Priocnemis (Priocnemis) hyalinata (Fabricius, 1793)

(Figs 11, 19, 24, 28)

Sphex hyalinatus Fabricius, 1793: 212 . Holotype, ♂, "Europe" [UZM].

Pompilus femoralis Dahlbom, 1829: 13 . Lectotype, ♂, "Sweden", designated by Blüthgen 1952: 14 [UZI]. Junior subjective synonym of Sphex hyalinatus Fabricius, 1793 according to Day 1979: 5.

Priocnemis hyalinatus: Eversmann 1849: 380; Kohl 1880: 191.

Salius hyalinatus: Dalla Torre 1897: 228 .

Priocnemis femoralis: Haupt 1927: 91, 93, 111, ♀ ♂; Gussakovskij 1930: 234, 244, 267, ♀ ♂.

Priocnemis (Priocnemis) femoralis: Wolf 1963: 27, 50, 95, 136, ♀ ♂; Priesner 1968: 130, 143, 151, ♀ ♂; Wolf 1972: 48, 54, 65, ♀ ♂; Tobias 1978: 100, 110, ♀ ♂.

Priocnemis (Priocnemis) hyalinata: Wahis 1986: 10 .

Priocnemis hyalinata: Wiśniowsk 2009: 116, ♀ ♂.

Diagnosis. Male. Body length 6.5–8.0 mm. Paramere with three distinct stout vertical separated processes ending by dense short strong spines (Figs 11, 19). Body from black to black with ferruginous-red coloration on femora, tibiae and basal metasomal segments (at least on S2 and T2). Hypopygium as in Fig. 24. Female. Body length 7.0– 10.0 mm. Antenna shortened; third flagellomere 2.0–2.5 × its width (Fig. 28). Metasoma with ferruginous-red basal segments, sometimes completely black.

Material examined. Germany. 1 ♂, Frankfurt a/M, 4.VIII.1903 (S. Grünberg) ; 1 ♀, Berlin; 1 ♀, Emmendingen, Windenreute, 10–12.VIII.1954 [MNHU]. Austria . 1 ♂, Roithen E Finklham, 1.VII.1994 (J. Gusenleitner) [OLL]. Russia . European part (East): 1 ♂, Republic of Mordovia, Mordovskii Natural Reserve, 28.VII.2011 (M. Mokrousov) . Eastern Siberia, Krasnoyarsk Terr: 1 ♂, Krasnoyarsk, 2.VII.2012 (V. Loktionov, M. Proshchalykin); 1 ♂, Berezovskii, 1.VII.2012 (V. Loktionov, M. Proshchalykin) [CEATB].

Distribution. Austria, Belarus, Belgium, British Isles, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Romania, Sicily, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Yugoslavia (Wahis 2013), Poland, Ukraine (Wiśniowsk 2009), Turkey (Yildirim & Wahis 2011); Russia: European part (North-West, Centre, East (new record), North Caucasus, Crimea), Ural, Western Siberia (Altai Rep.), Eastern Siberia (new record) (Krasnoyarsk Terr.); Uzbekistan (Eversmann 1849, Gussakovskij 1930, Tobias 1978, Baghirov 2014).