Ábrahám Levente (szerk.): Válogatott tanulmányok 14. - Natura Somogyiensis 30. / Miscellanea 14. (Kaposvár, 2016)

Ábrahám L.: New data to the Moroccan Myrmeleontiformia (Neompteridae, Myrmeleontidae, Ascalaphidae) fauna

94 Natura Somogyiensis femur (Fig. 17) at all. Tibiae with brown ring in the middle and stiff black bristles. Tarsal segments yellow; segment 5 with small brown mark apically. Segment 1 as long as seg­ment 5, segment 2-4 subequal. Tibial spurs shorter than segment 1 in all legs. All segments with shinning stiff black setae inwardly. Tibial spurs and claws shinning reddish brown. Wings: Fore wing: 19-20 mm long, 5 mm wide. Hind wing: 16-17 mm long, 4.5 mm wide. Membrane transparent. C and cross-veins in subcostal area yellow. Otherwise longitudinal veins yellow interrupted with brown at intersections of cross-veins. Pterostigma yellowish white with brown cross-veins basally and white cross-veins dis- tally. 7-8 presectoral cross-veins and 6-7 radial veins in fore wing. Membrane with little shadow at confluence of MP1 and inner series of cross-veins in apical area, along cross­veins connected CuA2 and A1 and at forking veins in marginal area. Hind wing with 7 presectoral veins and 6 radial veins. Abdomen: 14 mm long, shorter than wings. Tergites yellow with three wide dark brown bands. Stemites dominantly brown with yellow marks ventrally. Marks in abdo­men in lateral view as in Fig. 18. Genitalia-. In lateral view male ectoproct short, not reaches sternal margin. Tip of ectoproct with stiff black bristles. Gonarcus with parameres as in Fig. 19. Female: Fore wing: 20-21 mm, hind wing: 16-17 mm, abdomen 14-15 mm long. Diagnosis'. In the North African region, this species is easily distinguished from all the other known Cueta species by the characteristic shadows of the membrane, the shape of mark between antennas, the pattern of abdomen, missing a row of upstanding hairs on the hind femur of male and the short ectoprocessus of male. Based on male inner geni­talia, it belongs to Cueta lineosa group. Distribution-. So far, only the type specimen has been known from Lybia, it is new record for the fauna of Morocco. Fig. 19: Cueta impar Navás, 1932, gonarcus with parameres in lateral view

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