identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
9E7F847EF02BE863AD169A4E50E47C50.text	9E7F847EF02BE863AD169A4E50E47C50.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex argentatus Fabricius 1787	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae </p>
            <p> Sphex argentatus Fabricius, 1787</p>
            <p> Sphex argentatus Fabricius, 1787: 274, sex not indicated (as  argentata , incorrect original termination). Lectotype: ♀, India: Coromandel (= southeastern coast): no specific locality (ZMUC), designated by van der Vecht 1961: 28. Not examined. </p>
            <p> Sphex umbrosus Christ, 1791: 293, sex not indicated. Holotype or syntypes: origin not indicated (destroyed). Synonymized with  Sphex argentatus by van der Vecht 1961: 28, and 1973: 345. Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>[COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♂, 01.04.1892 (ANIC). AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 2♀ (BMNH); NSW: Sydney, 1♀ (BMNH); NT: Port Darwin, 1♀, 1♂ (BMNH); QLD: [no specific locality], 1♂, E. Saunders (BMNH); Brisbane, 1♂, 1957, F. G. T. Smith (BMNH), 1♀, 08.02.1923, A. N. Burns (ANIC); Burleigh Heads, 1♂, 10.03.1956, J. Keir (ANIC); Byfield State Forest, 1♀, 01.01.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); Cairns, 1♂, 01.04.1963, E. C. Corbet (BMNH); 8 km W of Cooktown, 1♂, 17.07.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Iron Range, 1♀, 26.04.1975, M. S. Moulds (AMS); Mackay, 1♂, 01.04.1892 (ANIC); Meringa, 1♂, 19.03.1927, A. N. Burns (ANIC); Rockhampton, 3♂, 12.01.1973, M. Moulds (AMS); Westwood, 1♀, 01.03.1925, A. N. Burns (ANIC); Wondecla near Herberton, 1♂, 06.01.1990, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS). INDONESIA:Papua: 30 km S Nabire, 1♀, 26.07.1998, Balke (NHMW); West Java Province: Bogor, Java, 1♀, 1931, G. L. Windred (ANIC). PAPUA NEW GUINEA:Morobe Province: Finschhafen, 1♀, Loganeg (ANIC).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex argentatus is distinguished from other Australian  Sphex by the combination of tubercles on the metanotum and the clypeus having no glabrous stripe. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black. Base of fore- and hindwing membrane darkened, forewing with fuscous spot beyond marginal cell. Wing veins brown to black. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white, no medial glabrous stripe on clypeus. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery, on scutum slightly denser laterally than medially. Tubercles on metanotum distinct. Propodeal enclosure with thin, erect silvery setae, leaving sculpture well visible.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 21.6-32.4 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with 10 long spines. Free clypeal margin with two inconspicuous lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.8  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum flat, with shallow medial impression near posterior margin. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum sparse on metasomal tergum I, absent on tergum II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 23.8-26.2 mm. Free clypeal margin truncate, slightly concave toward center, with short median lobe. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.4  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum convex, with shallow medial impression. Length of petiole 1.65  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I and II. Metasomal tergum V with only a few, tergum VI with considerable number of black setae. Metasomal sternum VII with large fringe of dark  setae laterally, sterna anterior of it each with a lesser amount of setae. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The types of  Sphex argentatus and its synonyms were not examined, because of the character combination in the redescription of the species by Kohl (1890) (as  Sphex umbrosus , synonymized with  Sphex argentatus by van der Vecht (1961, 1973): black body, bituberculate metanotum, uniformly silvery pubescence on face, sculpture on propodeal dorsum visible through moderately dense pubescence) is sufficient to unambiguously identify this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9E7F847EF02BE863AD169A4E50E47C50	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
6B75A0E607ACCBE49EEB410B2CD32E68.text	6B75A0E607ACCBE49EEB410B2CD32E68.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex carbonicolor van der Vecht 1973	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex carbonicolor van der Vecht, 1973</p>
            <p> Sphex carbonarius F. Smith, 1856: 247, ♀ (as  carbonaria , incorrect original termination), junior primary homonym of  Sphex carbonarius Scopoli, 1763. Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: Sydney (BMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p> Sphex carbonicolor van der Vecht, 1973: 342 Substitute name for  Sphex carbonarius F. Smith. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>[COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 2♀ (AMS). AUSTRALIA:NSW: Barraba, 1♀, March 37, M. Showers (AMS); Blue Mountains, 1♂, 08.01.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Caldwell, 1♀, 1♂, 12.01.1952, V. Robb (AMS); Casula, 1♂, 11.02.1958, M. I. Nikitin (BMNH), 1♂, 24.02.1958, M. I. Nikitin (BMNH); 40 km E of Coonabarabran, 1♀, 18.11.1990, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Glen Innes, 1♀, 26.12.1979, A. W. Cameron (AMS); Tamarama near Sydney, 1♀, 19.12.2003 (AMS); NT: Central Australia, 1♀, 23.06.1927, G. Horns (ANIC); Finke Gorge National Park, Alice Springs, 1♀, 20.10.1973, G. Griffin (ANIC); QLD: Blackdown Tableland Expedition Range, 1♂, 08.01.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); Burnett River, 1♀, 1891/1892, R. Lennon (BMNH); Cairo Station, 1♀, 15.01.-31.01.1954, C. Mc.C. (ANIC); Captain Billy Landing, Cape York, 11°38'S, 142°51'E, 1♂, 11.03.1992, G. Daniels &amp; M. A. Schneider (ANIC); Charters Towers, 1♀, 20.07.1902, W. W. Froggatt (ANIC); Division of Dawson, 1♀, Rothschild &amp; Bequest (BMNH); Kensington Downs, 2♀ (AMS); Rockhampton, 1♀ (ZMB); SA: Adelaide, 1♀, 08.01.1988, A. D. Austin (BMNH), 1♀, 1♂ (ZMB); Urrbrae, 1♀, 1944 (ANIC); Wilpena Pound Resort, Flinders Ranges, 1♂, 24.01.1995, L. Packer (ZMB); WA: 30 km N of Carnavon, Blow Holes Road, 1♂, 21.07.1978, G. A. Holloway (AMS); Carnarvon, 1♀, 01.08.1953, A. Snell (ANIC); Geraldton, 1♂, 1917, J. Clark (ANIC); Glen Forrest, 1♂, 11.12.1949, I. M. (ANIC); Lyndon Station, NW Basin, 1♀, 01.07.1950, G. Thomas (ANIC); Marloo Station, 1♂, 01.01.1935, Gebr. Goerling (ZMB), 1♂, 02.03.1935, A. Goerling (ZMB), 1♂, 01.02.1937, Gebr. Goerling (ZMB); Ongerup, 33°57.9'S, 118°28.8'E, 1♂, 28.11.2008, D. M. Bray &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> This species differs from other members of the  Sphex argentatus group in having distinct tubercles on the metanotum, combined with completely hyaline  wings except for a slight brown tinge at the apical margin of the forewing in some specimens. Specimens of  Sphex sericeus that may have the same color pattern are identifiable by the conspicuous transverse ridges on their propodeum, which are lacking in  Sphex carbonicolor .  Sphex argentatus and  Sphex finschii have a darkened wing base, while  Sphex decoratus differs by having orange legs (which are dark brown or black in  Sphex carbonicolor ). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Body length 27.6-35.6 mm. Body black. Wing membrane hyaline, forewing with fuscous spot beyond marginal cell. Wing veins brown. Clypeus bulging directly above free margin. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli nearly equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery, on scutum denser laterally than medially. Scutellum slightly convex, with medial impression. Tubercles on metanotum distinct. Propodeal enclosure densely covered with long, erect silvery-white setae, leaving sculpture visible. Length of petiole 1.1  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I and II, but very short. </p>
