Incasarus Gonzalez, Rasmussen, & Engel, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.17161/jom.v0i8.4506 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EB901F26-A84D-43F1-A0F6-10B71C684D83 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13620937 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7F729602-E30A-4A36-8D92-319948C72214 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:7F729602-E30A-4A36-8D92-319948C72214 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Incasarus Gonzalez, Rasmussen, & Engel |
status |
gen. nov. |
Incasarus Gonzalez, Rasmussen, & Engel View in CoL , new genus
ZooBank urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:7F729602-E30A-4A36-8D92-319948C72214
TYPE SPECIES: Incasarus garciai Gonzalez, Rasmussen, & Engel , new species .
DIAGNOSIS: The new genus can be recognized easily by the following combination of characters: body predominantly dark brown to black with reduced yellow maculations ( Figs. 4, 5 View Figures 4–10 ); forewing with two submarginal cells; propodeum setose; mesoscutum smooth and shiny between fine, contiguous punctures ( Fig. 8 View Figures 4–10 ); dorsal surface of propodeum about as long as metanotum; anterior tentorial pit in epistomal sulcus, below intersection between outer subantennal and epistomal sulci; male seventh tergum strongly projected medially ( Fig. 11 View Figures 11–20 ); fourth sternum with two premarginal combs of thick, simple setae medially ( Fig. 12 View Figures 11–20 ); fifth sternum with long, thick, simple setae medially on premarginal line ( Fig. 13 View Figures 11–20 ); sixth sternum with broad U- or V-shaped midapical emargination ( Fig. 14 View Figures 11–20 ); seventh sternum with apodemes and apical lobes broad, short, attached to a large disc ( Fig. 15 View Figures 11–20 ); and genitalia with gonostylus about as long as gonocoxite, simple, without apical lobes or projections, with long, thick mid-ventral and apical setae, and articulated to gonocoxite ( Figs. 18‒20 View Figures 11–20 ).
DESCRIPTION: ♂: Moderate-sized bees (7–8 mm in length); color dark brown to black, nonmetallic, without yellow maculations except on clypeus; integument largely smooth and shiny between punctures, especially on dorsal surface of mesosoma; punctures coarser, denser on head than on meso- and metasoma; pubescence whitish, sparse, longer and denser on head and mesosoma than on metasoma; metasomal terga with distal margins glabrous, narrow; second metasomal tergum with postgradular area as shallow as on remaining terga. Head broader than long, broader than mesosoma; mandible edentate, pointed; labrum with strong ridge bordering glabrous, impunctate, triangular basal area; clypeus more than twice broader than long; supraclypeal area elevated along midline; lower mesal paraocular area distinctly swollen ( Fig. 6 View Figures 4–10 ); anterior tentorial pit in epistomal sulcus, below intersection between outer subantennal and epistomal sulci; antennal toruli about at middle of face; antennal scape unmodified, not surpassing lower tangent of median ocellus in repose; antennal flagellum unmodified, slightly shorter than head width; facial fovea well-marked, ovoid; compound eyes slightly convergent ventrally; lower margin of median ocellus coinciding with upper orbital tangent; vertex gently convex; gena narrower than compound eye in profile, widest medially; labiomaxillary complex of moderate length, not distinctly elongate. Pronotal collar rounded, not carinate; dorsal surface of propodeum gently sloping, areolate. Forewing with pterostigma more than three times longer than broad, slightly wider than prestigma, margin basal to vein r-rs slightly divergent from costa, that within marginal cell straight or nearly so; marginal cell obliquely and broadly truncate at apex, appendiculate, about as long as distance from its apex to wing tip; two submarginal cells, first submarginal cell slightly shorter than second; basal vein gently curved; 1m-cu distal to 2Rs (second free abscissa Rs, or first submarginal crossvein sensu Michener, 2007); 2m-cu basal to 2rs-m (second submarginal crossvein sensu Michener, 2007); jugal lobe about two-thirds length of vannal lobe; hind wing with second abscissa of M+Cu about four times length of cu-a; 8 distal hamuli. Legs unmodified; mesotibial spur about half mesobasitarsal length; outer surfaces of pro- and mesotibia apically with small posterior spine; metabasitibial plate carinate, slightly broader apically, with scattered, semierect, short, stiff setae basally on disc ( Fig. 10 View Figures 4–10 ); metatibia about twice as long as metabasitarsus, with posterior marginal carina weakly toothed basally; keirotrichia on inner surface except on anterior and posterior margins; inner metatibial spur slightly curved at apex, outer spur shorter and more strongly curved at apex than inner; metabasitarsus strongly projecting on posterodistal margin; pretarsal claws cleft, symmetrical or nearly so. Second metasomal tergum with well-marked lateral fovea; seventh tergum without pygidial plate, distal margin strongly projected medially ( Fig. 11 View Figures 11–20 ); fourth sternum with two medial premarginal combs of thick, simple setae ( Fig. 12 View Figures 11–20 ); fifth sternum with long, thick, simple setae medially on premarginal line ( Fig. 13 View Figures 11–20 ); sixth sternum with broad U- or V-shaped midapical emargination ( Fig. 14 View Figures 11–20 ); seventh sternum with apodemes short, apical lobes broad, short, attached to large disc ( Fig. 15 View Figures 11–20 ); eighth sternum longer than broad, midapical projection long, slightly longer than disc ( Figs. 16, 17 View Figures 11–20 ); genital capsule longer than broad, gonobase absent ( Figs. 18‒20 View Figures 11–20 ); gonostylus about as long as gonocoxite, simple, without apical lobes or projections, with long, thick mid-ventral and apical setae, articulated to gonocoxite; volsella simple, not differentiated in digitus and cupis; penis valves simple, short, apices not surpassing basal one-fourth of gonostylar length (measured in ventral view); penis membranous, bilobed, shorter than penis valves.
ETYMOLOGY: The new genus-group name is a combination of Inca, referring to the pre-Columbian civilization that occupied most of the Andes, and - sarus, a stem commonly used in a number of related panurgine genera. The name is masculine.
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.