Colocistis eureka (Mickel & Krombein)
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.33.5078 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:88E03F8F-D9B9-47F1-B6E9-0456D47B1E37 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/349A1C2F-ADA0-8798-BB08-454D67006FDE |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Colocistis eureka (Mickel & Krombein) |
status |
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Colocistis eureka (Mickel & Krombein) Figures 10 View Figures 1–12 , 21 View Figures 13–24 , 39 View Figures 37–40
Glyptometopa eureka Banks, 1912:202. Holotype female; USA: Arizona, Palmerlee (MCZ).
Diagnosis.
Colocistis eureka shares the strongly elevated gular carina with Colocistis segredentata . However, in Colocistis eureka the carina is strongly biangular or bidentate versus medially uninterrupted and the meso- metapleural sulcus is faint but distinct, versus absent or incomplete in Colocistis segredentata .
Maleunknown.
Description.
Female.
Body length. 9.5-10.0 mm.
Head. Wider than long in anterior view; vertex with lateral foveae consisting of row of large, shallow punctures; occipital carina ( Fig. 10 View Figures 1–12 ) meeting transverse carina at obtuse angle, transverse carina irregular, notched medially between submedial teeth, subtended by irregular rugae toward occiput.
Mesosoma. Pronotal disk 0.4 × as long as broad in dorsal view, nearly impunctate, with several scattered punctures; propleura densely punctured; foretibia with two spines laterally; basitarsus with two spines on outer surface; tibial spur 0.9 × length of basitarsus; hindcoxa ventral carina extending 0.5 length of coxa, dorsal longitudinal carina broadly elevated basally.
Metasoma. Sternum I without medial groove ( Fig. 21 View Figures 13–24 ).
Color. Reddish brown; vestiture whitish to pale yellow.
Distribution
( Fig. 39 View Figures 37–40 ). USA: Arizona, Cochise County: Palmerlee; Santa Cruz County: Atascosa Mountain; two specimens were seen (BME, UCRC).
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.