Ancistrocerus deqinensis You & Li

You, Ju, Chen, Bin & Li, Ting-jing, 2013, Two new species of the genus Ancistrocerus Wesmael (Hymenoptera, Vespidae, Eumeninae) from China, with a key to the Oriental species, ZooKeys 303, pp. 77-86 : 80-82

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.303.4922

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1A37C30E-A358-97DB-803C-1842742FA7EB

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Ancistrocerus deqinensis You & Li
status

sp. n.

Ancistrocerus deqinensis You & Li   ZBK sp. n. Figs 7-14

Material examined.

Holotype.♂, China, Yunnan, Diqing, Deqin County, 28°29.03'N, 98°54.63'E, 3467 m, 19. VII. 2011, Tingjing Li, No. 201107191 (CQNU). Paratypes. 4♂♂,the same data as holotype, No. 201107192-201107195 (CQNU).

Description.

Male: Body length 7.0-7.8 mm (Fig. 7), forewing length 7.5-8.0 mm. Black; the following parts are yellow: a lower frontal spot, clypeus, a spot between antennal socket and eye, almost mandible; the parts are bright ferruginous: labrum, antennae ventrally, a spot on tempora, an anterior band on pronotum, outside half of tegula (Fig. 14), apical bands on metasomal terga I–VI and sterna I–VI, a median spot on sternum VII (Fig. 10), and apex of femora to tarsi V in all legs.

Head. Densely covered with long setae, setae distinctly longer than the distance between the posterior ocelli; vertex with dense and coarse punctures, interspaces between punctures ridge–like (Fig. 9); width of clypeus equal to or slightly longer than length, clypeus moderately emarginate, almost semicircular, apically with acute teeth, sparse punctures and long setae (Fig. 8); antennal scape with sparse and small punctures, dense and long setae; antennal article XIII folded backward, reaching nearly the base of article XI (Fig. 12).

Mesosoma. Densely covered with long setae, similar to those on head; pronotal carina weaker in dorsum, but acutely produced in lateral corner. Mesopleuron reticulate, with large and irregular punctures; pronotum and mesonotum with dense and coarse punctures, smaller than those on mesopleuron; tegula with sparse punctures and long setae (Fig. 14); scutellum flat, metanotum convex, punctures on scutellum and metanotum similar to those on pronotum and mesonotum; marginal and median carinae of propodeum well developed, convavity of propodeum with striae; femora with dense long setae and sparse small punctures.

Metasoma. Densely covered with long setae, as long as the distance between the posterior ocelli; width of tergum I slightly less than 2 times length, with somewhat dense large punctures (interspaces smaller than punctures), transverse carina well developed, with a wide and deep median notch; apical bands on metasomal sterna I–VI complete; width of tergum II: length = 2.4: 2.0, the bottom of basal sulcus with longitudinal keels; punctures on terga II–VI much smaller than those on tergum I; sternum II basally with transverse uniform sulcus, not truncate behind sulcus, in profile somewhat concave (Fig. 11), punctures on sterna II–VI much sparser than those on tergum II.

Female. Unknown.

Distribution.

China (Yunnan).

Remarks.

The species is similar to Ancistrocerus parietum (Cameron, 1900) from Europe to northeast of China and North America, in the shape of the clypeus, punctures on the mesosoma, transverse carina of tergum I well developed and with a wide and deep median notch. However, it can be distinguished from similarspecies and other members of the genus with the following characters: body markings bright ferruginous, tegula with sparse punctures and long setae (Fig. 14), terga II–VI with dense long setae (Fig. 13), apical bands on metasomal sterna I–VI complete and sternum VII with a medial spot (Fig. 10).

Etymology.

It is named after the type locality of the species, Deqin County in Yunnan Province of China.

Key to the Oriental species of Ancistrocerus

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Vespidae

Genus

Ancistrocerus