala Polasek , Bellingan & van Noort, 2022

Polasek, Ozren, Bellingan, Terence & van Noort, Simon, 2022, A new species of paper wasp from the genus Ropalidia Guerin-Meneville from South Africa (Hymenoptera, Vespidae), Journal of Hymenoptera Research 90, pp. 213-222 : 213

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.90.81581

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:61F3203B-F366-41D7-9712-51EA68ED4574

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D2F40851-7892-4C82-AA17-20C1D462BF72

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:D2F40851-7892-4C82-AA17-20C1D462BF72

treatment provided by

Journal of Hymenoptera Research by Pensoft

scientific name

Ropalidia amabala Polasek , Bellingan & van Noort
status

sp. nov.

Ropalidia amabala Polasek, Bellingan & van Noort sp. nov.

Type specimens.

Holotype: Oatlands Road, Grahamstown, 33°18'16.13S, 26°31'26.62E, South Africa, Nov 2020, leg TA Bellingan and MH Villet, 1♀. (AMGS). Paratypes [10♀♀, 3♂♂]: 9♀♀ and 1♂ with the same location data as the holotype (including series of larva in ethanol and a nest) (AMGS, AMNH, SAMC); Kenton on Sea, South Africa, January 1972, leg RA Jubb (malaise trap), 2♂♂ (AMGS); Howison's Poort, Grahamstown, South Africa, 14-29.II.1972, leg FW Gess, 1♀ (AMGS). The total number of examined specimens: 11♀♀, 3♂♂. Observational data: Mount Michael, Hilton, -29.575806, 30.288814, South Africa, 1♀, 1♂; obs. happyasacupcake (https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20355582).

Diagnosis.

This species can easily be separated from other African mainland species by the dark brown ground colour with a reddish hue, combined with a large whitish-yellow area on the pronotum, and a posterior band on T2 that is merged with six semi-circular spots. The circular location of these accessory spots is a sufficient criterion for a unique species determination, since other mainland Ropalidia do not have a central ventral or dorsal spot on T2 or S2. In addition, males have an interesting pattern of clypeus punctation, characterised by the presence of large and dense punctations in the basal half, while the apical half of clypeus is almost entirely impunctate.

Description.

Females. Wing length 8.6-9.7 mm. Colour. The ground colour is dark brown with a reddish tone (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). Clypeus with the basal two thirds in ground colour, the apical third is whitish-yellow; sometimes, suffused whitish-yellow markings can appear under the upes (Fig. 1b View Figure 1 ). Interantennal area sometimes with whitish-yellow spot, commonly without any markings. Mandible with a yellowish antero-basal spot (Fig. 1b View Figure 1 ), gena and tempora brown-reddish, lighter than the ground colour (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). The antennal scape blackened dorsally, with a brown underside (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). AF1 is similarly coloured to R. tenebrica Polašek, 2022, with a brown base and a distal blackening. The remaining flagellomeres are black dorsally, occasionally brownish ventrally. The pronotum is mainly whitish-yellow, with only the basal colour remaining at the posterior (mesopleural) margin and inferior angle (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). Mesosoma in the ground colour, posterior margins of scutellum and metanotum brownish (Fig. 1c View Figure 1 ). Propodeum and the rest of the mesosoma in ground colour (occasionally a minute yellowish spot at the tip of coxa I). Femora in the ground colour, tibia brownish, lighter than the femur (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). The apical spot of the fore wing is dark and opaque, nervature brown, stigma dark brown and opaque (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). Metasoma basally with the ground colour (more distal segments can be brownish). T1 without any markings, T2 with a thick posterior band and six merged semi-circular spots (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ); these spots are arranged unevenly, one dorsally, one ventrally and two on each side (Fig. 1a, d View Figure 1 ). T2 lamella is yellowish, comparatively shorter.

