Ceropales Latreille, 1796
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publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5264.1.8 |
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publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:49FCE66C-0EEE-46A1-B170-F1DDA1837107 |
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DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14187915 |
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persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039287F7-FF86-850D-FF2C-8362FA59FC08 |
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treatment provided by |
Plazi |
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scientific name |
Ceropales Latreille, 1796 |
| status |
sensu stricto |
Subgenus Ceropales Latreille, 1796 View in CoL View at ENA sensu stricto
Ceropales Latreille, 1796: 123 View in CoL .
Type species: Evania maculata Fabricius, 1775 , by subsequent monotypy of Latreille 1810: 437.
Agenioxenus Ashmead, 1902: 137 . Type species: Ceropales rufiventris Walsh & Riley, 1869 View in CoL = robinsonii Cresson, 1867 View in CoL , by original designation. Junior subjective synonym of Ceropales Latreille, 1796 View in CoL according to Viereck 1902: 275.
Ceratopales Schulz, 1906: 174 View in CoL . Subsequent misspelling of Ceropales Latreille, 1796 View in CoL .
Hypsiceraeus Morice & Durant, 1915: 403 View in CoL , 405. Type species: Evania maculata Fabricius, 1775 , by original designation. Junior subjective synonym of Ceropales Latreille, 1796 View in CoL according to Wahis 1986: 34.
Bifidoceropales Wolf, 1965: 72 (as subgenus of Ceropales View in CoL ). Type species: Ceropales ( Bifidoceropales) pygmaeus Kohl, 1880 View in CoL , by original designation. Synonymy with Ceropales View in CoL s. str. by Waichert et al. (2022).
Key to species of the subgenus Ceropales ( Ceropales) from India
1. Tarsal claws simple, not bifid apically; body ferruginous or black with yellow-ivory patches......................... 2
– Both claws of fore ( ♀) and middle ( ♀, J) tarsi bifid, with a long appressed, obliquely truncate subapical tooth; body black; inner claw of fore leg (J) deeply split owing to the unusually large, not truncate inner tooth basally..................................................................................................... declivis ( Haupt, 1934) View in CoL
2. Wings subfuscous or fusco-hyaline....................................................................... 3
– Wings hyaline....................................................................................... 5
3. Fore wing infuscated in apical third; metasoma black, T1–T3 with white lateral bands............. ligea Bingham, 1903 View in CoL
– Fore wing subfuscous or fusco-hyaline entirely; metasomal segments ferruginous or yellow with ferruginous patches..... 4
4. Metasoma yellow, basal margin of the metasomal segments 1–3 basally ferruginous, fuscous or fusco-ferruginous; mesosoma yellow, mesothorax and base of metathorax black or fuscous; legs yellow, variegated with ferruginous spots.................................................................................................. ornata Smith, 1855 View in CoL
– Metasoma ferruginous with basal segment black; mesosoma: pronotum, tegula ferruginous; legs ferruginous, coxa and trochanter black................................................................... fuscipennis Smith, 1855 View in CoL
5. Pronotum strikingly convex in lateral view and rather steeply sloping to mesonotum................................ 6
– Pronotum not convex in lateral view, in level with mesonotum................................................. 7
6. Frons raised in lateral view onto antennal region; lateral side of propodeum with remarkable and finely cross-wrinkled metapleural suture; free margin of the last metasomal segment significantly curved; propodeum conspicuously flat over its entire length; posterior part of propodeum dark reddish laterally.............................. judicatrix Nurse, 1902 View in CoL
– Frons normal, moderately raised in lateral view, shortly flat below fore ocellus and raised between antennal sockets; metapleural sulcus not developed, rarely hardly discernible; free margin of the last metasomal segment nearly straight, slightly curved above in lateral view; posterior margin of propodeum raised laterally; lateral corners of propodeum white........................................................................................................ indica Móczár, 1989 View in CoL
7. Head with dense yellowish-brown setae, mainly concentrated on upper frons and vertex; clypeus completely pale yellow without any marking; ivory patch on face non confluent; antenna pale yellow ventrally, brownish black dorsally; medial emargination of compound eyes not deep......................................... keralaensis Anju, Binoy & Thejass , sp. nov.
– Head without prominent yellowish-brown setae; clypeus pale yellow with a black spot medially; ivory patch on face confluent till upper eye margin; antenna entirely brownish black; compound eyes medially deeply emarginated............................................................................. anaghae Anju, Girish Kumar & Thejass , sp. nov.
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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Ceropales Latreille, 1796
| Anju, K., Thejass, P., Binoy, C. & Kumar, P. Girish 2023 |
Hypsiceraeus
| Morice, F. D. & Durant, J. H. 1915: 403 |
Ceratopales
| Schulz, W. A. 1906: 174 |
Agenioxenus
| Ashmead, W. H. 1902: 137 |
Ceropales
| Latreille, P. A. 1796: 123 |
