Biology and ecology of a deep cave nesting spider wasp, Ageniella evansi Townes, (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae), in Arizona
Author
Pape, Robert B.
text
Journal of Natural History
2024
2024-08-06
58
29 - 32
963
1054
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2024.2374542
journal article
303366
10.1080/00222933.2024.2374542
d54dc585-f919-46bb-bd74-f2487d8434bc
1464-5262
13758275
Cesonia
sp.
Simon, 1893
The genus
Cesonia
contains 31 species distributed primarily in the West Indies, Central America,
Mexico
, the
United States
(10 species), southern
Canada
and a single species in the Mediterranean region (
Murphy 2007
; World Spider Catalogue [WSC] 2022). Three
Cesonia
species
are recorded in the project region:
C. classica
Chamberlin, 1924
,
C. gertschi
Platnick and Shadab, 1980
and
C. ubicki
Platnick and Shadab, 1980
(
Platnick and Shadab 1980
). The single
Cesonia
host observed most closely resembles
C. gertschi
(
Figure 22
). Most records of
C. gertschi
are from middle elevations among oaks in grassland habitat. There are two records associated with riparian habitat and two from lower elevations. One of the latter is from Sabino Canyon (
34 km
north-west of the Park), which is in the same Arizona Upland subdivision
Sonoran Desert
habitat found in the Park.