Head. Clypeus wide, about 1.4 times wider than long, with a moderately convex surface; the basal part, in ground colour, is covered by shallow and large punctations, which lose contour apically and convert to poorly defined craters in the yellow areas of the clypeus (Fig. 1b View Figure 1 ). The upes is straight and comparatively longer, while the juxtamandibular notch is shallow; the oculo-clypeal angle is not sharp (Fig. 1b View Figure 1 ). The general appearance of the clypeus mostly resembles R. excavata Giordani Soika, 1977 females, but with a less developed juxtamandibular notch. The entire clypeal surface is covered by a golden under-layer of pubescence and stronger yellowish protruding setae of approximately equal length basally and apically. Gena is slightly narrower than the broadest part of the eye, most commonly about 0.9 times its width (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). It is covered by large and well-defined punctums next to the eye margin, smaller and shallower close to the occipital carina. Frons is covered by large and coarse punctation, extending until the ocelli; it dissipates posteriorly towards the occipital carina. The occipital carina is complete and slightly sinuate. The complex eye is covered by short and sparse setae. The ocellar triangle is barely acute forward or equilateral. Frons is covered by yellowish straight or slightly bent setae, which are about as long as the forward ocellus diameter. The scape is barely shorter than AF1; AF2 is about as wide as long.

Mesosoma. Mesosoma covered by comparatively denser and coarser punctation, similar to R. excavata Giordani Soika, 1977. Punctation of mesonotum is of equal density throughout, including the areas lateral to parapsidal furrows. The pronotum is densely punctated, but punctation is well defined only in the remaining dark areas; punctation on the whitish-yellow areas is comparatively shallower and less defined. Mesopleura covered by large and coarse punctums, while those on the metapleura are about half their size and less dense. The scutellum is comparatively more developed and elevated, similar to R. soikai Polašek & Kehinde, in contrast to the more flattened scutellum in R. excavata Giordani Soika, 1977 (Fig. 1c View Figure 1 ). The median carina of the scutellum is barely visible in the anterior part, while it is completely lacking dorsally, thus resembling the entire Ropalidia nigrofemorata group of species. The metanotum is posteriorly flattened, with a moderate size of the shiny impunctate area. The propodeal excavation is comparatively shallower, with well-developed superior carina, variable striations (more or less developed, but always visible), and variably developed inferior carina (Fig. 1c View Figure 1 ). The general appearance of the propodeum mostly resembles R. kuficha Polašek, 2022, which has only thin yellow markings on the body.

Metasoma. Tergum 1 is pyriform and slightly elongate, similar to R. guttatipennis (de Saussure), with more developed punctation on the posterior half. T2 is covered by dense directional punctation, which is sparse on S2. The entire T2 surface is covered by short yellowish protruding setae, which barely extend posteriorly over the lamella.

Males resemble females, except having more yellowish markings on the face and the ventral side of the mesosoma. Wing length 8.2-9.3 mm. Colour. Most of the face is yellowish-white, except dark-brown frons (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ). Tempora with a reddish line, gena with a yellow widened area close to the eye, posteriorly in ground colour. Antenna dorsally black; scape yellow underneath, flagellomeres orange (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ). Pronotum with a larger whitish-yellow area, scutellum and postscutellum posteriorly with a faint reddish area. Mesopleura anteriorly with a large yellow patch, laterally without yellow markings. Coxa I and II, and femora I and II ventrally entirely yellow (Fig. 2b View Figure 2 ). Tibia and tarsi brown, in contrast to dark-brown (ground colour) dorsal side of the femora, similarly to R. nigrofemorata (Cameron). Wings translucent, with minimal anterior yellowing close to stigma; nervature brown, stigma dark brown and opaque. The apical spot is well developed, faintly reaching stigma (equal to Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). Metasoma in the ground colour, except a faint reddish posterior band on T1 and a characteristic whitish-yellow posterior band on T2 and S2, with integrated six spots (Fig. 2b View Figure 2 ).

Head. The clypeus is broader than long (1.3 times), with a flattened surface, which is minimally depressed sub-apically in some specimens (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ). The clypeus is similar to R. nigrofemorata (Cameron), with evenly curved upes, long and straight basal notch, lacking the oculo-clypeal angle and a barely projecting, subacute apex (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ). Clypeus base is covered by large and shallow punctums, which become less defined apically; the apical third of the clypeus surface is usually completely impunctate (Fig. 2a View Figure 2 ). Frons covered by large and coarse punctation, which becomes smaller on tempora, but then reverts to equally large punctum size on gena, close to the eye; punctums on tempora and gena posteriorly become somewhat smaller and less defined. Gena about 0.4-0.5 times the eye width. Mandibles shiny, nearly impunctate; only a few basal punctums can be more defined. Scape broadened, about 1.6-1.9 times the AF1 base width, shorter than AF1; AF2 about 1.4-1.6 times longer than wide. Tyloids are weak and thin, and they are not elevated above the flagellomere surface; the first one originates on the distal part of AF1, as a thin line that gradually emerges and becomes discernible of the distal half of the flagellomere length. Those on AF2 and AF3 are linear and thin, gradually widening on AF4 and AF5 and reaching about a half of the inner flagellomere surface in more distal segments, or a majority of surface in the terminal flagellomere (Fig. 2c View Figure 2 ). In all instances, their surface is partly shiny but less than in R. nigrofemorata (Cameron). The terminal flagellomere is elongated, about 1.7 times the AF10, with a rounded tip (Fig. 2c View Figure 2 ).

Mesosoma. Fore tarsal spur 1 not developed.

Metasoma. S7 is flattened or weakly concave (Fig. 2b View Figure 2 ).

Key to species update

The key provided in the previous genus revision ( Polašek et al. 2022) should be updated with the following elements.

Females

35a Basal body colour dark brown with a reddish hue, with a large whitish-yellow area on the pronotum and six whitish-yellow spots integrated with a posterior band on T2 and S2 (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). The apical spot of the fore wing is dark, but faintly extending towards the stigma (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). The median carina of the scutellum is weakly developed, barely visible dorsally. South Africa R. amabala sp. nov.
- Basal body colour pattern is different; if the pronotum and T2 have large markings, these are yellow, and the basal body colour is brown or ferruginous (rarely, specimens of R. aethiopica may have yellowish markings or even reddish basal colour, but in these cases, the median scutellar carina is well developed dorsally) 35

Males

18a Basal body colour dark brown with a reddish hue, with a large whitish-yellow area on the pronotum and six whitish-yellow spots integrated with a posterior band on T2 and S2 (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). The apical spot of the fore wing is dark, but faintly extending towards the stigma (Fig. 1a View Figure 1 ). The median carina of the scutellum is weakly developed, barely visible dorsally. South Africa R. amabala sp. nov.
- Basal body colour pattern is different; if the pronotum and T2 have large markings, these are yellow, and the basal body colour is brown or ferruginous (rarely, specimens of R. aethiopica may have yellowish markings or even reddish basal colour, but in these cases, the median scutellar carina is well developed dorsally) 35

