Gonaporus emiratus I. Zonstein & Wahis

Zonstein, Irina & Wahis, Raymond, 2015, Revision of the Palaearctic genus Gonaporus Ashmead, 1902 of spider wasps (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae), Zootaxa 4018 (4), pp. 451-505 : 471-472

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4018.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:81CA1EED-5B91-4654-8BA5-9D179A7593B4

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5665457

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/900D9F6D-FF9D-4077-72C3-FBEAC8D6FD1D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gonaporus emiratus I. Zonstein & Wahis
status

sp. nov.

Gonaporus emiratus I. Zonstein & Wahis , sp. nov.

( Figs 40 View FIGURES 38 – 45 , 90 View FIGURES 88 – 91 , 101 View FIGURES 100 – 104 , 112 View FIGURES 110 – 120 , 123 View FIGURES 121 – 130 , 133 View FIGURES 131 – 141 , 144 View FIGURES 142 – 152 , 155 View FIGURES 153 – 159 , 166 View FIGURES 160 – 166 , 177 View FIGURES 175 – 181 , 202 View FIGURES 200 – 207 , 210 View FIGURES 208 – 211 )

Diagnosis. G. emiratus sp. nov. is most similar to G. alfierii ; in that the males of both species, unlike those of other congeners, share the lack of a ventral tooth on the claws. The head (clypeus, frons and occiput), propleuron, pronotum and procoxa of both species are strongly setose with long fine whitish setae (in addition to brown setae along inner orbit). The other congeners have long fine whitish setae almost restricted to the posterior part of the head and propleuron. The female of G. emiratus sp. nov. differs from that of G. a l f i e r i i by the shorter protarsomere 1; widened, almost spatulate spines of the tarsal comb ( Fig. 133 View FIGURES 131 – 141 ), ventral tooth of claws slightly tapering apically ( Fig. 40 View FIGURES 38 – 45 ) and shorter malar space (Table 1). The male of G. emiratus sp. nov. differs from that of G. alfierii by the shape of the subgenital plate and genitalia ( Figs 202 View FIGURES 200 – 207 , 210 View FIGURES 208 – 211 ). Female of G. emiratus sp. nov. has 1–2 short anteroventral spines on the protarsomere 1; whereas the females of G. israelicus and G. setitarsus sp. nov. have 2–3 long anteroventral spines on the protarsomere 1 ( Figs 26 View FIGURES 17 – 28. 17 , 135, 139 View FIGURES 131 – 141 ). Female of G. emiratus sp. nov. differs from that of G. ecbatanus by the straight abscissa Rs1 of the hind wing ( Fig. 177 View FIGURES 175 – 181 ) and tapering claw; from that of G. maureanus by the longer, considerably widened spines in the tarsal comb ( Fig. 133 View FIGURES 131 – 141 ); and from the females of the other species of Gonaporus by the presence of only three posterior spines of the tarsal comb on the protarsomere 1.

Description. Female. Body length 5.5–8.8 mm. Structure: see Table 1. Coloration: Head mostly black; clypeus mostly black, with orange apical 0.25–0.33 and yellow smooth margin; mandible mostly yellow, orange-brown on apical 0.33; antenna black. Mesosoma black to mostly black with pronotum narrowly orange laterally; tegula light yellowish-orange to brownish-orange. Legs: Coxae from black to mostly orange; trochanters black to mostly orange; femora black basally, orange apically; tibiae blackish-orange; tarsomere 1 mostly orange-brown, narrowly blackish-brown apically; other tarsomeres blackish-brown; spurs whitish basally, blackish apically; spines of tarsal comb mostly hyaline, orange-brown basally; spines on tibiae and femora orange-brown; tarsi with brown spines. Metasoma: Segments 1–2 or 1–3 entirely to mostly orange-brown, blackish medially; segments 3–5 or 4–5 mostly black basally and orange-brown apically; segment 6 dark orange-black. Pygidium orange-black and shiny. Setae: Head, propleuron and procoxa with numerous long fine curved whitish setae. Protarsomere 1 with 3 long spines posteriorly and 1–2 short spines anteroventrally.

Male. Body length 5.1 mm. Structure: see Table 2. Protarsus ( Fig. 144 View FIGURES 142 – 152 ). Subgenital plate ( Fig. 202 View FIGURES 200 – 207 ): Hirsute, broad lanceolate, with well-developed median keel. Genitalia ( Fig. 210 View FIGURES 208 – 211 ). Coloration: Head black; mandible mostly orange-yellow, dark orange-brown apically; antenna black. Mesosoma black; tegula yellowish-orange. Legs: Coxae mostly black, orange apically; trochanters black; femora mostly black, orange apically; tibiae mostly black, orange basally and apically; tarsi mostly brown; protarsomere 1mostly brown, orange-brown basally; protibial spur orange basally, brownish apically; other spurs brown; leg spines brown. Metasoma: Segment 1–3 orange, segments 4–7 mostly blackish-brown, yellowish-orange apically. Setae: Head (posteriorly) and propleuron with numerous long fine whitish setae; clypeus with few short brownish setae.

Etymology. The specific epithet denotes the type locality of this species.

Material examined. Holotype: ♀, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES: Al Saad, 27.ii.1981, C.G. Roche ( BMNH). Paratypes: UNITED ARAB EMIRATES: Al Saad, 30.i.1981, C.G. Roche, 3♀; same 17.i.1981, 1♀; same, 6.ii.1981, 1♀; Shweib [=Al Shuwaib], Madam, 24.iii.1987, I.L. Hamer, 1♂ ( BMNH).

Distribution. United Arab Emirates ( Fig. 216 View FIGURE 216 ).

Habitat. Probably sandy deserts.

Biology. Unknown.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Pompilidae

Genus

Gonaporus

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