Ancistrocerus transpunctatus You & Li

You, Ju, Chen, Bin & Li, Ting-jing, 2013, Two new species of the genus Ancistrocerus Wesmael (Hymenoptera, Vespidae, Eumeninae) from China, with a key to the Oriental species, ZooKeys 303, pp. 77-86 : 79-80

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.303.4922

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0748723C-35EF-BA76-72B3-1CD30A7B6048

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Ancistrocerus transpunctatus You & Li
status

sp. n.

Ancistrocerus transpunctatus You & Li   ZBK sp. n. Figs 1-6

Material examined.

Holotype. ♂, China, Yunnan, Diqing, Weixi County, Tacheng Town, 27°36.22'N, 99°24.29'E, 2017 m, 16. VII. 2011, Tingjing Li, No. 201107166 (CQNU). Paratypes. 1♂, China, Yunnan, Diqing, Weixi County, Tacheng Town, 27°36.22'N, 99°24.29'E, 2017 m, 16. VII. 2011, Tingjing Li, No. 201107167 (CQNU); 2♂♂, China, Yunnan, Baoshan City, Tengchong County, Jietou Village, Datang, 25°25.40'N, 98°39.27'E, 1597 m, 13. IV. 2006, Li Ma (YNAU).

Description.

Male: Body length 7.5-8.0 mm (Fig. 1), forewing length 6.0-6.5 mm. Black; the following parts are yellow: clypeus, a spot between antennal socket and eye, labrum, almost mandible, a spot on tempora, outer face of fore tibia, a spot on apex of mid tibia; the following parts are dark ferruginous: antennal article XI, an anterior band on pronotum, apical bands on metasomal terga I–II and sternum II.

Head. Densely covered with long setae, as long as the distance between the posterior ocelli; vertex with dense and coarse punctures, punctures almost connected (Fig. 3); clypeus with sparse punctures (Fig. 2), length of clypeus slightly longer than width, apical emargination slightly shallow, shallower than semicircular, apical teeth somewhat acute; antennal scape with sparse and small punctures, antennal article XIII folded backward, reaching the base of article XI (Fig. 4).

Mesosoma. Setae on mesosoma slightly sparser and shorter than those on the head; pronotal carina weaker on dorsum, but acutely produced in lateral corner; mesopleuron with large and irregular punctures; pronotum and mesonotum with dense and coarse punctures, smaller than those on mesopleuron; tegula slightly smooth and shining, with fine punctures; scutellum flat, metanotum convex, punctures on scutellum and metanotum similar to those on pronotum and mesonotum; marginal and median carinae of propodeum developed, apical convavity of propodeum densely with striae; femora with short white pubescence.

Metasoma. Setae on metasomal tergum I as long as those on mesosoma, but much sparser; length of setae on terga II–VI less than 1/2 times those on tergum I; width of tergum I 2.3 times length, transverse carina well developed and with a narrow and shallow median notch; width of tergum II: length = 2.3: 2.4, the bottom of basal sulcus with longitudinal keels, punctures on metasomal tergum II distinctly weaker than those on tergum I, apical margin of tergum II with a transverse row of big punctures (Fig. 5); metasomal terga III–IV reticulate, densely covered with large punctures; punctures on terga V–VI smaller and weaker than those on terga III–IV; metasomal sternum II deeply truncated behind the basal sulcus, straight and distinctly angled near the base in profile (Fig. 6); sterna II–VI with sparse and small punctures.

Female. Unknown.

Remarks.

The species is similar to Ancistrocerus antoni (Cameron, 1900) from India, in body coloration with similar spots, pronotal carina acutely produced into lateral corner, and shape of the tegula. But it can be distinguished from the relatedspecies and other members of the genus with the following characters: apical margin of metasomal tergum II with a transverse row of big punctures, forming a transverse furrow (Fig. 5), terga III–IV reticulate, densely with large punctures.

Distribution.

China (Yunnan).

Etymology.

It is named after its metasomal tergum II with a transverse row of big punctures.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Vespidae

Genus

Ancistrocerus