Pison oculare Pulawski, 2018

Pulawski, Wojciech J., 2018, A Revision of the Wasp Genus Pison Jurine, 1808 of Australia and New Zealand, New Guinea, and the Pacific Islands (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae), Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 65, pp. 1-584 : 315-317

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13159946

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E62387EA-FE8E-FE8E-410D-FCFBFC80FB67

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pison oculare Pulawski
status

sp. nov.

Pison oculare Pulawski , species nova

Figures 749 View FIGURES -753.

NAME DERIVATION.– Oculare is the Latin neuter adjective meaning ocular; with reference to the shallowly emarginate eyes of this species.

RECOGNITION.– Like Pison orbitale , P. oculare has an unusually shallow eye emargination, whose depth is less than half of midocellar diameter ( Fig. 750 View FIGURES ), whereas in all other Pison the emargination is about as deep as the midocellar diameter. Both species also have a fine omalus, which is found only exceptionally in the other Pison (e.g., P. tenebrosum ). Additionally, the second recurrent vein is received near the midlength of the second submarginal cell ( Figs. 751, 752 View FIGURES ). See Pison orbitale for differences between the two species (p. 317).

DESCRIPTION.– Frons dull, minutely punctate, punctures less than one diameter apart. Occipital carina narrowly separated from hypostomal carina. Gena narrow in dorsal view. Eye emargination unusually shallow, less than half as deep as midocellar diameter ( Fig. 750 View FIGURES ). Labrum not emarginate. Anteromedian pronotal pit transversely elongate, about as long as 1.5 × midocellar diameter. Scutum foveate along flange, without longitudinal ridges adjacent to posterior margin; scutal punctures minute, interspaces linear, microsculptured, dull. Tegula enlarged. Mesopleuron with fine omalus (closer to anterior margin than in orbitale ); mesopleural punctures markedly larger than those on scutum, interspaces linear. Postspiracular carina present, about 1.5 × as long as midocellar diameter; integument depressed between postocellar carina and episternal sulcus. Metapleural sulcus not costulate between dorsal and ventral metapleural pits. Propodeum with irregular longitudinal carina separating side from dorsum and posterior surface and extending from gastral socket area toward spiracle (carina obscured dorsally by adjacent rugae); dorsum conspicuously rugose, with middle carina but without sulcus; side ridged, punctate between ridges; posterior surface irregularly rugose (specimen from Wilpena) or irregularly ridged (specimen from Taree area), with several conspicuous ridges radiating up from transverse carina just above gastropropodeal articulation. Forewing with three submarginal cells ( Figs. 751, 752 View FIGURES ), submarginal cell II greatly reduced in size in specimen from Taree area ( Fig. 752 View FIGURES ), its height about 0.2 of distance that separates it from marginal cell; second recurrent vein ending near middle of submarginal cell II.

ter; eye height equal to 1.14-1.16 × distance between eye notches. Clypeus mesally with well-defined punctures, many of which are more than one diameter apart; free margin of lamella slightly, evenly arcuate, rounded laterally ( Fig. 749 View FIGURES ). Dorsal length of flagellomere I 2.1-2.3 × apical width, of flagellomere IX 1.5. × apical width. Mandible: trimmal carina without incision; acetabular groove with two rows of punctures. Length 4.6-5.9 mm; head width 1.6-1.7 mm.

♂.– Unknown.

GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION (Fig.753).– New South Wales, South Australia.

RECORDS.– HOLOTYPE: ♀, AUSTRALIA: New South Wales: Doyles River 50 km NW Taree at 31°31ʹS 152°14ʹE, 15 Nov 2009, D. Bray ( AMS).

PARATYPE: AUSTRALIA: South Australia: Wilpena in Flinders Ranges National Park at 31°31.7ʹS 138°36.2ʹE, 22 Dec 2010, V. Ahrens and W.J. Pulawski (1 ♀, CAS) .

CAS

California Academy of Sciences

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Crabronidae

Genus

Pison

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF