The genus Apterogyna Latreille, 1809 in Egypt, with three new species (Hymenoptera: Bradynobaenidae: Apterogyninae)
Author
Soliman, Ahmed M.
Author
Gadallah, Neveen S.
Author
Al-Shahat, Ahmed M.
Author
Pagliano, G.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3905
2
209
220
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3905.2.3
c06e94fe-bc2b-4cd3-ad06-71b978c7ac17
1175-5326
241302
EF1F09FE-C414-4653-B4F7-841C4E348D27
Apterogyna similis
Soliman & Gadallah
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs 28−32
)
Material examined.
Holotype
♂:
Egypt
, Nahia, Giza [
30°02'54"N
,
31°07'40"E
],
23.xi.1932
(leg.?) [
CUE
].
Description.
MALE (
holotype
). Body length
11 mm
.
Colour.
Black, except antenna, pronotum, metapleuron, posterior two-thirds of scutellum, tegula, metanotum, propodeum, metapleuron, legs, first metasomal segment and terminal hook ferruginous red; mandible ferruginous on basal third, reddish brown apically; palpi dark brown; scutellum and mespleuron partly red; T3−T7 chestnut posteriorly. Wings hyaline with yellow veins and pterostigma brown. Fore tibial spur reddish, mid and hind ones waxy white; eye black.
Pubescence
. Body including legs densely clothed with erect to recumbent white setae, such setae masking background of face, clypeus, pronotum and anterior half of mesoscutum; T1, T2 with well defined tuft of dense long white setae apicomesally (
Fig. 31
); metasomal segments 3−6 with well-developed apical fringe of white setae.
Head
. In dorsal view slightly narrower than pronotum (0.8 ×) and convergent behind eyes; vertex punctulate, with a smooth area adjacent to each ocellus, with a distinct polished tubercle posterolaterally closer to eye than lateral ocellus; ocellocular distance (OOD) as long as interocellar distance (IOD); malar space 0.35 × LED; mandible slender, with very small subapical tooth. Antenna long, 2 × as long as mesosomal length; scape subquadrate, 0.7 × as long as its maximal width, distinctly shorter than F1 (0.2 ×); F1 distinctly long, 5 × as long as its width, slightly longer than F2 and 1.25 × as long as F3.
FIGURES 28–32.
Apterogyna similis
sp. nov.
, holotype, ♂: 28. Habitus, dorsolateral view; 29.
Mesosoma
, dorsal view; 30. Propodeum, dorsal view; 31. T1–T2; 32. T3.
Mesosoma
. Pronotum declivous in front, transversely ridged posterolaterally, with strongly concave posterior margin and broadly rounded humeral angle; basal half of mesoscutum and scutellum densely punctate, the former with median longitudinal polished ridge extending along its anterior half; notauli complete, strongly divergent anteriorly (
Fig. 29
); tegula smooth and bare; propodeal dorsal face areolate, posterior face abruptly declivous, shallowly concave and smooth (
Fig. 30
); hind coxa with strong lamina on outer surface. Mesopleuron punctatereticulate, with smooth area in front of mid coxa. Fore wing with closed brachial cell; hind wing with eight hamuli. Front femur swollen distally; hind inner tibial spur slightly shorter than basal tarsomere.
Metasoma
. T1−T3 moderately reticulate-foveate (
Figs 31, 32
); T4−T7 finely punctate; S1 with distinct transverse carina posteriorly; S2, S3 densely punctate-reticulate, the latter with transverse smooth area subapically; S4−S6 with transverse smooth ridge widened medially, become finely punctate-reticulate laterally; S6 with a group of short reddish bristles laterally; S7 with transverse smooth ridge basally and puncticulate apically.
FEMALE unknown
Distribution.
Egypt
: Giza.
Remarks.
This species closely resembles
Apterogyna olivieri
but differ in the following: with red pronotum and metapleuron, while scutellum and mesopleuron are partly red (all are entirely black in
A. olivieri
);
mesosoma
densely clothed with recumbent setae masking background beneath particularly on pronotum and anterior half of mesoscutum (
Figs 28, 29
) (
mesosoma
with scattered erect setae in
A. olivieri
(
Fig. 20
)); propodeal posterior face smooth (
Fig. 30
) (reticulate-punctate in
A. olivieri
); metasomal T1 and T2 with well-developed tufts of whitish setae apicomesally (
Fig. 31
) (ill-defined in
A. olivieri
(
Fig. 22
)); metasomal T3 densely and deeply punctate (
Fig. 32
) (with scattered superficial punctures in
A. olivieri
(
Fig. 22
)).
Etymology.
The name
similis
(Latin, adjective) refers to the similarity of this species with
A. olivieri
Klug.