A new remarkable species in the Chrysis ignita group (Hymenoptera, Chrysididae) and an overview on Central Asian species, with new synonymies
Author
Rosa, Paolo
rosa@chrysis.net
text
Linzer biologische Beiträge
2019
2019-07-26
51
1
397
417
journal article
22917
10.5281/zenodo.3758372
10b36454-4441-4819-aeda-7f5606ef6fa9
0253-116X
3758372
Chrysis lyubae
nov.sp.
(
Figs 3
, 4-8)
M a t e r i a l e x a m i n e d:
Holotype
♀
,
Kazakhstan
:20kmN[possiblyE?]
Kegen
,
43.0°N
̅
79.0°E
,
24.v.1994
, leg.
K. Deneš
jr. (type deposited at
BZL
).
D i a g n o s i s: Despite the
Chrysis ignita
group includes more than a hundred species, only a few are entirely red or red with pink and purple colours:
Chrysis
mane
SEMENOV, 1912 (known from
China
:
Gansu
,
Qinghai
,
Inner Mongolia
;
Russia
: Eastern Siberia,
Buryatia
, new record,
Fig. 1
, 13-16),
C. kukunorensis
SEMENOV, 1967 (
China
:
Qinghai
,
Gansu
,
Fig. 17
),
C. matutina
SEMENOV, 1967 (
China
:
Gansu
,
Hubei
,
Fig. 18
),
C. violenta
LINSENMAIER, 1968
(North
India
,
Pakistan
, Tibet,
Nepal
,
Fig. 2
, 9-14),
C. violenta ultramonticola
LINSENMAIER, 1968
(Tibet,
Nepal
). Three of these,
Chrysis lyubae
nov.sp.
,
C. violenta
and
C. violenta ultramonticola
belong to the
Chrysis
ruddii
subgroup, for short pronotum, its length less than one fourth of its width; F1 fully black or largely non-metallic; scapal basin with dense, appressed, white pubescence.
Chrysis lyubae
nov.sp.
can be easily recognised from
C. violenta
and
C. violenta ultramonticola
by its colour pattern with metasoma fully purple-rosy, without contrasting blue-purple bands on the second and third tergum; vertex, mesoscutum and tegulae dark purple, contrasting with the rest of red-rosy mesosoma; mesoscutum with a median rosy spot;
C. kukunorensis
,
C. mane
and
C. matutina
are conversely fully red and museum specimens are often golden to greenish.
Chrysis lyubae
nov.sp.
can be morphologically separated by the M-like TFC (vs. straight in
C. violenta
); short malar spaces (vs. elongated); punctures on scapal basin smaller than punctures close to eye (vs. punctures of the same size); metasoma completely dull, with dense coriaceous microsculpture between punctures (vs. dense large punctures in
C. violenta
and dense small punctures in
C. violenta ultramonticola
); apical teeth of the third metasomal tergum short, triangular, with central interval narrower and more angulate (vs. apical teeth longer, the central interval wider); black spots on the second sternum longer, with a reduced violet tint in between and apically (vs. second sternum largely metallic red, with smaller black spots).
Chrysis
kukunorensis
,
C. mane
and
C. matutina
are separated by elongated shape of metasoma in dorsal view (see also pictures in
ROSA et al. 2017a
), and differently shaped apical margin of the third tergum (
Fig. 12
,
16
̅18).
D e s c r i p t i o n:
Body length 10.0 mm. Fore wing length 7.0 mm. Female. OOL = 2.3 MOD; POL = 1.2 MOD; MS = 1.0 MOD; relative length of P: F1: F2: F3 = 1.0: 2.1: 1.4: 1.3.
Head: In full face view, length
1.5 mm
, width
2.7 mm
. Apex of clypeus slightly arched; TFC strong, M-like, its distal margin ending less than 1.0 MOD far to eye margin; scapal basin with very dense and fine punctation, transversally subcontiguous; punctures on face covered with dense, appressed, silvery setae; punctures on vertex and occiput small, dense. Malar space 1.0 MOD long, as long as one third of F1. Subantennal distance less than 1.0 MOD. Subgenal carina complete, extending to mandible joint. Mandible without subapical tooth; in lateral view, mandible relatively thick, its sides gradually converging towards apex and basally.
Mesosoma: Length
3.5 mm
; width (PPW)
2.4 mm
. Pronotum with large anteromedian groove; punctation deep, coarse, uneven, and mostly contiguous. Mesoscutum with dense, small to medium-sized punctures, larger basally among notauli, with very narrow polished interstices; lateral area of mesoscutum with scattered punctures and tiny dots on polished interstices; notauli complete and parapsidal lines hardly visible medially; notauli with deep, round pits, decreasing from posterior to anterior end. Mesoscutellum with irregular, double punctation, with smaller punctures at sides and posteriorly. Metanotum with larger, subreticulate punctures of different size; on anterior margin with a row of elongate foveae. Mesopleuron with episternal sulcus formed by deep and large foveae. Propodeal teeth large, hardly divergent, pointing backwards.
Metasoma: Length
4.6 mm
. T1 with double punctures, larger and scattered medially, with tiny punctures on interstices. T2 antero-medially densely punctured, with uneven punctures and tiny punctures on interstices; punctures scattered posteriorly, with larger polished interstices a few tiny punctures. T3 with small, even, very dense punctures, without polished interstices, covering the whole tergum, including post-pit row; pits of the pit row small, round and deep; apical teeth short, triangular, pointed, subequal in length, and with similar indenture, the median one less wider and more arcuate. Median longitudinal carina hardy visible on T2 and T3. Black spots on S2 large, elongate, medially separated (about 1 MOD) (
Fig. 7
).
Colouration: Red-rosy. Head, with vertex and occiput entirely dark violet; pronotum laterally with larger punctures with black bottom; mesoscutum dark violet to black, with a medial, rosy spot; tegulae rosy anteriorly and dark violet to black posteriorly. Second and third metasomal tergum dorsally purplish. Second metasomal sternum basally and third one entirely black; first sternum partly and second one medially purplish. Mandibles dark brown, basally red-rosy. Scape and pedicel metallic rosy, flagellomeres black. Legs rosy, hind femur and tibia black on inner side; tarsi brown, darker on the last tarsomere. Wings hyaline on outer margins, distinctly brownish from medial to discoidal cell.
Vestiture: Pubescence on vertex and dorsally on mesosoma dense, moderately long (1.0 MOD), with erect and whitish or slightly brown setae; metasoma laterally with short erect setae; on femora and tibiae with sparse, erect and short setae, longer ventrally on femora.
Male. Unknown.
D i s t r i b u t i o n:
Kazakhstan
.
E t y m o l o g y: The specific epithet
lyubae
(feminine name in genitive case) is named after my wife Lyuba Zaytseva (Bernareggio,
Italy
) in recognition of his continuous help in my study of cuckoo wasps.
D i s c u s s i o n: Currently thirty-four species of the
Chrysis ignita
group are known for Central Asian countries (
Kazakhstan
,
Kyrgyzstan
,
Tajikistan
,
Turkmenistan
, and
Uzbekistan
) (DU BUYSSON 1896;
LINSENMAIER 1959
,
1997
;
MOCSÁRY 1912
a
, 1912b;
RADOSZKOWSKI 1889
;
ROSA 2018
,
2019
;
ROSA et al. 2017a
,
2017b
,
2017c
,
2017d
,
2017e
;
SEMENOV 1903
, 1912, 1967; SEMENOV & NIKOL̕SKAYA 1954;
TARBINSKY 1996
,
2000
;
VINOKUROV, 2006
). A few of them are also known for the Chinese Xinjiang, e.g.
Chrysis csikiana
MOCSÁRY, 1912
,
C. keriensis
MOCSÁRY, 1889
and
C. kashgarica
MOCSÁRY, 1912
(
ROSA 2018
;
ROSA et al. 2014
). Yet, the number of species is significantly underestimated and further research will definitely reveal a number of new species.
In the last years, a revision of the
type
material (
ROSA et al. 2017a
,
2017e
, unpubl records) has changed species placement in some groups. In particular, six species included by
KIMSEY & BOHART (1991)
in the
Chrysis ignita
group were moved to other species groups, as well as two species described by
TARBINSKY (2000)
. More in detail,
C. alaica
belongs to the
C. cerastes
group;
C. araxana
MOCSÁRY, 1893 to the
C. maculicornis
Figs 1-3
: Habitus: (
1
)
Chrysis
mane
SEMENOV; (
2
)
Chrysis
violenta
LINSENMAIER; (
3
)
Chrysis lyubae
nov.sp.
Figs 4-8
:
Chrysis lyubae
nov.sp.
: (
4
) habitus, lateral view; (
5
) face, frontal view; (
6
) second and third tergum, dorso-lateral view; (
7
) metasoma, ventral view; (
8
) metasoma, posterior view.
group;
C. draco
MOCSÁRY, 1912
to the
C. subsinuata
group;
Chrysis
lanata
MOCSÁRY, 1912
,
C. regalis
MOCSÁRY, 1912
,
C. sapphirus
SEMENOV, 1967 and
C. korneevi
TARBINSKY, 2000
belong to the
Chrysis
facialis
group. Moreover, two of these species proved new synonymies:
Chrysis
korneevi
TARBINSKY,
2000
nov.syn.
of
Chrysis
regalis
MOCSÁRY, 1912
(in particular,
C. korneevi
is the male of
C. regalis
) and
Chrysis
anastasiae
TARBINSKY,
2000
nov.syn.
of
Chrysis
dentipes
RADOSZKOWSKI, 1877
.
TARBINSKY (2000)
provided a revision of the
Chrysis ignita
group of the Tian Shan, with keys, descriptions, distributions and line drawings. A preliminary revision of his collection at IBPB resulted in discovery of a series of misidentifications (e.g. the series of specimens identified as
Chrysis chinensis
MOCSÁRY, 1912
included specimens of
C. longula
ABEILLE DE PERRIN, 1879
;
C. longula
included specimens of the
taczanovskii
group;
C. rutiliventris
included specimens close to
C. mediata
LINSENMAIER, 1951
;
C. mediata
included
C. angustula
SCHENCK, 1856
; and the same situation was observed for almost all the other species identified in the
C. ignita
group), which will be dealt with at length in another work. However, a few Tarbinsky̕s species, clearly synonyms, are already discussed in the present paper. Besides the above mentioned
Chrysis
korneevi
and
C. anastasiae
, not belonging to the
C. ignita
group, other synonymies are
Chrysis
crebropilosa
TARBINSKY,
2000
nov.syn.
of
Chrysis csikiana
MOCSÁRY, 1912
;
Chrysis
talassica
TARBINSKY,
2000
nov.syn.
of
Chrysis inaequipunctata
BISCHOFF, 1910
;
Chrysis
viridodentata
TARBINSKY,
2000
nov.syn.
of
Chrysis castigata
LINSENMAIER, 1959
; finally,
Chrysis ignita
var.
fulgidaeformis
BISCHOFF,
1930
nov.syn.
of
C. uljanini
RADOSZKOWSKI, 1877
, after examination of the
types
housed at MNHU.