            <p>Female: Foretarsal rake with 12 long spines. Free clypeal margin with small notch medially.</p>
            <p> Male: Free clypeal margin entire. Metasomal sterna  II–VII mostly glabrous. Metasomal terga V and VI with few bristles. Metasomal sternum VIII notched apically, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The type of  Sphex carbonicolor was not examined, because the character combination listed in the original description (black body, a glabrous area on the clypeus, a bituberculate metanotum, hyaline wings) is almost unique.  Sphex ephippium , which shares these features, is sufficiently differentiated by its character combination (see below). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6B75A0E607ACCBE49EEB410B2CD32E68	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
3631624B827FD8BFB0CC4462A196F6F5.text	3631624B827FD8BFB0CC4462A196F6F5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex decoratus F. Smith 1873	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex decoratus F. Smith, 1873</p>
            <p> Sphex decoratus F. Smith, 1873: 461, [♀] (as  decorata , incorrect original termination). Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: northwest coast: no specific locality (BMNH). Presumed holotype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype (presumed). ♀, AUSTRALIA:WA: "NW Coast", (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>AUSTRALIA:QLD: "North Queensland", 1♀, (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex decoratus (of which only the female is known) can be recognized by the combination of markedly raised, distinct tubercles on the metanotum, a mostly orange metasoma of which segment II is black, and a plain propodeal surface.  Sphex sericeus greatly varies in color and may look superficially similar to  Sphex decoratus , but differs in having a markedly ridged propodeal dorsum, whereas that of  Sphex decoratus lacks notable ridges. </p>
            <p> Description . </p>
            <p> Female: Body length 24.6-27.2 mm. Body black, but the following are orange: base of mandible, clypeus, scape, pedicel, flagellomere I, flagellomere  II–IV above, tegula, subalar area, pronotal lobe, area below anteroventral metapleural pit, petiole, at least parts of metasomal segments I and  IV–VI , legs except for base of coxa as well as claw teeth and distal half of claw. Wing membrane yellow near base, hyaline at apex. Wing veins bright orange. Forebasitarsal rake with 11 long spines. Free clypeal margin plain or with insignificant emarginations. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Clypeus glabrous medioventrally. Distance between hind- ocelli slightly smaller than their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar and scutum golden, the latter with longer, denser pubescence laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum convex, with distinct medial impression. Tubercles on metanotum distinct. Propodeal enclosure with dense, appressed golden  pubescence and sparse, erect golden setae; sculpture completely concealed. Length of petiole twice length of flagellomere II. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p>In the original description, F. Smith did not mention the sex of the holotype. It is listed as a male by Pulawski (2014). However, examination of the type shows that it is clearly a female.</p>
            <p>Geographic distribution.</p>
            <p> Only two specimens of  Sphex decoratus could be studied, and no specific geographic information is available. The origin of the holotype is given as 'northwest coast of  Australia’ in the original description, that of the other examined specimen as 'North  Queensland’ . </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3631624B827FD8BFB0CC4462A196F6F5	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
5BEFF76E16D7974826D436A776815D48.text	5BEFF76E16D7974826D436A776815D48.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex ephippium F. Smith 1856	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex ephippium F. Smith, 1856</p>
            <p> Sphex ephippium F. Smith, 1856: 249, ♀, junior primary homonym of  Sphex ephippius Linnaeus, 1767 (now in  Sphecodes ). Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: Northern Territory: Port Essington (BMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀ (BMNH); "North Australia", 1♀ (BMNH); NSW: North Beach, Bellinger R., 1♂, 15.01.1971, D. K. McAlpine (AMS); NT: 29 km NW Mataranka, 14°45.5'S, 132°51.1'E, 1♂, 05.04.2008, W. J. Pulawski &amp; G. A. Williams (CAS); Dick Creek, 73 km WSW Timber Creek, 15°50'7"S, 129°54'5"E, 1♂, 12.04.2008, G. Williams &amp; W. Pulawski (AMS); Groote Eylandt, 1♀, 28.01.1925, G. H. Wilkins (BMNH), 1♂, 12.02.1925, G. H. Wilkins (BMNH); 17 miles NNE of Newcastle Waters, 1♀, 13.03.1967, M. S. Upton (ANIC); Port Darwin, 1♂, Dec 02 (ANIC), 1♀ (BMNH); QLD: [no specific locality], 2♂, E. Saunders (BMNH); "Mid Queensland", 1♂ (BMNH); Bamaga, Cape York, 1♀, 26.03.1964, I. F. B. Common &amp; M. S. Upton (ANIC); Brisbane, 1♂,  Feb–Mar 43, E. F. Riek (ANIC); Bundaberg, 1♀, 01.02.1971, H. Frauca (ANIC); Byfield State Forest, 1♀, 05.01.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); Cairns, 1♂, 01.01.1902 (ANIC); Cape York, 1♀, 01.08.1986, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♂, 05.08.1986, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 29.05.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Chili Beach near Portland Roads, 2♂, 25.08.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 1♂, 26.08.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Claudie River, 3 miles W of Mount Lamond, 1♀, 13.01.1972, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS); 8 km W of Cooktown, 1♀, 17.07.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS);Dunk Island, 1♀, 31.12.1949-05.01.1950, G. B. (ANIC); Eidsvold, 1♂, 01.01.2023, Mackerras (AMS); Hammond Island, 1♀, 14.03.1963, R. J. Docherty (BMNH); Mackay, 1♀, 1947, A. Marriage (AMS); Prince of Wales Island, 1♀, 13.02.1975, Torres (AMS); Thursday Island, 1♀, 14.01.1939 (BMNH); Walkers Creek, 35 km NNE of Normanton, 1♀, 02.01.1990, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); SA: Adelaide, 1♀ (ZMB); WA: Bullsbrook, 1♂, 13.01.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH); 3 km NWbyW of Millstream, 21°34'S, 117°03'E, 1♂, 05.04.1971, E. F. Riek (ANIC). </p>
            <p> Diagnosis . </p>
            <p> Sphex ephippium is unique in the combination of a tuberculate metanotum, appressed golden pubescence on the clypeus interspersed with longer dark setae, and long, silvery-white pubescence concealing the sculpture of the propodeal enclosure. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black. Wing membrane darkened at base, with fuscous band at apex. Wing veins dark brown. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons golden, erect setae on clypeus black and on frons golden. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery, denser laterally and posteriorly on latter. Scutellum convex. Metanotum markedly raised, tubercles indistinct. Propodeal enclosure densely covered with long, silvery-white pubescence aligned anteriorly, mostly concealing sculpture. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I and II.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 22.8-30.6 mm. Free clypeal margin slightly scoop-shaped, with indistinct emarginations. Distance between hind- ocelli slightly smaller than their shortest distance to compound eyes. Forebasitarsal rake with nine long spines. Scutellum without impression. Length of petiole 1.7  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum absent on apical half of metasomal tergum II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 21.2-24.6 mm. Free clypeal margin truncate, concave towards center. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.15  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum with or without medial impression. Length of petiole almost twice length of flagellomere II. Metasomal terga V and VI covered with black bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–V with a few erect black setae,  VI–VIII more densely covered with silvery setae and brown ones with silvery tips. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The type of  Sphex ephippium was not examined, because the character combination in the original description (darker setae among the golden pubescence of the face, dense silvery pubescence on propodeal enclosure) is sufficient to unambiguously identify this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5BEFF76E16D7974826D436A776815D48	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
F7E9A50BE455C003DF532C5814A3588E.text	F7E9A50BE455C003DF532C5814A3588E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex finschii Kohl 1890	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex finschii Kohl, 1890</p>
            <p> Sphex finschii Kohl, 1890: 412, sex not indicated (as  Finschii , incorrect original capitalization). Lectotype: ♂, Papua New Guinea: New Britain: no specific locality (ZMB), designated by Hensen 1991: 21. Lectotype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Lectotype. ♂, PAPUA NEW GUINEA:[province unknown]: New Britain [no specific locality] (ZMB).</p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p> INDONESIA:Papua: Yerelua, 1♂, 26.07.1998, Balke &amp; Konyorah (NHMW). PAPUA NEW GUINEA:Bougainville Province: Bougainville Island, 1♂, 1908, L. Cohn (ZMB), 1♂, 26.07.1923, E. O. Pockley (AMS); Buoni, Bougainville Island, 1♀, 20.10.1922, E. O. Pockley (AMS); Sininai, Bougainville Island, 1♀, 26.09.1922, E. O. Pockley (AMS), 1♀, 26.09.1923, E. O. Pockley (AMS); Central Province: Port Moresby, 1♀, 25.02.1939, C. Lupson (AMS); East New Britain Province: Vudanplata, 15 km W Keravat, 4°12'S, 152°00'E, 1♀, 1♂, 05.-13.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB); Vunabaur, 30 km S Kokopo, 4°28'S, 152°19'E, 1♀,  1 ♂, 07.-12.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB); Oro Province: Mount Lamington, 1♀, May 1927, C. T. McNamara (AMS); West New Britain Province: Lamavoro, 10 km S Hoskins, 5°28'S, 150°26'E, 1♂, 21.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB); Makasili, 20 km E Hoskins, 5°28'S, 150°26'E, 2♀, 2♂, 19.-24.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> This species is well characterized by its wings, which are largely hyaline but darkened at the base. It shares this trait with three other species. One of them is  Sphex luctuosus that can be distinguished by claw teeth perpendicularly oriented to the inner margin of the claw, a character of the  Sphex resplendens group (as a member of the  Sphex argentatus group,  Sphex finschii possesses obliquely oriented claw teeth). The second spe  cies ,  Sphex argentatus , is identifiable by its distinctly tuberculate metanotum, while the tubercles are indistinct in  Sphex finschii . The third species,  Sphex fortunatus , has erect setae that are uniformly silvery on its clypeus, whereas  Sphex finschii has black setae. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Body black. Costal cell of fore- and hindwing dark. Base of forewing membrane darkened, sometimes up to the medial  cell’s distal margin, fuscous band at apex. Hindwing membrane darkened mainly near base. Wing veins dark brown to black. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery, erect setae on clypeus black and on frons silvery. Clypeus with glabrous ridge dorsomedially. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery, denser laterally on scutum. Scutellum convex, with shallow medial impression. Metanotum markedly raised, tubercles indistinct. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure sparse and fine, leaving sculpture fully visible. Length of petiole nearly 1.7  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum II. </p>
            <p> Female: Body length 21.6-29.2 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with nine long spines. Free clypeal margin with 3 faint lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.9  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 20.4-25.2 mm. Free clypeal margin truncate, concave medially. Area adjacent to it glabrous. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.1  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Tomentum dense on metasomal tergum I. Metasomal terga V and VI with few black bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–IV mostly glabrous,  V–VII with increasingly dense fringes of dark and silvery setae laterally on apical margin. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, covered with silvery pubescence, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p>Geographic distribution.</p>
            <p> Although  Sphex finschii is listed by Cardale (1985) and Hensen (1991), no specimen was found that has actually been collected in Australia. Individuals examined during this study come from New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, or Indonesia. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F7E9A50BE455C003DF532C5814A3588E	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
D70BFA2C35A42B91B39413A08CDC7294.text	D70BFA2C35A42B91B39413A08CDC7294.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex modestus F. Smith 1856	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex modestus F. Smith, 1856</p>
            <p> Sphex modestus F. Smith, 1856: 248, ♀ (as  modesta , incorrect original termination). Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: no specific locality (BMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p> Sphex bannitus Kohl, 1890: 62, ♀. Holotype: ♀, New Holland, now Australia: no specific locality (ZMB). Synonymized with  Sphex modestus by Turner (1910: 346). Holotype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> Holotype (of  Sphex bannitus ). ♀, AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality] (ZMB). </p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p> AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 3♀, 2♂ (ZMB); "NW Australia, Carlshalton", 2♀, E. Clement (ZMB); NSW: 56 miles W of Cobar, Baznatos Tank, 1♀, 01.01.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH); Haystack Ridge near Mount Tomah, 1♀, 29.11.1977, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 35 km N of Menindee, 1♂, 26.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 35 km WNW Menindee, 32°12.4'S, 142°10.8'E, 2♂, 18.12.2011, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Mount York, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 29.01.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Pooncarie, 1♂, 26.11.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♂, 27.11.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Round Hill Nature Reserve, 1♀, 27.12.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); 112 km N of Wentworth, 1♂, 28.11.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS); NT: 20 km W of Barkly Homestead, 1♀, 18.06.1989, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Dick Creek, 73 km WSW Timber Creek, 15°50'7"S, 129°54'5"E, 1♂, 12.04.2008, G. Williams &amp; W. Pulawski (AMS); Hermannsburg, 1♂, Leonhardi (ZMB); Keep River National Park, 15°54'1"S, 129°04'4"E, 1♀, 11.04.2008, G. Williams &amp; W. Pulawski (AMS); Port Darwin, 2♂ (BMNH); 131 km N Tennant Creek, 18°28.8'S, 133°52.1'E, 1♀, 01.04.2008, W. J. Pulawski &amp; G. A. Williams (CAS); QLD: "Mid Queensland", 1♀, 1♂ (BMNH); Mission Beach, 1♀, 16.08.1975, G.  O’Reilly (AMS); SA: 20 km S Adelaide, 1♀, 01.01.1999, B. N. Danforth (CAS); Adelaide, 1♂ (ZMB); Cocata Conservation Park, 33°17.0'S, 135°19.7'E, 1♂, 03.01.2011, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Port Augusta Botanic Garden, 32°27.6'S, 137°45.1'E, 1♂, 25.01.2011, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); 27 km WSW Whyalla, 33°06.5'S, 137°19.0'E, 1♂, 28.12.2010, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Wilpena Pound Resort, 1♀, 18.01.1976, M. S. Moulds (AMS); WA: Bullsbrook, 2♀, 12.12.1951, H. F. Broadbent (BMNH), 1♀, 12.01.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH), 1♀, 3♂, 13.01.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH), 1♀, 13.02.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH); 11 km S Geraldton, 28°51.6'S, 114°38.8'E, 1♀, 02.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); 10 km S Jurien Bay, 30°22.8'S, 115°04.5'E, 4♀, 31.10.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); 15 km S Kalbarri, 27°50.4'S, 114°09.0'E, 3♀, 04.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Kalbarri National Park: Ross Graham Lookout, 27°48.6'S, 114°28.3'E, 1♀, 07.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Marloo Station, 2♀, Mar 35, A. Goerling (ZMB); W of New Norcia, 1♂, 12.01.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH); Shire of Dandaragan, Highway #1, 31.1 km S of Cataby, 1♂, 07.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Shire of Northampton, Kalbarri National Park, 27°40'39"S, 114°16'18"E, 1♀, 09.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32.880879°S, 115.676464°E, 1♂, 25.01.2010, S. Krause (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32.880160°S, 115.682545°E, 1♀, 27.01.2010, S. Krause (ZMB); Southern Cross, 1♂, 10.-22.01.1936, R. E. Turner (BMNH); Urawa Nature Reserve ca 5 km N Mullewa, 28°29.6'S, 115°29.5'E, 3♂, 11.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Waroona, 1♀, 26.12.1908, G. F. Berthoud (BMNH), 1♀, 11.01.1909, G. F. Berthoud (BMNH). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex modestus is unique among the Australian  Sphex in the combination of the following characteristics: claw teeth obliquely oriented to inner claw margin, wing membrane with a yellow tinge towards their base, appressed pubescence on clypeus silvery-white interspersed with erect black setae, legs and metasoma entirely black or dark brown, and propodeal enclosure not concealing sculpture.  Sphex pretiosus is superficially similar, but, among other things, the color of its erect setae on the clypeus matches that of the silvery and silvery-golden appressed pubescence, whereas the erect setae on the clypeus of  Sphex modestus are black. </p>
            <p> Description . </p>
            <p> Body black. Forewing membrane dark at the very base (Fig. 13B), with yellow tinge in basal half, remainder hyaline and with fuscous band at apex. Wing veins orange, dark brown near very base and around marginal cell of forewing. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery, erect setae on clypeus black and on frons silvery. Pubescence on collar, scutum, scutellum and metanotum silvery, on scutum denser laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Tubercles on metanotum indistinct. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure silvery-white to dirty beige, not completely concealing sculpture. Length of petiole 1.8  × length of flagellomere II. </p>
            <p> Female: Body length 19.6-24.6 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with 10 long spines. Free clypeal margin with two faint lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.25  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Tomentum sparse on metasomal tergum I, absent on tergum II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 20.6-26.2 mm. Free clypeal margin truncate, slightly concave towards center. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.4  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Tomentum dense on metasomal tergum I, moderately dense on tergum II. Metasomal terga V and VI covered with black bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VII with increasingly dense silvery pubescence, forming dense fringes laterally on sterna  V–VII (Fig. 13C). Metasomal sternum VIII entire, with rather sparse silvery pubescence, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The type of  Sphex modestus F. Smith, 1856 was not examined, but we did study the type of  Sphex bannitus Kohl, 1890, which was synonymized with  Sphex modestus by R. Turner (1910). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D70BFA2C35A42B91B39413A08CDC7294	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
ADAE2FF09A40D4CC8A5052788B3C955E.text	ADAE2FF09A40D4CC8A5052788B3C955E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex sericeus (Fabricius 1804) Fabricius 1804	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex sericeus (Fabricius, 1804)</p>
            <p> Sphex aurulentus Fabricius, 1793: 201, sex not indicated, junior primary homonym of  Sphex aurulentus Fabricius, 1787 (now in  Liris ). Holotype or syntypes: India: Tranquebar (depository unknown: van der Vecht 1961: 30). Not examined. </p>
            <p> Pepsis sericeus Fabricius, 1804: 211, sex not indicated (as  sericea , incorrect original termination). Lectotype: ♀, "in maris pacifici Insulis" (ZMUC), designated by van der Vecht 1961: 30. Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♂ (BMNH); NT: Port Darwin, 5♀, 6♂ (BMNH); QLD: [no specific locality], 1♂ (ANIC); "North Queensland", 1♀ (BMNH); Allingham near Mackay, 1♂, 25.10.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Archer Point, 10 km S of Cooktown, 1♂, 05.09.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Barron Rivers, 1♂ (ANIC); Biloela, 1♂, 08.12.1926, E. Ballard (BMNH); Blackdown Tableland Expedition Range, 1♀, 08.01.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); Cairns, 2♂, 1919, Jarvis (ANIC); Cape Ferguson, Townsville, 1♀, 3♂, 21.-22.03.1978, N. Duke (ANIC); Cape York, 1♀, 02.06.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 3♂, 02.08.1986, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 2♂, 28.05.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS),  1 ♀, 31.05.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♂, May 1902 (BMNH), 1♂ (BMNH); Cooktown, 1♂, 18.07.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Duaringa, 1♂, 26.12.1946, C. W. Smith (AMS); Ellis Beach N of Cairns, 1♀, 12.05.1967, D. H. Colless (ANIC); Endeavour River, Cooktown, 1♂, 05.10.1922, F. P. Spry (ANIC); Gayndah, 2♀ (AMS); 5 km SEbyS of Helenvale, 15°44'S, 145°15'E, 1♀, 25.08.1992, J. Cardale &amp; P. Zborowski (ANIC); Inkerman, 1♂, W. Stalker (BMNH); Mackay, 1♂, May 1893 (BMNH), 1♀ (BMNH); Mitchell River Settlement, 1♀, 01.04.1969, A. L. Dyce (ANIC); 4 miles NE of Mount Lamond, 1♀, 02.12.1971, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS), Quarantine Bay near Cooktown, 1♂, 13.06.