Notes on Iberian Mutillidae (Hymenoptera) part I: a new species, new records and some taxonomic and faunistic remarks
Author
Parejo-Pulido, Daniel
Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos (IREC), CSIC-UCLM-JCCM, Ronda de Toledo, 12, 13005 Ciudad Real, Spain.
Author
Romano, Marcello
Piazza A. Cataldo, 10, I 90040 Capaci (PA), Italy.
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-07-11
5477
5
501
536
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5477.5.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5477.5.1
1175-5326
12733366
DBB3BBAE-1626-4F36-BBDC-A9B4E0832E18
Smicromyrme sicanus
(
De Stefani, 1887
)
(
Fig. 15
)
Mutilla ephippium
var.
sicana
De Stefani, 1887: 62
,
♂
;
De Stefani 1897: 81
.
Smicromyrme pusilla septentrionalis
Hoffer, 1936: 162
,
♀
syn.
Petersen 1988
.
Smicromyrme pusilla septentrionalis
f.
gregory
Hoffer, 1936: 163
,
♀
syn.
Petersen 1988
.
Smicromyrme rufipes
var.
lutescens
Invrea, 1954: 153
,
♂
syn.
Petersen 1988
.
Smicromyrme septentrionalis
:
Lelej 1984: 82–83
,
1985: 236–238
.
Smicromyrme sicana
:
Petersen 1988: 194
;
Pagliano 1995: 101
;
Turrisi 1999: 148
;
Lelej 2002: 69
;
Lelej
et al.
2003: 133
;
Lelej & Schmid-Egger 2005: 1532–1533
;
Bogusch 2006: 141–142
;
Pagliano & Strumia 2007: 95
;
Strumia & Pagliano 2007: 86
;
Standfuss & Standfuss 2012: 462
;
Lo Cascio 2015: 559
;
Pagliano & Agnoli 2018: 130
.
Smicromyrme sicanus
:
Lelej & Yildirim, 2009: 4
, 21;
Muskovits & György 2011: 109–110
;
Lelej
et al.
, 2016: 18
;
Gogala 2017: 29
;
Lelej, 2017: 156
;
Pagliano & Strumia 2019: 261
;
Pagliano
et al.
2020: 190
;
Lelej & Prisniy, 2021: 15
;
Pagliano 2021: 61
;
Lelej & Williams 2023: 105
,132.
Diagnosis. Male
(
Fig. 15A
). Body black except for the apical part of mandibles and most of mesosoma, which are red; tibiae and tarsi are brownish. Colouration of mesosoma is highly variable, ranging from entirely red to only pronotum, tegulae, upper part of mesopleurae, scutellum and metanotum red (
Fig. 15A
). Mandibles tridentate at the apex, with an external tooth beneath. Clypeus concave, with two distinct apical teeth and a low, medial carina, higher in the anterior part of the clypeus and gradually lowering distally until merging with the surface around the middle of the clypeus (
Fig. 15D
). Head with rounded sides, converging behind the eyes. Medium-sized ocelli, POL/ OOL of almost 1 (range = 0.9–1, N = 5); OL:MOD:LOD = 1.0:0.8–1.2:0.7–1.0 (N = 5) (
Fig. 15C
). Tegulae shiny, with very few, small and superficial punctures. Wings hyaline, darkened at the apex. Propodeum with a smooth slope. S1 with a longitudinal carina. Felt lines on lateral sides of both T2 and S2. T2 1.3 times wider than long (N = 3); distal fringes of sparse white-silvery pubescence on the metasomal tergum. Genitalia is shown in
Fig. 15E–G
. Body length: 6.8–10.0 mm. (N = 5).
