Dielis | |
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Dielis trifasciata trifasciata. Museum specimen | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Scoliidae |
Subfamily: | Scoliinae |
Tribe: | Campsomerini |
Genus: | Dielis Saussure & Sichel, 1864 |
Dielis is a New World genus of the family Scoliidae, also known as the scoliid wasps, formerly treated as a subgenus within Campsomeris.
Description and identification
Dielis are medium sized wasps that exhibit strong sexual dimorphism. The females are black with broad yellow or orange bands on the abdomen, often on the first 3 or 4 tergites. The males have yellow bands on the first 4 or 5 tergites. The setae are usually white, though in some species there is a yellowish to brownish tint. The forewing of Dielis species includes two recurrent wing veins and two submarginal cells as typical of the genera of Campsomerini, apart from Colpa.
Distribution
Species of this genus occur from Canada south to Chile and Argentina.
Species
There are 12 species of Dielis:
- Dielis auripilis (Fox, 1896)
- Dielis bahamensis (Bradley, 1964)
- Dielis chilensis (Saussure, 1858)
- Dielis diabo Golfetti & Noll, 2023
- Dielis dorsata (Bradley, 1940) – Caribbean scoliid wasp
- Dielis pilipes (Saussure, 1858) – hairy-footed scoliid wasp
- Dielis plumipes (Drury, 1770) – feather-legged scoliid wasp
- Dielis pseudonyma (Schulz, 1906)
- Dielis tejensis Szafranski, 2023
- Dielis tolteca (Saussure, 1857) – Toltec scoliid wasp
- Dielis trifasciata (Fabricius, 1793) – three-banded scoliid wasp
- Dielis whitelyi (Kirby, 1889)
Gallery
- D. diabo female in Brazil.
- D. dorsata female in Florida.
- D. dorsata male in Florida.
- D. pilipes female in the western United States.
- D. pilipes male in California.
- D. plumipes fossulana female in Florida.
- D. plumipes fossulana male in Florida.
- D. tejensis male in Texas.
- D. tolteca female in California.
- D. tolteca male in California.
- D. trifasciata nassauensis female in the Bahamas.
- D. trifasciata trifasciata female in Florida.
- D. trifasciata trifasciata male in Cuba.
References
- ^ Golfetti, Ivan Fernandes; Noll, Fernando Barbosa (2023). "After more than half a century: Dielis diabo (Hymenoptera: Scoliidae: Scoliinae), a new scoliid from the Neotropics". Zootaxa. 5231 (3): 345–350. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.5231.3.10. PMID 37045140. S2CID 256447441.
- ^ Bradley, James Chester (1957). "The Taxa of Campsomeris (Hymenoptera: Scoliidae) Occurring in the New World". Transactions of the American Entomological Society. 83 (2): 65–77. JSTOR 25077743.
- Ramírez-Guillén, Luis Damián; Falcon-Brindis, Armando; Gómez, Benigno (2022). "The Scoliidae wasps (Hymenoptera: Scolioidea) of Mexico: taxonomy and biogeography". Zootaxa. 5214 (1): 47–88. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.5214.1.2. PMID 37044915. S2CID 254354124.
- Osten, T. (2005). "Checkliste der Dolchwespen der Welt (Insecta: Hymenoptera, Scoliidae). Teil 1: Proscoliinae und Scoliinae: Campsomerini. Teil 2: Scoliinae: Scoliini. Teil 3: Literatur" [Checklist of the Scoliidae of the World. Part 1: Proscoliinae and Scoliinae: Campsomerini. Part 2: Scoliinae: Scoliini. Part 3: Literature] (PDF). Bericht der Naturforschenden Gesellschaft Augsburg (in German). 62 (220–221): 1–62. Retrieved 2014-06-24.
- Szafranski, Przemyslaw (2023). "New Dielis species and structural dichotomy of the mitochondrial cox2 gene in Scoliidae wasps". Scientific Reports. 13 (1): 1950. doi:10.1038/s41598-023-27806-x. PMC 9895450. PMID 36732536.
External links
Media related to Dielis at Wikimedia Commons
Taxon identifiers | |
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Dielis |
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