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Redlynch, 1♂, Dec 38, H. F. Sternitzky (BMNH); Thursday Island, 1♂, 14.01.1939 (BMNH); Townsville, 1♂, 03.04.1902, F. P. Dodd (BMNH); Westwood, 1♂, 09.12.1923, A. N. Burns (ANIC); WA: Baudin Island, 1♀ (BMNH), Roeburne, 1♀ (BMNH). INDONESIA:Papua: Yerelua, 1♂, 26.07.1998, Balke &amp; Konyorah (NHMW). PAPUA NEW GUINEA:Western Province: Daru Island, 1♀, 05.05.-18.05.1921, E. O. Pockley (AMS). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex sericeus is unique among its Australian congeners in having three to four broad, continuous transverse ridges on the propodeal enclosure which are even visible through the pubescence. Female specimens of  Sphex rugifer ,  Sphex darwiniensis and  Sphex imporcatus possess vaguely similar structures, but those are much finer.  Sphex rugifer also has approximately 20 ridges on the propodeal enclosure, while those of  Sphex darwiniensis and  Sphex imporcatus are discontinuous in the center. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Pubescence on scutum slightly denser laterally. Scutellum slightly convex, with shallow medial impression near posterior margin. Tubercles on metanotum distinct. Propodeal enclosure with three to four broad, continuous transverse ridges; propodeal pubescence not concealing sculpture. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal terga I and II.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 20.2-25.7 mm. Body black, but the following are orange: basal half of mandible, clypeus, scape, pedicel, parts of flagellomere I, scutellum, metanotum, petiole, metasomal segment I, anterior two thirds of metasomal segment II, legs excluding claw teeth and distal half of claw. Wing membrane with yellow tinge and markedly fuscous band at apex. Wing veins orange, dark near apex. Forebasitarsal rake with nine long spines. Free clypeal margin conspicuously notched medially, bulging above. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.7  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on mesosoma golden. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 16.8-23.6 mm. Wing membrane largely hyaline, with slight yellow tinge around costal cell. Forewing with faint fuscous band at apex. Wing veins dark brown to orange. Free clypeal margin concave towards center. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Distance between hind- ocelli nearly equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery. Length of petiole 1.6  ×–1.7× length of flagellomere II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few silvery bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VIII largely glabrous. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin sometimes slightly concave. </p>
            <p> Variation . </p>
            <p>Males of this species markedly vary in color, though most Australian specimens belong to either one of two forms: the first form has the following parts bright red: anterior side of midfemur, entire hindfemur, petiole, metasomal segments I and II (Fig. 14B), while the body of the second form is entirely black (Fig. 14C). The color of the females seems to be more or less uniform among the collecting localities.</p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The types of  Sphex sericeus and its synonyms were not examined, because the character combination in the redescription by Kohl (1890) (broad transverse ridges on propodeal enclosure, bituberculate metanotum) is sufficient to unambiguously identify this species. Van der Vecht (1961) noted that the lectotype of this species agrees with the species current (i.e.,  Kohl’s ) interpretation. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/ADAE2FF09A40D4CC8A5052788B3C955E	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
582B2E7175BFD860E2B9F95AD97222AD.text	582B2E7175BFD860E2B9F95AD97222AD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex darwiniensis R. Turner 1912	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex darwiniensis R. Turner, 1912</p>
            <p> Sphex darwiniensis R. Turner, 1912: 56, ♀. Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: Northern Territory: Darwin (BMNH). Presumed holotype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype (presumed). ♀, AUSTRALIA:NT: Port Darwin, 1911, F. P. Dodd (BMNH).</p>
            <p>The collecting locality is shown in Fig. 20B.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex darwiniensis (of which only the female is known) differs from all other Australian  Sphex in having the features diagnostic for the  Sphex resplendens group combined with orange legs and metasoma, partly yellowish wings and approximately ten distinct, fine transverse ridges on the propodeal enclosure. The similar  Sphex rugifer has a uniformly dark forewing, black legs and a black petiole.  Sphex rhodosoma , in contrast to both the former species, is almost completely orange, including the entire mesosoma. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 22.2 mm. Body black, but the following are orange: apical half of mandible, clypeus, scape, pedicel, base of flagellomere I, legs from trochanter onward except for claw teeth and apical half of claw, tegula, subalar area, petiole, gaster. Wing membrane yellow, darkened beyond submarginal cell I. Wing veins orange, brown in darkened area of wing. Forebasitarsal rake with seven long spines. Free clypeal margin medially with two lobes which are slightly convex above, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Distance  between hind- ocelli slightly smaller than their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery-white, the latter glabrous except laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum flat, shiny, without impressions. Propodeal enclosure with short, silvery-white pubescence and approximately ten distinct transverse ridges which are in  terrupted medially, sculpture almost completely visible. Length of petiole approximately 0.9  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum on metasomal terga I and II sparse and short. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/582B2E7175BFD860E2B9F95AD97222AD	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
6ED0CCFF4FE8E990D56F9817DB687ECD.text	6ED0CCFF4FE8E990D56F9817DB687ECD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex fumipennis F. Smith 1856	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex fumipennis F. Smith, 1856</p>
            <p> Sphex fumipennis F. Smith, 1856: 249, ♀, ♂. Syntypes: Australia: South Australia: Adelaide (BMNH). One syntype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Syntype. ♀, AUSTRALIA:SA: Adelaide (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p> [COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], ♀, 21.06.1959 (AMS). AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 3♀, 2♂ (BMNH); NSW: Avoca Beach, 1♀, 11.12.1987, S. Hunter (AMS); Bathurst, 1♀, 02.02.1965, C. H. Smithers (AMS); 6 km NE of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 3♂, 11.01.1980, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 7 km N of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 23.02.1979, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 06.03.1979, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 7 km NE of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 1♂, 28.12.1981, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 10 km N of Broken Hill, 2♀, 1♂, 11.03.2001, M. Ohl (ZMB); Cabramatta, 1♂, 10.03.1963, E. C. Corbet (BMNH); Cheltenham, 1♀, 25.03.1950 (AMS); 25 km SW of Dubbo, 1♀, 08.11.1981, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 30 km N of Euston, 1♂, 28.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Kurnell, 3♂, 16.12.1978, D. A. Doolan (AMS); Lane Cove, 1♂, 07.01.1944 (AMS), 1♀, 24.02.1945 (AMS); Lord Howe Island, 1♂, 22.12.1921, A. Musgrave (AMS); Maire Road, Lord Howe Island, 1♂, 22.12.1921, A. Musgrave (AMS); 35 km N of Menindee, 1♂, 26.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Middle Beach Road, Lord Howe Island, 1♀, 26.03.1979, T. Kingston (AMS), 1♀, 14.04.1979, T. Kingston (AMS); Mount Annan, Botanic Garden, 1♂, 12.12.2007, L. von Richter (AMS); Mount Kaputar National Park, 1♀, 25.03.1978, G. Daniels (AMS); Mount Keira, 1♀, 22.12.1986, G. A. &amp; A. Holloway (AMS); Mount Tomah, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 01.01.1981, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Murray Beach, Jervis Bay, 1♀, 18.02.1987, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 50 km N of Pooncarie, 2♂, 26.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Pooncarie, 3♂, 26.11.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 28.11.1992, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Round Hill Nature Reserve, 2♀, 25.10.1977, G. Daniels (AMS); South Durras, 35.40S, 150.17E, 1♀, 18.03.2001, M. Ohl (ZMB); Sydney, 1♀, 01.02.1913, A. Musgrave (AMS); Vincentia, Jervis Bay, 2♂, 17.02.1987, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 112 km N of Wentworth, 2♀, 28.11.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Winston Hills, 1♂, 25.02.1985, C. A. P. Urquhart (AMS); Woronora, 1♀, 03.01.1982, M. L. Bason (AMS), 1♀, 27.03.1982, M. L. Bason (AMS), 1♀, 04.05.1982, M. L. Bason (AMS); NT: 20 km W of Barkly Homestead, 1♀, 18.11.1989, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 41 miles Bore Barkly Hwy, 1♂, 10.07.1989, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Port Darwin, 2♀, 8♂ (BMNH) QLD: "Mid Queensland", 1♀, 2♂ (BMNH); "North Queensland", 2♀, 2♂ (BMNH); Archer Point, 10 km S of Cooktown, 1♀, 3♂, 05.09.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Bramston Beach, 1♀, 26.08.1987, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Cape York, 1♀,  05.06.1985 , N. W. Rodd (AMS); Capricorn Group, NW Islet, 1♀, Dec 25, A. Musgrave (AMS); Claudie River near Mount Lamond, 1♀, 12.10.1974, G. Daniels (AMS); Cooktown, 1♀, 18.07.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Grantleigh, 1♀, 20.11.1978, R. Eastwood (AMS); Hammond Island, 1♀, 10.10.1964, R. J. Docherty (BMNH); Herberton, 1♀, 18.08.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Mission Beach, 1♀, 16.08.1975, G.  O’Reilly (AMS); Poison Creek Road, Cooktown, 1♂, 16.06.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 64 km SW of Ravenshoe, 1♂, 08.01.1976, D. K. McAlpine (AMS); 10 km W of Torrens Creek township, E of Hughenden, 1♀, 07.01.1987, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); Yeppoon, 1♂, 17.11.1978, R. Eastwood (AMS); SA: Adelaide, 1♂ (ZMB); Anajatra, Mann Ranges, 1♀, 10.-11.05.1983, G. A. Holloway (AMS); Lake Gilles Conservation Park, 3♂, 01.02.1995, L. Packer, M. Schwarz, P. Hurst, Y. Pamula (ZMB), 1♂, Mar 1995, L. Packer, Y. Pamula (ZMB); Middleback Ranges, 1♂, Mar 1995, M. Schwarz, B. Kranz (ZMB); Wilpena Pound Resort, 1♀, 18.01.1976, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); WA: Bunbury, 1♂, 01.01.1961, A. Snell (AMS); 15 km S Kalbarri, 27°50.4'S, 114°09.0'E, 1♂, 04.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); 26 km NE of Laverton, 28°28'43"S, 122°29'09  ’’ , 1♀, 28.09.2005, L. Packer (ZMB); Marloo Station, 1♀, 1♂, 01.01.1935, Gebr. Goerling (ZMB), 1♀,  01.04.1935 , A. Goerling (ZMB); 50 km E of Mullewa, 1♀, 03.09.1981, G. A. Holloway (AMS); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32°52'51"S, 115°40'35"E, 1♂, 25.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32.839339°S, 115.639100°E, 1♀, 26.01.2010, S. Krause (ZMB); Swan River, 1♂,  Dämel (ZMB); Urawa Nature Reserve ca 5 km N Mullewa, 28°29.6'S, 115°29.5'E, 1♂, 11.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Waroona, 1♂, 28.02.1909, G. F. Berthoud (BMNH); Wilga, 1♀, 1♂, 19.01.1980, K. Carnaby (AMS), 2♂, 14.01.1983, K. &amp; E. Carnaby (AMS); Yallalong Homestead, 1♂, 29.11.1999, M. S. Moulds &amp; M. Humphrey (AMS). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex fumipennis is distinguished from almost all other Australian  Sphex in having largely dark wings, a black metasoma and silvery-white pubescence on the propodeal enclosure. There is only one other species with similar features,  Sphex rugifer , and while most females of this species have a red metasoma, the males as well as some females have a black metasoma like  Sphex fumipennis . A reliable characteristic of  Sphex fumipennis is that the hindwing becomes almost completely hyaline towards the apical margin (Fig. 16B), while that of  Sphex rugifer is, at least in the distal half, uniformly dark (Fig. 24  A–C ). Males of  Sphex fumipennis also have a conspicuous fringe of silvery setae near the apex of metasomal sternum VIII (Fig. 16C), whereas males of  Sphex rugifer lack this pubescence (Fig. 24D). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black, legs black or maroon. Wing membrane dark, with violet lustre near base, apical margin of forewing membrane and distal part beyond cellular area of hindwing membrane hyaline. Wing veins dark brown to black. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery, erect setae on clypeus and frons black. Pubescence on top of collar silvery, long lateral setae black. Pubescence on scutum silvery, interspersed with few black setae near anterior margin. Silvery pubescence on scutum denser laterally. Propodeal enclosure sparsely covered with silvery-white pubescence, leaving sculpture completely visible. Posterior end of propodeum with black setae.</p>
            <p>Female: 22.2-28.4 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with eight long spines. Free clypeal margin slightly scoop-shaped, with two distinct lobes medially and small bulge slightly above them; distance between lobes less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Clypeus except for bulge entirely pubescent. Distance between hind- ocelli nearly equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum flat, without impressions. Length of petiole almost equal to flagellomere II. Tomentum sparse on metasomal tergum I, absent on tergum II.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 15.2-21.2 mm. Free clypeal margin truncate, concave towards center. Medioventral part of clypeus glabrous. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.25  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum convex, with (sometimes shallow) medial impression. Length of petiole 1.25  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal terga I and II. Metasomal terga V and VI with a few black bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VI with few appressed silvery setae, sterna VII with several erect black setae, sternum VIII with a dense fringe of silvery setae in center. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, raised from side to center, its margin straight. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6ED0CCFF4FE8E990D56F9817DB687ECD	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
