Bembecinus rhopaloceroides (Arnold)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.11512316 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12728852 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7C4DD35E-FFAD-1E53-FFF1-FA24A347CF82 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Bembecinus rhopaloceroides (Arnold) |
status |
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Bembecinus rhopaloceroides (Arnold) View in CoL
Figures 5b View FIGURE , 19 View FIGURE a-c.
Stizus rhopaloceroides Brauns, 1911:92 View in CoL (sleeping on Datura View in CoL ). Nomen nudum.
Stizus rhopaloceroides Arnold, 1929:294 View in CoL , Figs 47 and 47a, ♀, ♂ (authorship attributed to Brauns). Syntypes: South Africa: Eastern Cape Province: Willowmore ( TMSA).— Arnold, 1930:20 (in checklist of Afrotropical Sphecidae View in CoL ); Handcock, Chawanda, and Mhlanga, 1995: 40 (syntypes in NMZB].— As Bembecinus rhopaloceroides (Arnold) View in CoL : Evans, 1966:135 (new combination, observations by Brauns, 1911); R. Bohart and Menke, 1976:532 (in checklist of world Sphecidae View in CoL ); S. Gess, 1996:273 (floral records); S. Gess and F. Gess, 2003:117 (floral records), 2006:14 (floral records); Pulawski, 2014:33 (in catalog of world Sphecidae View in CoL sensu lato).
RECOGNITION. — The female of B. rhopaloceroides View in CoL shares with gariepensis View in CoL the ferruginous terga (at least terga I and II) with pale yellow apical fasciae. Bembecinus inexspectatus View in CoL and omaruru View in CoL share this color pattern, but in inexspectatus View in CoL the length of hindtarsal arolium is about 0.5 × of the inner claw, whereas about 0.25–0.30 × in rhopaloceroides View in CoL and gariepensis View in CoL ; in omaruru View in CoL the setae of tergum II are erect at least laterally, where as they are appressed in the females of the other two species. Some karasanus View in CoL are also similar, but in that species the labrum punctures are larger than those on the scutum, where as markedly smaller in the other two species.
The females of gariepensis and rhopaloceroides are identical morphologically and can only be identified by association with the topotypical males. The geographic distribution is of some help: rhopaloceroides occurs in the Eastern, Western, and Northern Cape Provinces of South Africa as well as in southern Namibia, whereas gariepensis is found in the Northern Cape Province of South Africa as well as in southern Namibia (in other words, gariepensis is unknown from the Eastern and Western Cape Provinces).
The male of rhopaloceroides shares with gariepensis an incrassate foretibia, with the dorsal margin convex in profile ( Fig. 19c View FIGURE , 7a). They differ as follows: in gariepensis , the foretibial inner surface is flat or nearly so, without emargination in the dorsal view ( Fig. 7b View FIGURE ); in rhopaloceroides , it has an oblique impression that in the dorsal view looks like an emargination at the tibia’s basal third ( Fig. 19b View FIGURE ).
VARIATION.— In most of the specimens examined, terga II and III are ferruginous or with insignificantly narrow black fascia basally and the pale yellow apical fascia not broadened laterally, in some females with a pair of black spots in the middle. The specimens from Aus, Namibia, have the pale yellow apical fasciae of terga broadened laterally; in the female, tergum II has a conspicuous black basal fascia and tergum III has only a minimum of ferruginous (anterior to the pale yellow apical fascia).
In most males, the gaster is all or largely ferrugineus (except for the yellow apical fasciae), but all black (except for the apical fasciae) in some specimens; some intermediate specimens have a small amount of ferruginous color on tergum I, just anterior to the yellow apical band.
In the vast majority of specimens, the setae are appressed on tergum II, but they are erect laterally in the single male from Aus, Namibia, up to 0.5 × midocellar width.
