Kaszab Zoltán (szerk.): A Magyar Természettudományi Múzeum évkönyve 69. (Budapest 1977)

Papp, J.: New Apanteles Först. species from Hungary (Hymenoptera, Braconidae: Microgasterinae), V

Figs. 1-4. Apanteles aptus sp. n. Ç : 1 = head behind eyes, in dorsal view, 2 = part of right fore wing, 3 = tergites 1-3, 4 = hind half of abdomen with hypopygium and ovi­positor sheath. — Fig. 5. A. longicalcar THOMS. Ç : part of right fore wing (stigma -\- r 1 + cuqu x infolded, laterally without any creases. Ovipositor sheath (in lateral view) almost as long as first two joints of hind tarsus. Body black. Antenna below somewhat brownish. Palpi pale, first joint of both maxillar and labial palpus yellowish brown. Legs black; apical third of first femur, apex of second femur, tibiae-tarsi 1-3 entirely yellow, hind tibia and tarsus weakly dark fumous, all spurs pale yellow. Wings hyaline. Stigma and metacarp opaque brown. Veins with light pigmentation. rf and host unknown. Locality: Nagyharsány, Szársomlyó (VI t : Sopianicum)*, 19 May 1976, 1 9 (holo­type), leg. PAPP J. Holotype deposited in the Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest; Hym. Typ. No. 2381. The new species is a representative of the lineipes-growp (PÁPP 1976), and is nearest to A. longicalcar THOMS. (England, Sweden, Hungary, Korea). The differen­ces between them are as follows : A. longicalcar THOMS. 1. Body 2.5-3 mm long. 2. Both spurs of 3rd tibia longer than half basitarsus, inner spur as long as two­thirds of basitarsus. 3. r 1 as long as width of stigma and longer than cuqu 1 (Fig. 5). 4. Hypopygium normal in size and produ­ced behind (Fig. 50, in NIXON 1973 : 227). 5. Two preapical joints of antenna twice longer than broad. A. aptus sp. n. 1. Body 2 mm long. 2. Inner spur of 3rd tibia as long as half basitarsus, outer one shorter. 3. ?\ much shorter than width of stigma or length of cuqu^ (Fig. 2). 4. Hypopygium small and truncate behind (Fig. 4). 5. Two preapical joints of antenna only one-and-a-half times longer than broad (6:4, XIOO). * Numbers and names refer to the zoogeographical subdistricts of the Carpathian Basin (MÓCZÁR et al. 1972).

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