371C667B07713B8E2E89CA46C52DFE8F.text	371C667B07713B8E2E89CA46C52DFE8F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex gilberti R. Turner 1908	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae </p>
            <p> Sphex gilberti R. Turner, 1908</p>
            <p> Sphex gilberti R. Turner, 1908: 468, ♀. Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: Queensland: Mackay (BMNH). Presumed holotype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype (presumed). ♀, AUSTRALIA:QLD: Mackay, Feb 1892 (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>AUSTRALIA:NSW: Lansdowne, 1♀, 06.02.1981, G. &amp; T. Williams (AMS); QLD: Capricorn Group, NW Islet, 2♀, Dec 25, A. Musgrave (AMS), 1♀, Nov-Dec 25, A. Musgrave (AMS); Clump Point, 1♀, 06.03.1964, I. F. B. Common &amp; M. S. Upton (ANIC); Montville, 1♀, L. Smith (ANIC).</p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 24E.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> This species (of which only the female is known) is characterized by a black metasoma with a dark blue lustre, extensively yellow wings, and dark pubescence on scutum and propodeal enclosure.  Sphex resplendens , which is otherwise similar, has uniformly dark wings. The pubescence on the propodeal enclosure of  Sphex modestus is at least partially silvery or yellowish, and its hindwing membrane is missing the yellow tinge.  Sphex modestus is also distinguished by the presence of tubercles on its metanotum, even though sometimes they are only faintly recognizable, while in  Sphex gilberti the metanotum is plain. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 22.4-26.8 mm. Body black, legs brown. Wing membrane yellow, with slightly fuscous band at apex. Wing veins orange to light brown. Forebasitarsal rake with eigtht long spines. Free clypeal margin medially with two lobes which are separated only by a small notch. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery, erect setae black. Clypeus with conspicuous indentation medioventrally and vertical glabrous stripe dorsoventrally. Distance between hind- ocelli approximately 0.6  × their shortest distances to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar silvery. Scutum with sparse, erect, black setae and denser, silvery-white setae laterally. Scutellum slightly convex, without impressions. Propodeal enclosure with sparse, erect black pubescence, sculpture completely visible. Length of petiole almost equal to flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I, sparse on tergum II. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/371C667B07713B8E2E89CA46C52DFE8F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
CEAD291B2D2FF545921C843A3FA5B0C5.text	CEAD291B2D2FF545921C843A3FA5B0C5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex gracilis	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex gracilis sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:NSW: 35 km N of Menindee, 26.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA:NSW: Broken Hill, 1♂, 15.02.1942, C. E. Chadwick (AMS); 40 km W of Cobar, 3♂, 12.11.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 30 km N of Euston, 1♀, 28.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Fowlers Gap, 114 km SW of Broken Hill, Barrier Range, 2♂, 21.12.1988, G. J. &amp; R. L. Langston (CAS); Gilgandra, 4♀, 1♂, Nov-Dec 1986, G. A. Holloway (AMS); 40 km E of Gol  Gol , 1♂, 27.11.1992, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Lightning Ridge, 1♂, 14.10.1989, I. D. Buddle (AMS); 20 km N of Menindee, 1♀, 10.11.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 35 km N of Menindee, 2♂, 26.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Pooncarie, 1♂, 27.11.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 3♀, 28.11.1992, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 112 km N of Wentworth, 1♂, 28.11.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 15 km E of Hillston, 1♀, 29.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); SA: Calperum Station 16 km N Renmark, 34°02.9'S, 140°42.2'E, 1♀, 03.12.2010, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS), 1♂, 04.12.2010, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); 17 km E of Renmark, 1♀, 23.11.1977, D. K. McAlpine &amp; M. A. Schneider (AMS); 3 km N Renmark, 34°09.5'S, 140°44.2'E, 1♂, 02.12.2010, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> This species differs from other Australian  Sphex of the  Sphex resplendens group in having a combination of the following features: erect setae on clypeus uniformly silvery-white, metasoma black, and clypeal surface without wrinkles. Further  more , the metasoma of female  Sphex gracilis is considerably slenderer than that of other examined species (Fig. 18A). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black. Wing membrane hyaline, with fuscous band at apex. Wing veins orange to light brown. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery-white. Scutellum with shallow medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure short and sparse, leaving sculpture easily visible.</p>
            <p>Female: Body length 19.9-25.9 mm. Mandible basally and ventral part of clypeus reddish, distal tarsomeres sometimes inconspicuously orange. Wing veins darker near apex. Forebasitarsal rake with 5-8 spines which are markedly short and stout. Free clypeal margin faintly convex medially. Clypeus mostly glabrous, only laterally with pubescence. Distance between hind- ocelli equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on scutum denser laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum flat. Length of petiole nearly equal to flagellomere II. Tomentum very sparse on metasomal tergum I, absent on tergum II.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 18.5-20.6 mm. Forewing membrane sometimes with yellow tinge, hindwing membrane entirely hyaline. Wing veins light brown, sometimes orange, often darker near apex, sometimes uniformly colored. Free clypeal margin simple, concave towards center. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe, ventral part also glabrous. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.9  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on scutum denser laterally. Scutellum convex. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum dense on metasomal tergum I, moderately dense on tergum II. Metasomal tergum V and VI with few bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VI mostly glabrous, apical margin of metasomal sternum VII and VIII covered with silvery pubescence. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin inconspicuously concave. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> At first, the males and females of this species look quite different. While the habitus of the male matches that of most examined species of  Sphex , the  female’s metasoma is much slenderer and seems longer than that of other species. Nonetheless, they most likely are the same species, as indicated by the following features. </p>
            <p> One of the most important characters that connect both sexes is the uniformly silvery pubescence on the clypeus. In at least six of the ten other Australian species in the  Sphex resplendens group, the erect setae on the clypeus are black. Of the remaining four species, two are colored bright orange. One of the other two has extremely unusual structures on the clypeal surface. Concerning the last remaining species other than  Sphex gracilis , male and female individuals were found that have both silvery and golden pubescence on the clypeus as well as on the propodeum, a unique trait among the studied material. </p>
