Sphictostethus striatulus Roig-Alsina, 1985

Kurczewski, Frank E., West, Rick C., Waichert, Cecilia & Pitts, James P., 2022, Additional new and unusual host records for Western Hemisphere spider wasps (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae), Insecta Mundi 2022 (928), pp. 1-32 : 8

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.6533498

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:48EC3DE6-45D1-40E2-8C4D-2D8788058CAC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6533544

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AA87D0-FFFC-FF95-FF71-FBCEFC395119

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sphictostethus striatulus Roig-Alsina
status

 

Sphictostethus striatulus Roig-Alsina View in CoL

CHILE: Araucanía Region, Cautín Province, Pucón, Huerguehue National Park; 25 February 2021; G. Andrés. Host: Unidentified species ( Anyphaenidae ), adult or subadult female. The first photograph shows the wasp standing over the paralyzed ghost spider as it laid on the ground, ventral side upward, grasping its left forecoxa with her mandibles. The second photograph shows S. striatulus pulling the spider in the opposite direction of an S. xanthopus , grasping its right forepatella or forefemur with her mandibles, while S. xanthopus (Spinola) grasps the trochanter of the third left leg with her mandibles. The third photograph shows the two wasps grappling atop the spider while it laid, ventral side upward, on the ground with S. xanthopus attempting to sting S. striatulus and bite it with her mandibles. The S. striatulus is grasping the patella of the spider’s second right leg ( Andrés 2021).

CHILE: Santiago Metropolitan Region, 12 km W of Paine, Altos de Cantillana Reserve; 23 September 2012; B. Segura. Host:? Grammostola sp. (Theraphosidae) , juvenile. The wasp dragged the paralyzed tarantula backwards on the ground, dorsal side upward, grasping the base of its right foreleg with her mandibles. An accompanying video of the same event shows the wasp searching for and finding the paralyzed tarantula as it laid on its left side on the ground, then grasping the base of its right foreleg with her mandibles and dragging it backwards on the ground ( Fig. 13 View Figures 9–16 ; Segura 2012; Segura, Santiago, Chile, 2021 pers. comm.).

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