Nest. The nest is one of the most striking features of this species. In contrast to all previously known mainland African Ropalidia species, the only examined nest of this species was built directly on the tree trunk of a Brachychiton sp., in an area devoid of the surrounding lightly coloured grey lichen (Fig. 3a View Figure 3 ). The nest has the same colour as the lichen, suggesting that the nearby lichen fibres were used as the nest-building material, exhibiting a striking mimicry with the surroundings (Fig. 3b View Figure 3 ). There are additional reddish or blackish streaks in the cell wall; the opercula are below the outer cell margin, with traces of the cell wall (Fig. 3b View Figure 3 ). Notably, the marginal cells exhibit a fair degree of disordered building, failing to create a regular hexagonal form (Fig. 3b View Figure 3 ). After collection, the cell colour of the nest changed to mainly yellowish (Fig. 3c View Figure 3 ). The nest had 37 complete cells and about 20 incomplete marginal cells. Most of the cells were regular, but the marginal cells close to the lower edge of the nest were commonly irregular. There were 28 larvae in the nest and 24 detectable eggs; most of marginal cells had eggs laid in them, a single egg in each cell. The cocooned cells were unevenly distributed across the nest (Fig. 3b View Figure 3 ). The average cell wall width was 2.4 ± 0.1 mm [n=15], while the average cell length of cells with cocoons was 11.1 ± 1.5 mm [n=11]. The closed cocoons had a flattened surface that did not reach the outer cell margin. The cell paper is dense and brittle. In addition, there were four empty tachinid cocoons in the nest (Fig. 3c View Figure 3 ), suggesting a heavy tachinid parasitoid load. At the time of collection, in the early morning, there were 10 females and one adult male present on the nest.

Phylogenetic status.

The new species was compared with three groups: (i) the mainland African capensis -group, (ii) non-capensis group and (iii) selected Malagasy Ropalidia species. The last group of species was selected on the basis of the nesting pattern, and it included three species that build the nests directly on tree trunks, in an area where the lichen or moss has been cleared. These include R. minor (de Saussure) [iNat: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/69302879], with partly green nests, R. saussurei Kojima [iNat: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/9669640, 85477179], with entirely green nests and R. dubia (de Saussure) [iNat: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/81256863], with brownish nests in the lichen cleared area.

The comparison was based on three morphological features: the tarsal 1 spur on the foreleg in males (Fig. 4a View Figure 4 ), the tyloids of the terminal flagellomere in males, and the morphology of the propodeal excavation in both sexes.

The tarsal I spur was shown to be a character present in the capensis group of species (with two exceptions), while it is entirely lacking in the non- capensis group ( Polašek et al. 2022).The same anatomical feature is present in males of all three analysed Malagasy species, but lacking in R. amabala sp. nov., suggesting that the newly described species is more closely related to the non- capensis group than either capensis or the Malagasy species.

The tyloids of the male antenna further support the closeness of R. amabala sp. nov. to the non- capensis group. The tyloids in R. amabala sp. nov. mostly resemble the mainland African species (most notably R. nigrofemorata Cameron), with a flattened surface that is not elevated above the flagellomere, especially in the terminal flagellomere, where the tyloid occupies most of the surface (Fig. 2c View Figure 2 ). In contrast, most Malagasy species, including all three examined species, have a thinner tyloid with a sharp inner margin on a substantially longer terminal flagellomere (Fig. 4c View Figure 4 ). Similar morphological characters are present in almost all members of the mainland capensis group ( Polašek et al. 2022).

The third analysed character is the superior and inferior propodeal carina (Fig. 1c View Figure 1 ). Nearly all of the mainland non- capensis species have those developed, commonly as sharp cuticular structures (Fig. 1c View Figure 1 ), while these carinae are almost entirely lacking in the members of the capensis group. Furthermore, the analysed Malagasy species of Ropalidia do not have either the superior or the inferior carina developed (Fig. 4c View Figure 4 ).

The morphological characteristics of R. amabala sp. nov. exhibit the most similarity with the mainland Ropalidia nigrofemorata group of species, comprising R. nigrofemorata (Cameron), R. tenebrica Polašek and R. tenuipilosa Polašek, rendering this species a member of the Ropalidia nigrofemorata group. Among them, the nesting habits were only described for R. tenuipilosa Polašek, which constructs the nests on tree branches (iNat: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/19815065). The comparison of the morphological characteristics of the member of the Ropalidia nigrofemorata group did not yield any additional reliable morphological difference.

Distribution.

Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa).

Etymology.

The name comes from the Zulu word amabala, meaning “spots”, and refers to the six spots integrated with the posterior band on T2 and S2, characteristic for this species.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Vespidae

Genus

Ropalidia