Tiphia (Tiphia) incisa Cameron 1897

Autor: Han, Qian, Wang, He-Sheng, Chen, Bin, Li, Ting-Jing
Rok vydání: 2023
Předmět:
ISSN: 0096-3801
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7921204
Popis: Tiphia (Tiphia) incisa Cameron, 1897, new record (Figs 96–102) Tiphia incisa Cameron, 1897: 49; Bingham, 1897: 57, 60; Allen & Jaynes, 1930: 102; Hedicke, 1936: 13 (listed). Tiphia (Tiphia) incisa Cameron: Allen, 1969: 388–389; Allen, 1975: 26. Material examined. 2♁, China, Fujian prov., Wuyi Mountain National Nature Reserve, 40°16′60″N, 117°11′5″E, 1209 m, 20.VII.2021, Jinlan Li (CNU); 1♁, China, Zhejiang prov., Longquan City, Fengyang Mountain Nature Reserve, 28°4′43″N, 119°7′42″E, 1764 m, 27.VII.2007, Zhi Chen (CNU); 3♁, China, Zhejiang prov., Jinhua City, Wucheng County, Tashi Town, Yinling Village, 28°48′14″N, 119°20′49″E, 633 m, 21.VII.2021, Xiangping Liao (CNU). Diagnosis. Male (Fig. 96). Body length 10.4–12.5 mm, forewing length 6.8–8.8 mm. Mandible (Fig. 97) with preapical denticle and obsolete intermittent impressed line; clypeus (Fig. 97) with coarse and dense punctures, apex medially emarginated; frons (Fig. 97) with medial longitudinal narrow carina; lower frons with dense punctures, somewhat reticulate, and upper frons with sparse punctures; vertex (Fig. 98) with relatively sparser punctures; pronotal anterior carina complete; mesopleuron (Fig. 99) with big punctures and mixed with few minute punctures; mesoscutum medially with dense punctures, sparser laterally, only with notaulus; mesoscutellum (Fig. 102) with sparse punctures; tegula atmost slightly longer than middle width, posterior margin without transverse impressed line; apex of marginal cell of forewing (Fig. 96) distinctly exceeding second submarginal cell; propodeal areola (Fig. 102) subtrapezoidal, distinctly convergent posteriorly, APWL=5.9: 4.1: 6.9, medial longitudinal carina reaching posterior 2/3 of areola; lateral surface of propodeum dorsally (Fig. 99) with sparse long oblique wrinkles, ventrally smooth; subposterior area of T1 (Fig. 96) close to apex and slightly depressed, with 2–3 transverse rows of punctures; S1 (Fig. 100) anteriorly arched and with scattered punctures, posteriorly smooth, with posterolateral groove and approaching the anterior apex; T3–T6 and S2–S5 with dense punctures; S5 (Fig. 101) with lateral denticle, and without deep orifice. Female. Unknown. Distribution. China (Zhejiang, Fujian); India.
Published as part of Han, Qian, Wang, He-Sheng, Chen, Bin & Li, Ting-Jing, 2023, A taxonomic revision of the nominotypical subgenus Tiphia Fabricius, 1775 (Hymenoptera: Tiphiidae: Tiphiinae) from China, with three new species and a key to the Chinese species, pp. 1-43 in Zootaxa 5284 (1) on pages 31-32, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5284.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/7918890
{"references":["Cameron, P. (1897) Hymenoptera Orientalia, or contributions to a knowledge of the Hymenoptera of the oriental zoological region, Part V. Memoirs of the Manchester Literary and Philosphical Society, 44, 1 - 51.","Bingham, C. T. (1897) The fauna of British India including Ceylon and Burma. Hymenoptera, 1, 56 - 64. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 100738","Allen, H. W. & Jaynes, H. A. (1930) Contribution to the taxonomy of Asiatic wasps of the genus Tiphia (Scoliidae). Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 76 (17), 1 - 105. https: // doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.76 - 2814.1","Hedicke, H. (1936) Tiphiidae. Hymenopterorum Catalogus, Part 1, 1 - 32.","Allen, H. W. (1969) Redescriptions of types of Tiphiinae from Asia, Africa, Oceania in the British Museum (NH) and at Oxford University. Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 95, 353 - 438.","Allen, H. W. (1975) The genus Tiphia of the Indian Subcontinent. Technical Bulletins, 1509, 1 - 95."]}
Databáze: OpenAIRE