Megischus baogong Ge & Tan, 2022

Ge, Si-Xun, Ren, Li-Li & Tan, Jiang-Li, 2022, First discovery of Megischus Brulle (Hymenoptera, Stephanidae) in Ryukyu Islands, with description of a new species, Journal of Hymenoptera Research 91, pp. 309-320 : 309

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.91.85373

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:330F6F9C-C8E5-4DB5-ADB5-F76945A9EAFC

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3797E2A2-FC94-45BD-99B1-2E29315D8D1E

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:3797E2A2-FC94-45BD-99B1-2E29315D8D1E

treatment provided by

Journal of Hymenoptera Research by Pensoft

scientific name

Megischus baogong Ge & Tan
status

sp. nov.

Megischus baogong Ge & Tan sp. nov.

Figs 1-4 View Figures 1–4 , 5-7 View Figures 5–7 , 8-11 View Figures 8–11 , 12-15 View Figures 12–15 , 16 View Figure 16

Material examined.

Holotype, ♀ (BFU), Ryukyu islands : Amami-Oshima Island, Amami City, Naze-shi; 22.VI.2021, leg. Miyamoto toshiiki ; Paratype, ♀ (NWUX), Ryukyu islands : Amami-Oshima Island, Amami City, Naze-shi; 22.VI.2021, leg. Miyamoto toshiiki .

Etymology.

The species name is derived from a historical personage, Baogong, a minister in Song dynasty of China famous as a representative of justice, whose drama role named Heimian (black head), a special facial sketch in Chinese opera. We name the new species after Baogong because of its completely blackish head.

Diagnosis.

Head completely blackish (Fig. 16 View Figure 16 ), temples slightly bulging behind eyes; ocellar area (Fig. 1 View Figures 1–4 ) transversely rugose; vertex transversely rugose and posteriorly almost reaching occipital carina; pronotum (Fig. 4 View Figures 1–4 ) shallowly concave anteriorly and with distinct pronotal fold; area in front of pronotal fold largely smooth; scutellum (Fig. 5 View Figures 5–7 ) almost glabrous and sparsely foveolae.

Description.

Holotype. Female. Length of body 27 mm; forewing length 14.5 mm; ovipositor sheath 31.5 mm. Paratype. Female. Length of body 24.6 mm; forewing length 12.1 mm; ovipositor sheath 25.3 mm.

Head. Antenna with 41 segments; first antennal segment 1.5 × as long as wide and 2.1 × as long as second segment, third segment length 2.7 × its maximum width; frons strongly rugose, more or less reticulate-rugose medially (Fig. 2 View Figures 1–4 ); three anterior coronal teeth large and lobe-shaped, both posterior ones smaller and wider; vertex with 3 strongly curved carinae anteriorly, followed by slightly reticulate-rugose medially and transverse rugae almost reaching occipital carina; temple slightly bulging, smooth and shiny (Fig. 1 View Figures 1–4 ), except for some fine punctures laterally; occipital carina distinct, strongly developed up to near level of ventral 0.5 of eye and not connected to hypostomal carina; hypostomal carina large, with several rugae and punctures (Fig. 3 View Figures 1–4 ).

Mesosoma. Neck relatively slender and anteriorly shallowly concave (Fig. 4 View Figures 1–4 ), with several weak carinae anteriorly and three interrupted but rather strong carinae, below the middle of the pronotum postero-dorsally. Pronotal fold distinct and with area in front of fold largely smooth and shiny; middle part of pronotum moderately transversely carinate, without lateral groove; middle part of pronotum weakly differentiated from posterior part (Fig. 4 View Figures 1–4 ), and latero-posteriorly rather weakly convex; posterior part of pronotum generally with rather sparse setosity, propleuron coriaceous; prosternum densely foveolate and setose; convex part of mesopleuron strongly foveolate and with dense whitish setosity (Fig. 6 View Figures 5–7 ); mesosternum largely smooth (except some fine punctures); scutellum smooth and shiny except some foveolae (Fig. 5 View Figures 5–7 ); propodeum dorsally almost glabrous (Fig. 5 View Figures 5–7 ), completely with large, circular foveolae, most foveolae well separated by relatively large interspaces.

Wings. Fore wing: wing membrane subhyaline (Fig. 7 View Figures 5–7 ), and surface evenly bristly; vein 1-M moderately curved, 5.2-5.6 × as long as vein 1-SR and 1.2-1.3 × vein m-cu; vein 2-SR 0.95-1.0 × as long as vein r; vein r ends 0.5 × length of pterostigma behind level of apex of pterostigma; vein 1-SR 0.6-0.7 × as long as parastigmal vein; vein 3-CU1 distinct and curved apically.

Legs. Hind coxa strong, annular, largely transversely striate, with long whitish setosity (Fig. 8 View Figures 8–11 ); hind femur robust, largely smooth and shiny with scattered punctures (more densely developed basally; Fig. 9 View Figures 8–11 ), hind femur ventrally with two large teeth and four minute teeth in between and one tooth behind large posterior tooth; hind tibia slender, moderately curved basally (Fig. 10 View Figures 8–11 ), 1.3 × longer than hind femur, densely setose, basal narrow part of hind tibia 0.7 × as wide as widest part, lateral view of hind tibia below depression nearly parallel-sided and slender, inner side rather convex basally, densely setose; hind basitarsus subparallel-sided, densely setose ventrally, ventral length 4.4-4.9 × its maximum width (Fig. 11 View Figures 8–11 ).

Metasoma. Tergite I with its basal 0.3 reticulate-rugose and remainder part micro-sculptured (Fig. 12 View Figures 12–15 ), dorsally slightly convex at basal 0.4, ca. 9.2 × as long as its maximum width, 2.5 × as tergite II and 0.9 × as remainder of metasoma; basal 0.05 of tergite II shiny and following 0.1 weakly rugose, remainder coriaceous; remainder of tergites (Fig. 13 View Figures 12–15 ) smooth and coriaceous with sparse and short setae (but tergite VI and VII densely setose medially); pygidial area with rather fine wrinkled dorsally, medially moderately convex and distinctly punctate; length of ovipositor sheath ca. 1.16 × as long as body length and ca. 2.2 × forewing length, length of subapical whitish band (Fig. 14 View Figures 12–15 ) 1.2 × as long as dark apical part. Ovipositor tip laterally compressed, with minute teeth apically (Fig. 15 View Figures 12–15 ).

Colour. Body almost completely blackish; mesosoma, metasoma, antennae, and hind legs black or blackish; head almost completely blackish except brown hypostomal flange; tergite II brownish bilaterally; wing membrane light brownish, subhyaline; fore and middle legs dark brown or blackish; ovipositor sheath largely black except whitish subapical band.

Male. Unknown.

Distribution.

Amami-Oshima Island (Ryukyu Islands)

Biology.

Collected in June. Host is unknown.

Note.

The new species runs to M. atriceps in the key to Old World Megischus by van Achterberg (2002), in having the occipital carina not reaching the hypostomal carina and length of subapical whitish band of ovipositor sheath 1.2 × as long as its dark apical part. It differs from M. atriceps in having a sparsely rugose hypostomal flange, and an almost completely blackish colour of not only head but also legs.

The East China Sea area (including most of the Okinawa Trough) may have been subaerial between 1.6-1.3 Ma, thus indicateing that the Ryukyu Arc region may have been part of the Eurasian continent at that time. During two major development periods (sometime between 1.6 - 1.0 Ma, and 0.2 - 0.025 Ma) the Ryukyu Arc may have been nearly connected to the Chinese continent through Taiwan as a land bridge (Kimura, 2000), as reflected by a similar fauna composition and other characteristics of South China. Foenatopus cinctus (Matsumura, 1918) has been found in both Okinawa island and South China (Taiwan and Guangxi), but to date, no Megischus species have been recorded from Taiwan. The Ryukyu Islands are located in the subtropical zone, a suitable climate type with the highest diversity of Megischus and other Stephanidae . However, including this study, only two species of crown wasps have been recorded for this area. More species can be expected after more intensive collecting.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Stephanidae

Genus

Megischus