Atanycolus ivanowi (Kokujev, 1898)
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.83.63353 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3F3A83D4-9079-476E-AE59-FCE2E7EFEABF |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/79F54A51-0677-504D-A1D2-5825027B4868 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Atanycolus ivanowi (Kokujev, 1898) |
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Atanycolus ivanowi (Kokujev, 1898) View in CoL
Figs 2-5 View Figures 2–10 , A1 View Figures A1–A4
Material.
South Korea (1 female, 1 male). - Gangwon-do • 1 female ; Yanggu-gun , [8] Bangsan-myeon, Omi-ri; 13 Jun. 1992; D.-S. Ku leg.; NIBR 510 • 1 male ; same data as for preceding; SMNE 511 .
Additional material.
? Italy • 1 male (lectotype of Bracon sculpturatus Thomson, 1892); ZMLU • 1 female (paralectotype of B. sculpturatus Thomson); ZMLU.
Romania • 1 female (lectotype of Atanycolus signatus Szépligeti, 1901); Transylvania, Domogled Mountains ; 15-27 Jun. 1876; A. Moczáry leg.; HNHM 153261 .
Russia - Orenburg Province • 1 female; Saraktashskiy District, Saraktashskiy forestry, quarter 33; 16 Jul. 2007; T.S. Kostromina and V.A. Kozlov leg.; on fallen poplars; ZISP B0094 .
Slovakia • 1 female (paralectotype of A. signatus Szépligeti); Zádiel; HNHM 153262 .
Ukraine • 1 female (lectotype of Vipio ivanowi Kokujev, 1898); vicinity of Kharkiv, Vodyanoye; 26 Jun. 1886; I.Ya. Shevyrev leg.; ZISP .
Turkmenistan - Ahal Region • 1 female; "sovkhoz Sovet Azerbaydzhany"; 1 Oct. 1988; Pashaev leg.; apricot; from " Sph. kam. and chr. " [ Sphenoptera spp.]; ZISP B0095 .
Distribution.
Caucasus: Armenia, Azerbaijan. Central Asia: Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan. China: Xinjiang ( Li et al. 2020a). Europe: Eastern, Southern, and Western Europe. Iran. Japan: Hokkaido. Kazakhstan. Russia: Eastern Siberia, European part, Far East: Jewish Autonomous Province, Primorskiy Territory, Sakhalin Island; Ural ( Kostromina 2010). South Korea (new record). Turkey.
Diagnosis.
The species is easily recognisable by the following character states: the median area of third metasomal tergite strongly elevated and transverse, with rounded sides and strongly narrowed posteriorly (Fig. 5 View Figures 2–10 ); third and fourth tergites longitudinally rugose, their apical margins with incomplete, weak and weakly crenulate transverse subapical grooves. See also Li et al. (2020a: 15) for taxonomic literature and additional illustrations.
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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