Female
(
Fig. 15B
). Body black except for red mandibles (except the apical part), antennal tubercles, clypeus, mesosoma, tibiae and tarsi. Mandibles acuminate. Clypeus with a tooth-like tubercle in the middle of the anterior margin. Vertex with a silvery spot of dense pubescence at the centre. Antennae reddish-brown, darkening toward apex. Mesosoma about 1.4 times longer than wide (mesosoma length/maximum width range = 1.3–1.4, N = 5), with a small, wide, nail-like and non-protruding scutellar scale; two lateral areas of golden pubescence on the dorsal part of mesosoma, being the centre of dark pubescence; propodeum with a smooth slope. T2 approximately as wide as long (T2 width/length range = 1–1.1, N = 5), with a round spot of white-silvery pubescence in the middle, and small similarly coloured spots on each side. Narrow band of white-silvery pubescence on the posterior margin of T2, extended triangularly forward in the middle. T3 entirely covered by white-silvery pubescence. Pygidial area narrowly oval with longitudinal almost parallel striae and a smooth apical part (
Fig. 15H
). Body length:
4.7–5.8 mm
. (N = 4).
FIGURE 15.
Smicromyrme sicanus
(De Stefani)
, male (
A, C, D, E, F, G
) and female (
B, H
).
A, C
Spain, El Escorial, Madrid [MNCN_Ent 306880].
B
Spain, Tres Cantos, Madrid [MNCN_Ent 339243].
D, E, F, G
Spain, Mijaralengua, Burgos [MNCN_ Ent 367056].
H
Elvas, Portugal.
A, B
habitus, dorsal view;
C
head, dorsal view;
D
clypeus;
E, F, G
genitalia;
H
pygidial area.
For a more detailed description of both sexes see
S. septentrionalis
in
Lelej (1984
,
1985
).
Material examined
.
PORTUGAL
.
1♀
,
Ponte da Ajuda
,
Elvas
,
Portalegre
/
30.VI.2019
/
D. Parejo-Pulido
leg. / [
DPP
]
.
SPAIN
.
1♂
,
Escorial
,
Madrid
/
14-VIII-1904
/
García Mercet
leg. /
Colección García Mercet
[
MNCN
_
Ent
336881]
;
1♂
,
Escorial
,
Madrid
/
VIII-1904
/
García Mercet
leg. /
Colección García Mercet
[
MNCN
_
Ent
367067]
;
1♂
,
El Escorial
,
Madrid
/
Colección García Mercet
[
MNCN
_
Ent
367066]
.
1♂
,
El Escorial
,
Madrid
/
12.VIII.1906
/ as
Mutilla montana
Panz. var.
rubrocincta
Luc.
/
Colección J. Suárez
[
MNCN
_
Ent
306880]
;
1♂
,
Mijaralengua
,
Burgos
/
19.VIII.1998
/
C. Rey
leg. [
MNCN
_
Ent
367065]
;
4♀
,
Tres Cantos
,
Madrid
/
18-03-1993
,
21-06-1994
,
18- 03-1995
/
F. Fresno
leg. / ex.
Colección F. Fresno
[
MNCN
_
Ent
339243-46]
.
Distribution
.
Albania
,
Austria
,
Croatia
,
Czechia
,
France
,
Greece
,
Hungary
,
Italy
,
Montenegro
,
Portugal
,
Romania
,
Russia
(European part),
Spain
,
Serbia
,
Slovakia
,
Syria
,
Turkey
and
Ukraine
(
Pagliano
et al.
2020
; this study).
Iberian distribution
. Burgos,
Madrid, Portalegre
(this study).
Remarks
. The specimens reported in this study represent the first records of the species in the Iberian Peninsula. The studied males have the characteristic colour pattern with the black mesoscutum surrounded by red parts. Two of the females exhibit red T1. The female from
Portugal
was collected on the edges of the Guadiana River. The area was composed of holm oaks (
Quercus ilex
L.) and
Retama sphaerocarpa
L.
Regarding
Smicromyrme rufipes
var.
lutescens
as synonym of
S. sicanus
:
Invrea (1954)
described this colour variety of
S. rufipes
from Dalmatia, which was later synonymised with
S. sicanus
by
Petersen (1988)
after examining the
holotype
(Beograd). Years later,
Pagliano & Agnoli (2018)
and
Pagliano
et al.
(2020)
reported
Smicromyrme lutescens
for
Italy
as a valid species. Here, we stick to that synonymy, which probably escaped the previous authors.