Pyrrhoscolia | |
---|---|
The type species P. fax in South Africa | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Scoliidae |
Tribe: | Scoliini |
Genus: |
Pyrrhoscolia Bradley, 1957 |
Type species | |
Scolia (Pyrrhoscolia) fax (Bradley, 1957)
| |
range of genus |
Pyrrhoscolia is a genus of scoliid wasps in the subfamily Scoliinae. It is native to the Afrotropics, where they have been recorded in various Afromontane regions. They are external parasitoids of beetle larvae. [1] The wings of all three species are noted for their brilliant lustre. [2]
The body and its vestiture are black, apart from the apical segments of the abdomen which are bright reddish in both sexes (3 segments in females, 4 in males). Two species of Scolia are similarly coloured, but have swarthy wings and a red spot in each ocular sinus (or sini oculares, the "bays" bordered by the kidney-shaped eyes). In males, unlike Scolia, the propodeum has two distinct horizontal lobes, which project well behind the insertion of the petiole. [2]
The forewings lack the second recurrent vein and third submarginal cell in both sexes. The wings are closely striolate apically, as with the Scoliidae generally, and feature strong blue, blue-green or golden-green effulgence. [2] The eyes are deeply notched, as with the family generally. [3] On the faces of females the front and frontal space (or spatium frontale, located between the antennae [4] [5]) are separated by a distinct furrow, though not so in males. The male genitalia are distinctive. [2]
Three species belong to the genus Pyrrhoscolia: [1]
Pyrrhoscolia | |
---|---|
The type species P. fax in South Africa | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Scoliidae |
Tribe: | Scoliini |
Genus: |
Pyrrhoscolia Bradley, 1957 |
Type species | |
Scolia (Pyrrhoscolia) fax (Bradley, 1957)
| |
range of genus |
Pyrrhoscolia is a genus of scoliid wasps in the subfamily Scoliinae. It is native to the Afrotropics, where they have been recorded in various Afromontane regions. They are external parasitoids of beetle larvae. [1] The wings of all three species are noted for their brilliant lustre. [2]
The body and its vestiture are black, apart from the apical segments of the abdomen which are bright reddish in both sexes (3 segments in females, 4 in males). Two species of Scolia are similarly coloured, but have swarthy wings and a red spot in each ocular sinus (or sini oculares, the "bays" bordered by the kidney-shaped eyes). In males, unlike Scolia, the propodeum has two distinct horizontal lobes, which project well behind the insertion of the petiole. [2]
The forewings lack the second recurrent vein and third submarginal cell in both sexes. The wings are closely striolate apically, as with the Scoliidae generally, and feature strong blue, blue-green or golden-green effulgence. [2] The eyes are deeply notched, as with the family generally. [3] On the faces of females the front and frontal space (or spatium frontale, located between the antennae [4] [5]) are separated by a distinct furrow, though not so in males. The male genitalia are distinctive. [2]
Three species belong to the genus Pyrrhoscolia: [1]