The wasp genus Sphex in Sub-Saharan Africa (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae)
Author
Dörfel, Thorleif H.
11B5C093-23D5-417C-AB64-65764FC2AF05
Museum für Naturkunde, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
thorleif.doerfel@mfn.berlin
Author
Ohl, Michael
878259F2-C3C6-4264-B04A-C397E01E5C8E
Museum für Naturkunde, Invalidenstrasse 43, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
michael.ohl@mfn.berlin
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2022
2022-02-23
796
1
1
170
http://dx.doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2022.796.1665
journal article
55605
10.5852/ejt.2022.796.1665
9c3fa32d-4320-4170-83e3-a5c045a4ba68
2118-9773
6299440
76C5C9C4-C6C1-4EDC-8FF8-9828A6EF2040
Species of the
argentatus
group
The
argentatus
group contains the following nine species:
Sphex erythrinus
,
S. feijeni
nom. nov.
,
S. fumicatus
,
S. lanatus
,
S. rufinervis
,
S. taschenbergi
,
S. tomentosus
,
S. torridus
and
S. voeltzkowii
.
This group was proposed by
Hensen (1991)
, when it primarily encompassed species from the Australis and Orientalis regions. He correctly assigned the Afrotropical
S. fumicatus
to the group, and
Schmid-Egger (2014)
added
S. taschenbergi
based on Palearctic records. The species treated here conform to Hensen’s diagnostic character, a bituberculate metanotum (
Fig. 7
). In most species of the group, the tubercles are usually very distinct, but occasional specimens and particularly members of
S. erythrinus
,
S. feijeni
nom. nov.
and
S. rufinervis
have them more indistinct. Therefore, we opted to rely on an additional character for species group assignment that was mentioned by
Bohart & Menke (1976)
: the presence of a linear swelling in front of the upper part of the spiracular groove (
Fig. 9
). Only members of the
argentatus
group possess both of these traits, whereas others may have an indistinctly bituberculate metanotum but lack the spiracular swelling (
Fig. 10
). In the
satanas
group, the swelling is present, but the metanotum is always unmistakably flat.
Males in the
argentatus
group seem to have much greater intraspecific size variations than those of other groups. Length differences of up to ± 20% were observed. When sequenced, the differences in the CO1 gene for a small and a large individual of
S. lanatus
were minimal, so any size variations may simply be the result of differing amounts of available food during larval development.
In contrast to all other African species groups of
Sphex
, the orientation of the erect propodeal setae is not uniform within this group.