Eopompilus luteus Lelej, 1986
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4277.3.6 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:87D59B12-DBED-41D0-9C37-42AB8642B353 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6032342 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9D50A226-FF94-FF8F-5DB6-F938FC5DFC52 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Eopompilus luteus Lelej, 1986 |
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Eopompilus luteus Lelej, 1986 View in CoL
( Figs 6, 7 View FIGURES 1 – 7 , 18, 23 View FIGURES 17 – 25 , 30–33 View FIGURES 26 – 42 , 43 View FIGURE 43 )
Eopompilus luteus Lelej, 1986: 80 View in CoL , 81, ♂ (holotype, ♂, " Russia, Primorskii Terr., Khasan District , Andreevka, 27.VIII.1983 (Budris)" [ ZISP]); Lelej 1995: 225, 226, ♀, ♂ ; Ma & Li 2010: 367, ♀; Lelej & Loktionov 2012: 412; Loktionov & Lelej 2014: 95, 98, ♀, ♂; Ji et al. 2015: 2, 3, ♀ ♂.
Diagnosis. Female. Female of this species can be easily separated from all other species by having large body size (length 13.5–17.0 mm), body brown with abundant yellow spots on: head, mesosoma and metasoma, legs; and antenna mostly orange-yellow ( Figs 7 View FIGURES 1 – 7 , 43 View FIGURE 43 ). Other characters of importance are: forewing yellowish, without apical dark spot ( Fig. 30 View FIGURES 26 – 42 ); claw with subbasal additional tooth; propodeum matt without punctures and first flagellomere 5.8–6.3 times its width.
Male. Male of this species can be easily separated from all other species by having body dark brown with abundant yellow spots on: head, mesosoma and metasoma, legs; antenna mostly orange-yellow ( Fig. 6 View FIGURES 1 – 7 ); and large body size (length 10.0 mm). Other characters of importance are: pterostigma yellow ( Fig. 32 View FIGURES 26 – 42 ); first flagellomere 4.0–4.2 times its width; propodeum with fine weakly noticeable punctures; claws symmetrical without additional tooth.
Material examined. Type material. Holotype, ♂, " Russia, Primorskii Terr., Khasan District, Andreevka , 27.VIII.1983 (Budris)" [ ZISP] . Other material. RUSSIA. Far East: Primorskii Terr.: 1 ♂, Khasan , 13.VIII.1998 (S. Belokobylskij) ; 4 ♀, Ryazanovka , 16.VIII.1986, 2. IX.1 987, 17.VIII.1992, 11.IX.1996 (E. Belyaev, S. Belokobylskij) ; 1 ♀, Gamova Peninsular, Srednyaya Bay , 19.IX.2012 (E. Belyaev) [ IBSS] . CHINA. 1 ♀, Henan, Baotianman National Nature Reserve , 22.VII.2007 (Zai-fu Xu), 2016001744 [ SCAU] .
Distribution. Russia (Far East: Primorskii Terr.) ( Loktionov & Lelej 2014), China (Heilongjiang, Ningxia, Hebei, * Henan) ( Li & Ma 2010).
Biology. The material from Russia was collected by a light trap, but these wasps are also active at day time. The host, Araneus ventricosus ( L. Koch, 1878) (new record) is a large spider with abdomen length 15–17 mm, which makes a round web. The female was observed near the spiderweb and touching the distal line of the web with the wing. The female then waited for the spider on the nearest leaf of tree or bush. When the spider was caught and paralyzed, the female transported it ( Fig. 43 View FIGURE 43 ) moving on the ground by head first to a nest. The nests were observed under stones, on the roof and in the basement of wood buildings located near a forest. The female did not amputate the spider's legs. In Primorskij Terr. the female is active in mid-August–mid-September. During this period one female can hunt at least ten females of Araneus ventricosus .
ZISP |
Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences |
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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Eopompilus luteus Lelej, 1986
Loktionov, Valery M., Lelej, Arkady S. & Xu, Zaifu 2017 |
Eopompilus luteus
Ji 2015: 2 |
Loktionov 2014: 95 |
Lelej 2012: 412 |
Ma 2010: 367 |
Lelej 1995: 225 |
Lelej 1986: 80 |