Tachyphron armidalensis Brown, 1995

Brown, G. R., 2005, A revision of Tachyphron Brown and description of two new genera within the Ariphron group (Hymenoptera: Tiphiidae), Journal of Natural History 39 (2), pp. 197-239 : 219-223

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/0022290310001657892

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5214743

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/734787BF-FFA0-5A4C-D982-FB7CFD8BB55B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tachyphron armidalensis Brown, 1995
status

 

Tachyphron armidalensis Brown, 1995

( Figure 61 View Figure 61 )

Tachyphron armidalensis Brown, 1995b: 242 ; Brown, 2001: 40.

Material examined. HOLOTYPE: „. Australia: New South Wales: ‘ Fairburn’, 152 ° 109E, 30 ° 279S, 13.6 km NE of Wollomombi, trap 2, 2 January 1992, A. Campbell and C. Haywood, in ASCU. PARATYPES: 168 „: as holotype or ‘Daisy Hill’, 152 ° 109E, 30 ° 299S, 11.5 km of ENE Wollomombi, December 1991 (10), January 1992 (25), February 1992 (71), March 1992 (32), April 1992 (four), January 1993 (four), February 1993 (seven), March 1993 (two), December 1993 (one), January 1994 (12), February 1994 (one), A. Campbell and C. Haywood, in AMS, ANIC, ASCU and NTM; 4 „, Armidale area , 9–12 January 1984, G. R. Brown and G. J. Goodyer, in ASCU and NTM; 1 „, Tilbuster, 10 km N of Armidale, 10 January 1984, in ASCU.

Other material examined. New South Wales: 1 „, Scotts Head near Warrell Ck , 13 February 1968, D. H. Colless, in ANIC . Queensland: 2 „, Bundaberg, 28 March 1972, 18 April 1972, H. Frauca, in ANIC; 1 „, Bin Bin Range via Didcot , 5–7 January 1975, H. Frauca, in ANIC ; 1 „, Brisbane, 19 November 1913, H. Hacker, in BMNH; 1 „, Eidsvold , 20 March 1940, T . L. Bancroft, in ANIC ; 2 „, Watalgan Range via Rosedale , 21 March 1974, H. Frauca, in ANIC ; 1 „, 28 ° 119S, 153 ° 239E, ‘ Gwinganna’, 6 km SW by S of Tallebudgera, Malaise trap, 18–23 April 1994, D. Rentz, W. Lee and M. Upton, in ANIC; 1 „, 1♀, Tambourine Mountains , 11–18 April 1935, R . E. Turner ( BM 1935-240 ), in BMNH .

Distribution. South-eastern Queensland to the northern tablelands of New South Wales ( Figure 61 View Figure 61 ).

Diagnosis. Male: hypopygium with apical spine large and broadly triangular and the lateral spines relatively small (see Brown 1995b: Figure 5 View Figures 5–12 ). Aedeagus long and narrow with the apex narrowed and slightly down-turned, and the dorsal margin of the ventral lobe curved (see Brown 1995b: Figure 15 View Figures 13–16 ). Gena short and approximately quarter length of minimum eye diameter (see Brown 1995b: Figure 7 View Figures 5–12 ; 2001: Figure 14 View Figures 13–16 ).

Female: frons and vertex with a semicircular area of finer punctures interspersed between deeper punctures. Pygidium strongly narrowed dorsally with two medial longitudinal carinae (see Brown 2001: Figure 19 View Figures 17–24 ).

Description. Female: brown; antennae and legs slightly paler. Head subrectangular, slightly wider than long, posterior angles rounded, eyes relatively large, not strongly protuberant, almost reaching base of mandibles. Mandibles long, evenly curved, without preapical tooth. Clypeus narrowly truncate apically, closely and finely punctate, sharply medially carinate basally to near apical margin. Frons obscurely sagittally sulcate. Frons and vertex deeply rugosely punctate interspersed with small shallow punctures in a large semicircular area bounded by the inner orbits of the eyes and most of the vertex (except laterally and posteriorly). Pronotum trapezoid with lateral margins converging posteriorly, dorsal and lateral surfaces clearly delineated from dorsum, margins not carinate, dorsum rugosely punctate, punctures aligned longitudinally, lateral surface longitudinally multistriate with striae subparallel to ventral margin becoming rugosely punctate dorsally. Mesoscutellum trapezoid, closely punctate. Propodeum closely to rugosely punctate dorsally, rugosely punctate posteriorly, longitudinally striate laterally. Mesopleura with small dorsal surface below level of mesoscutellum, produced anterolaterally into a vertical carina. Metasoma rugosely punctate, punctures longitudinally aligned, T 1–5 with posterior line of longitudinal punctures blending in with other punctation; T 6 almost smooth medially, longitudinally, striations short, confluent and appearing as two parallel lines medially, with lateral fringe of setae, lateral margins strongly convergent dorsally, apical margin not broadly rounded, narrowly emarginate; T 1 with vertical declivity anteriorly; S1 short, broad, medially raised, not carinate; S6 with weakly raised lip on posterior margin. BL: 8.

Remarks. This is the most southern species, and is the only species found outside tropical Australasia.

The female has not been described previously, and apart from T. subtriangularus , is the only known female for this genus.

ASCU

Agricultural Scientific Collections Unit

ANIC

Australian National Insect Collection

NTM

Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

T

Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Tiphiidae

Genus

Tachyphron

Loc

Tachyphron armidalensis Brown, 1995

Brown, G. R. 2005
2005
Loc

Tachyphron armidalensis

Brown GR 2001: 40
Brown GR 1995: 242
1995
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF