Alloxysta crassa ( Cameron, 1889 ), 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2013.53 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BE8CED6C-8510-4790-9623-68FAC339E373 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3843845 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BD87FF-FF86-A011-F358-F930F41568E1 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Alloxysta crassa ( Cameron, 1889 ) |
status |
stat. nov. |
Alloxysta crassa ( Cameron, 1889) stat. rev.
Fig. 3 View Fig
Allotria crassa Cameron, 1889: 59 .
Dilyta crassa − Kieffer 1900: 114.
Alloxysta (Alloxysta) crassa − Dalla Torre & Kieffer 1902: 38.
Alloxysta crassa − Hellén 1963: 12.
Type material
Lectotype
♀, designated by Quinlan (1974: 7), with the following labels: “ Lectotype ” (round label with blue margins), “Bonar” (handwritten), “ crassa Cam ” (handwritten), “Cameron 96 76, Bonar Bridge, Sutherland, Scotland ”, “ Lectotype of Allotria crassa Cam. ♀ det. J. Quinlan, 1973”, “B.M. Type Hym. 7.128”, “ Alloxysta crassa ( Cameron, 1889) ♀ det. M. Ferrer-Suay 2012”.
Redescription
COLORATION. Head yellowish brown, mesosoma and metasoma brown. Scape, pedicel and F1-F3 dark yellow; F4-F11 brown. Legs dark yellow and veins yellowish brown.
HEAD. Transversely ovate, smooth and shiny, wider than high in front view. With setae below, between and a few above toruli. With few scattered setae on vertex and with many setae on face. Transfacial line 1.2 x height of compound eye. Malar space 0.5 x height of compound eye.
ANTENNA. Female: 13-segmented, filiform. All antennomeres covered with sparse setae. F1-F3 thinner and smoother than remaining flagellomeres; F4-F11 club-shaped, with rhinaria. Pedicel 1.7 x as long as wide; F1 3.3 x as long as wide; F2 3.6 x as long as wide; F3 3.6 x as long as wide; F4 3.0 x as long as wide. F1 1.7 x as long as pedicel; F1 1.2 x as long as F2; F2-F11 subequal in length, width and shape ( Fig. 3B View Fig ). Male unknown.
MESOSOMA. Pronotum covered by abundant setae, less at distolateral margins; with two thick, clearly visible carinae ( Fig. 3D View Fig ). Mesoscutum smooth and shiny, round in dorsal view, with scattered setae. Scutellum also smooth and shiny, with few scattered setae, abundant on apex of scutellum. Height of mesopleural triangle along anterior margin 0.9 x height of mesopleuron. Propodeum covered by abundant setae, propodeal carinae absent ( Fig. 3F View Fig ).
FORE WING. Longer than body, 1.5 x as long as mesosoma and metasoma together ( Fig. 3A View Fig ). Covered with dense pubescence; marginal setae present. Completely open radial cell, 2.8 x as long as wide. R1 short and straight; Rs long and slightly curved ( Fig. 3C View Fig ).
METASOMA. Anterior part with an incomplete ring of setae, glabrous at centre, wider laterally. Metasoma smooth and shiny, T3 and T4 clearly distinguished.
Remarks
This species was synonymized by Fergusson (1986) with A. macrophadna ( Hartig, 1841) . Alloxysta crassa is represented in BMNH by the lectotype female and 3 paralectotype females. Comments on the type series of A. crassa are presented in Quinlan (1974: 7). However, after revising the lectotype we found that it is a different and valid species. Alloxysta crassa can be differentiated from A. macrophadna by the shape of the radial cell: completely open in A. crassa ( Fig. 3C View Fig ) while partially open in A. macrophadna ; relation between flagellomeres: F2 longer than F1 and F 3 in A. crassa ( Fig. 3B View Fig ), whereas F2 is subequal to F1 and slightly longer than F 3 in A. macrophadna .
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.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Alloxysta crassa ( Cameron, 1889 )
Ferrer-Suay, Mar, Selfa, Jesús, Notton, David G. & Pujade-Villar, Juli 2013 |
Alloxysta crassa
Hellen W. 1963: 12 |
Alloxysta (Alloxysta) crassa
Dalla Torre K. W. & Kieffer J. J. 1902: 38 |
Dilyta crassa
Kieffer J. J. 1900: 114 |
Allotria crassa
Cameron P. 1889: 59 |