Foenatopus bisignatus Aguiar & Jennings, 2010

Soliman, Ahmed M., Gadallah, Neveen S. & Al Dhafer, Hathal M., 2017, First record of the family Stephanidae (Hymenoptera: Stephanoidea) for the fauna of Saudi Arabia, with the description of a new species, Zootaxa 4311 (1), pp. 23-38 : 30

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4311.1.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:605F93B9-5616-4EEA-BA97-FC12F714B5A7

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6039703

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FD7DB819-7672-7218-FF2C-FC450B3FC6E7

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Foenatopus bisignatus Aguiar & Jennings, 2010
status

 

Foenatopus bisignatus Aguiar & Jennings, 2010

Figs 18 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ̄22

F. bisignatus Aguiar & Jennings, 2010: 300 , ♀ & ♂.

Material examined. Saudi Arabia: 1 ♂, Al-Baha, Hadabah Hamra [19°16'31"N, 41°48'35"E], 381 m, 15.iv.2016, sweep net on Acacia , leg. Ahmed M. Soliman ( EFC) GoogleMaps ; Egypt: 1 ♀, South Sinai, St. Catherine, Wadi Gebal [28°31'54''N; 33°54'18''E], 29.iv.2013, Malaise trap, leg. Edmardash ( EFC) GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis. MALE: Body length: 7.0 mm; fore wing length: 4.0 mm. Morphometric ratios: Cxl/Cxh 3.58; Cxl/ Fml 0.8; tw/iEE 0.76; btl/btw 7.5; Pnl/Smw 1.36; tw/io 0.77; Pnl/Ew 1.93; GSl/Ptl 1.8; Ptl/T3l 2.0; Hdl/Ew 2.47; Ew/Tw 1.4; iEE/eEE 0.62; Ppl/Ew 1.66; io/oo 8.0; Ptl/alinotum 1.26; 1Cu/1cu-a 1.26.

This species is characteriZed by the presence of very large double whitish spots on sub-basal area of T4 that are very close and nearly touching each other ( Figs 18 & 21 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ); petiole with basal 0.4 and subapical 0.1 ivory ( Figs 18 & 21 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ); antenna yellowish and gradually darkened towards apex ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ); all legs dark brown to black, except tarsi are all yellowish ( Fig. 18 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ); vertex with area anterior to it with a large U-shaped carina followed by shorter transverse carina ( Fig. 19 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ). Pronotal colo transversely strigate, rest of pronotum alutaceus ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 18 – 21 ); hind coxa coarsely transversely strigate ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 22 ), hind femur finely transversely striated ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 22 ); hind femora with small sub-basal tooth, a larger median and subapical triangular teeth and 2̄3 unequal tubercles in between as well as other 2 tubercles beyond last (subapical one), apices of all tubercles with a single fine short hair ( Fig. 22 View FIGURES 22 ).

It differs from the Egyptian female in having body length 7.0 mm (in female 9.11 mm). Comparative morphometrics: Cxl/Cxh 3.58 (female 3.67); Cxl/Fml 0.8 (0.88); tw/iEE 0.76 (0.47); btl/btw 7.5 (5.94); Pnl/Smw 1.36 (1.29); tw/io 0.77 (0.59); Pnl/Ew 1.93 (1.99); GSl/Ptl 1.8 (1.19); Ptl/T3l 2.0 (2.24); Hdl/Ew 2.47 (1.99); Ew/ Tw 1.4 (1.49); iEE/eEE 0.62 (0.59); Ppl/Ew 1.66 (1.71); io/oo 8.0 (8.91); Ptl/alinotum 1.26 (2.2); 1Cu/1cu-a 1.26 (1.2). The body generally dark brown to black (in female the dark areas are reddish brown, lighter in color); two ivory spots on T4 very large and nearly touching each other (in female the two spots are quadrate and separated from each other by distance shorter than the diameter of each spot); hind coxa and femur finely transversely striated (alutaceus in female).

Distribution. Egypt ( Gadallah & Edmardash 2015), UAE (Aguiar & Jennings 2010; Aguiar et al. 2010), Saudi Arabia (Al-Baha region) (new record).

EFC

Escola de Florestas

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Stephanidae

Genus

Foenatopus

Loc

Foenatopus bisignatus Aguiar & Jennings, 2010

Soliman, Ahmed M., Gadallah, Neveen S. & Al Dhafer, Hathal M. 2017
2017
Loc

F. bisignatus

Aguiar & Jennings 2010: 300
2010
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