MATERIAL EXAMINED.— NAMIBIA: Aus , xii.1929, R.E. Turner (1 ♀, 1 ♂, BMNH) . SOUTH AFRICA: North West Province: Constable , xii.1962, SAM (1 ♀, SAMC) . Northern Cape Province: Namaqualand, Springbok, Hester Malan Reserve [now Goegap], 3–7.xi.1987, M. Struck (1 ♂, PPRI) ; Bloukrans near Calvinia, 17.xi.1931, J. Ogilvie (1 ♀, 2 ♂, BMNH); Pofadder , Bushmanland , Mus. Staff , x.1939 (1 ♀, SAMC) . Western Cape Province: Doringbos [NE of Clanwlliam], 3.xi.1966, J.G. Rozen (1 ♂, AMNH) ; Clanwilliam, F.W. Gess and S.K. Gess (2 ♂, AMGS) ; 43 km ENE Ceres on road to Sutherland , 2–3.xii.1989, R.W. Gess (1 ♀, 1 ♂, AMGS) , ♀ on flowers of mauve-white “mesem”, Mesembryanthemaceae ( Aizoaceae ); 18 miles [28.98 km] E Touws River to Hondewater , xii.1962, SAM [staff] (7 ♀, 123 ♂, SAMC) ; 18 miles [28.98 km] southeast Touwsrivier , 12.xi.1966, J.G. Rozen (3 ♂, AMNH) ; Koup at 33°07′S 21°17′E, 26.xii.1996, W.J. Pulawski (1 ♀, CAS) GoogleMaps ; Koup Siding, Laingsburg , xi.1939, Museum Staff [ SAMC] (1 ♀, SAMC) ; Dikbome, Merweville, Koup , x.1952, Museum Expedition [ SAMC] (1 ♂, SAMC) ; Laingsburg at 33°12′S 20°51′E, 25 and 26.xii.1996, W.J. Pulawski (4 ♀, CAS) GoogleMaps ; Oudtshoorn, Onverwacht , 9–12.xii.1986, F.W. and S.K. Gess (3 ♀, 1 ♂, AMGS) , 1 ♀ and 1 ♂ on flowers of Zygophyllum retrofractum Thunb. , Zygophyllaceae . Eastern Cape Province: Willowmore, no date, H. Brauns (2 ♀, SAMC ex NMZB; 1 ♂, UCDC), same locality, 20.i.1903, H. Brauns (1 ♀, SAMC) , same locality, 25.ix.1909, H. Brauns (1 ♂, SAMC) , same locality, 1.xii.1909, H. Brauns (1 ♂, SAMC) , same locality, 15.i.1910, H. Brauns (1 ♀, SAMC ex NMZB), same locality, 10.i.1912, H. Brauns (1 ♀, SAMC ex NMZB), same locality, ii.1914 (1 ♀, UCDC) , same locality, xi.1916, H. Brauns (1 ♀, 1 ♂, AMGS) , same locality, 1.xii.1917, H. Brauns (1 ♂, SAMC ex NMZB), same locality, xii.1920, H. Brauns (1 ♀, AMGS) , same data (1 ♀, SAMC ex NMZB), same locality, 12.i.1965, H. Empey (1 ♀, 1 ♂, AMGS) ; near Fullerton, C. Jacot-Guillarmod (3 ♂, AMGS) ; 4 miles [6.44 km] E Waterford, 29.x.1967, C. Jacot Guillarmod (1 ♀, AMGS) .
GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION.— Known from southwestern Namibia, the Northern, Western and Eastern Cape Provinces of South Africa. It appears to have a southern distribution from the Succulent Karoo in the west to the Nama-Karoo in the east ( Fig.26b View FIGURE ).
FLORAL ASSOCIATIONS.— Visiting flowers of three plant families: Asteraceae ( Athanasia trifurcata (Linnaeus) Linnaeus ) (S. Gess and F. Gess 2003), Zygophyllaceae ( Zygophyllum retrofractum Thunb. ) and Aizoaceae (Mesembryanthema) (label data, see Material Examined; S. Gess and F. Gess 2003, 2006).
NESTING. — Unknown.
PREY.— Unknown.
TMSA |
Transvaal Museum |
SAMC |
Iziko Museums of Cape Town |
PPRI |
ARC-Plant Protection Research Institute, National Collection of Fungi: Culture Collection |
AMNH |
American Museum of Natural History |
AMGS |
Albany Museum |
CAS |
California Academy of Sciences |
UCDC |
R. M. Bohart Museum of Entomology |
NMZB |
National Museum of Zimbabwe |
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.
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Bembecinus rhopaloceroides (Arnold)
Gess, Friedrich W., Pulawski, Wojciech J. & Gess, Sarah K. 2015 |
Stizus rhopaloceroides
PULAWSKI, W. J. 2014: 33 |
GESS, S. K. & AND F. W. 2003: 117 |
GESS, S. K. 1996: 273 |
EVANS, H. E. 1966: 135 |
ARNOLD, G. 1930: 20 |
ARNOLD, G. 1929: 294 |
Stizus rhopaloceroides
BRAUNS, H. 1911: 92 |