Sphaeropthalma difficilis ( Baker, 1905 )

Wilson, Joseph S., 2017, Nocturnal Velvet Ants (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae) of Joshua Tree National Park, Riverside County, California with the description of three new species, Zootaxa 4319 (2), pp. 329-367 : 353-354

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4319.2.4

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1Ecf4C4A-09Ca-42B4-A105-67Dec7863Fe5

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6032654

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/ED726D24-FFB3-FFD3-FF5F-FC54FB633F5C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Sphaeropthalma difficilis ( Baker, 1905 )
status

 

Sphaeropthalma difficilis ( Baker, 1905)

Photopsis difficilis Baker, 1905 . Invertebrata Pacifica 1: 114. ♂. Holotype data: California Claremont ( CUIC).

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) maricopella purismella Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 17. ♂. Holotype data: Lost. Synonymized by Ferguson (1967).

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) maricopella maricopella Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 17. ♂. Holotype data: Lost. Synonymized by Ferguson (1967).

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) maricopella castanea Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 17. ♂. Holotype data: Lost. Synonymized by Ferguson (1967).

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) californiense californiense Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 18. ♂. Holotype data: Lost. Synonymized by Ferguson (1967).

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) californiense fuscatella Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 18. ♂. Holotype data: Lost. Synonymized by Ferguson (1967).

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) quijotoa quijotoa Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 18. ♂. Holotype data: Lost. Synonymized by Ferguson (1967).

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) quijotoa parrasia Schuster, 1958 . Ent. Amer. 37: 18. ♂. Holotype data: Lost. Synonymized by Ferguson (1967).

Diagnosis of male. This species has a deeply excised vertical mandible with the tooth forming an acute angle (see Pitts et al. 2009: Fig. 38), lacks mesosternal processes, and has the marginal cell shorter than the stigma, the first segment of the metasoma petiolate with the second segment and densely punctate, the second sternum with an anteromedial tumid region, and the genitalia with a long cylindrical cuspis that is setose ventrally with the apex having longer denser setae and parameres with dense setae located medially, but internally directed, along the internal margin (see Pitts et al. 2009: Fig. 3 View FIGURES 1 – 4 ).

Diagnosis of female. The female of this species has the dorsum of the body covered with sparse erect brachyplumose setae, but the integument is not obscured, the ventral margin of the mandible with a deep excision subtended by a large rounded tooth and lacks a dorsal tooth at the termination of the dorsal carina, the head below eyes is parallel, the head evenly rounded in lateral view, the first metasoma segment is petiolate with the second segment and the pygidium is striate to granulate.

Material examined. Holotype data: California Claremont ( CUIC) . JTNP: 18–21.Jul.2012: 17 ♂ N9; 24 ♂ N7; 38 ♂ N5; 15 ♂ N3; 3 ♂ N1; 25 ♂ T; 37 ♂ S1; 21 ♂ S3; 10 ♂ S5; 6 ♂ S7; 5 ♂ S9; 26 ♂ S11; 8 ♂ S13; 65 ♂ S18. 26–28.Aug.2012: 1 ♂ N9; 9 ♂ N7; 2 ♂ N5; 5 ♂ N3; 4 ♂ N1; 3 ♂ T; 13 ♂ S1; 24 ♂ S3; 20 ♂ S5; 56 ♂ S7; 17 ♂ S9; 25 ♂ S11; 15 ♂ S13; 15 ♂ S18. 22–24.Sep.2012: 2 ♂ N9; 4 ♂ N7; 3 ♂ N5; 20 ♂ N3; 10 ♂ N1; 11 ♂ T; 12 ♂ S1; 25 ♂ S3; 27 ♂ S5; 46 ♂ S7; 62 ♂ S9; 12 ♂ S11; 44 ♂ S13; 23 ♂ S18. 26–28.Oct.2012: 3 ♂ S7; 5 ♂ S9; 3 ♂ S18.

Distribution. USA (Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, and Utah) and northern Mexico (Baja California and Sonora).

Activity. This species is seemingly active throughout the season at JTNP.

Remarks. Wilson & Pitts (2012) performed a phylogenetic analysis of S. difficilis and used this species to identify potential Pleistocene refugia in the North American cold deserts. Their research on this species provided evidence that in addition to desert-like conditions persisting through the ice age in parts of the Nearctic warm deserts, many areas maintained desert-like characteristics in the regional cold deserts. It is abundant throughout its range ( Table 2 & 3; Ferguson 1967; Pitts et al. 2009, 2010a; Wilson et al. 2010; Wilson & Pitts 2012; Boehme et al. 2012). This species is closely related to S. django , which is restricted to the Algodones Sand Dunes (Pitts et al. 2009).

Although most of the holotypes of the Schuster species synonymized with S. difficilis are listed as “lost”, they were likely never labeled as holotypes ( Ferguson 1967). This holds for most other Schuster types that are missing as well.

This species is currently placed in the S. difficilis species-group ( Pitts & Sadler 2015).

CUIC

Cornell University Insect Collection

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Mutillidae

Genus

Sphaeropthalma

Loc

Sphaeropthalma difficilis ( Baker, 1905 )

Wilson, Joseph S. 2017
2017
Loc

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) maricopella purismella

Schuster 1958
1958
Loc

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) maricopella maricopella

Schuster 1958
1958
Loc

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) maricopella castanea

Schuster 1958
1958
Loc

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) californiense californiense

Schuster 1958
1958
Loc

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) californiense fuscatella

Schuster 1958
1958
Loc

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) quijotoa quijotoa

Schuster 1958
1958
Loc

Sphaeropthalma (Micromutilla) quijotoa parrasia

Schuster 1958
1958
Loc

Photopsis difficilis

Baker 1905
1905
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