            <p> Moreover, this is also the only species in the  Sphex resplendens group where some males and females (see below for explanation) have the wing membrane entirely hyaline (excluding the apical margin), even at the base, and without any yellow. Both also have a very similar sculpture on the propodeal enclosure, and they also share the same length, density and orientation of its pubescence. Finally, the collecting localities show that both sexes occur in close proximity (Fig. 18E). </p>
            <p> There seems to be some variability among individuals, but they are nonetheless presumed to be of a single species. In both sexes, there are specimens that come from the same collecting series and are distinctively different in their wing coloration. One group possesses brown wing veins and wings that have no hint of yellow (Fig. 18C), the other group has orange wing veins and (in males) a yellow tinge in the basal half of the forewing membrane (Fig. 18D). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> Gracilis is a Latin adjective meaning  “slender” . It refers to the habitus of the female metasoma. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CEAD291B2D2FF545921C843A3FA5B0C5	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
6A9856B61436026AECAECD8BB4E082B1.text	6A9856B61436026AECAECD8BB4E082B1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex imporcatus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex imporcatus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♀, AUSTRALIA:SA: [no specific locality], 1937, M. F. L. (BMNH). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA:NSW: Fowlers Gap, 2♀, Dec 1981, M. L. Bason (AMS).</p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 23B.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex imporcatus (of which only the female is known) is unique among Australian  Sphex in having a remarkably modified clypeus (Fig. 4E, 19B). Dorsomedially on the clypeus, there is a deep groove of which the lower rim is encompassed by 5-8 markedly arcuate, broad wrinkles that almost reach the free clypeal margin. Furthermore,  Sphex imporcatus possesses several distinct transverse ridges on the propodeum, a characteristic it only shares with  Sphex sericeus ,  Sphex darwiniensis and  Sphex rugifer .  Sphex sericeus , as a member of the  Sphex argentatus group, is set apart by having a pair of distinct tubercles on the metanotum and a partially ferruginous metasoma, while the metanotum of  Sphex imporcatus lacks tubercles and its metasoma is black. The metasoma of  Sphex darwiniensis is bright ferruginous, and  Sphex rugifer can be distinguished by having fuscous wings, whereas  Sphex imporcatus has hyaline wings with a slight yellow tinge. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 24.3-25.6 mm. Body black except for tarsomeres V, which are at least partly orange, and also base of mandible and ventral part of clypeus and the wrinkles on it, which range from orange to maroon. Forewing membrane with yellow tinge on basal half and a slightly fuscous band at apex, hindwing membrane slightly yellowish near base. Wing veins bright orange, almost yellow. Forebasitarsal rake with 6-7 spines which are markedly short and stout. Free clypeal margin inconspicuously notched medially. Clypeus dorsomedially with deep groove of which the lower end is encompassed by 5-8 markedly arcuate, broad wrinkles that almost reach the free clypeal margin. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.9  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar, scutum, metanotum and propodeal enclosure silvery-white, scutum glabrous except laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum flat, without impressions. Propodeal enclosure with 6-9 discontinuous transverse ridges, pubescence not completely concealing sculpture.  Length of petiole 1.15  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum very sparse, on metasomal tergum I only present near center, absent on tergum II. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p>All three available specimens were heavily deteriorated, seemingly by abrasion. It is unknown whether the lesser length of the spines in the tarsal rake is also a result of abrasion, or whether it is characteristic of the species. Also, the original state of the pubescence on the clypeus and propodeum was probably very different from the current one.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>Imporcatus comes from the Latin noun porca (ridge between two furrows) and means "put into furrows", referring to the ridges on clypeus and propodeal enclosure of this species.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A9856B61436026AECAECD8BB4E082B1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
3242A8607FC93177E4473542F8305A9D.text	3242A8607FC93177E4473542F8305A9D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex luctuosus F. Smith 1856	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex luctuosus F. Smith, 1856</p>
            <p> Sphex luctuosus F. Smith, 1856: 250, ♀, ♂ (as  luctuosa , incorrect original termination). Syntypes: Australia: Western Australia: Swan River (BMNH). One syntype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Syntype. ♀, AUSTRALIA:WA: Swan River (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>[COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♂, 20.11.1927 (ANIC). AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 4♀, 4♂ (BMNH); NSW: " National Park", 1♀, 20.12.1914, C. Gibbons (AMS); Berowra, 1♂, 11.12.1923, Nicholson (AMS); 6 km NE of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 1♂, 12.11.1980, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Heathcote, 1♀, 1♂, 03.01.1947 (AMS); Lorien Wildlife Refuge, 3 km N of Lansdowne, 1♀, 27.12.1991, G. Williams (AMS); Sydney, 3♀, 1♂, C. Gibbons (AMS); Woy Woy, 1♂, 08.03.1924, Nicholson (AMS); QLD: Brisbane, 1♀, 07.02.1923, A. N. Burns (ANIC); Caloundra, 1♂, 17.12.1955, J. Keir (ANIC); Cape York, 1♀, 1904, Elgner (ANIC); Halliday Bay, 50 km NE of Mackay, 1♀, 19.09.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 40 km E of Miriam Vale, 1♂, 03.11.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS); VIC: Rye, 1♀, 07.02.1954, A. N. Burns (ANIC); WA: Hamelin Telegraph Station, 26°23.9'S, 114°09.9'E, 1♀, 10.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); 20 km WNW of Israelite Bay, 1♂, 29.12.1990, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); Lyndon Station, NW Basin, 1♀, 01.07.1950, G. Thomas (ANIC).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex luctuosus differs from all other species in the  Sphex resplendens group in having wings for the most part hyaline and lacking a yellow tinge, but darkened basally.  Sphex gracilis also has hyaline wings, but not fuscous basally. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery, erect setae on clypeus and frons black. Wing membrane darkened basally, forewing with dark costal and marginal cell and a fuscous band at apex. Hindwing membrane hyaline except basally. Clypeus with small glabrous spot medioventrally. Pubescence on top of collar silvery, long lateral setae black. Pubescence on scutum denser laterally. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure silvery-white, thin and sparse enough to leave sculpture completely visible, interspersed with few black setae near posterior end.</p>
            <p> Female : Body length 24.6-32.4 mm. Wing veins brown to light brown. Forebasitarsal rake with 9-11 long spines. Free clypeal margin with two distinct lobes medially, bulging slightly above; distance between lobes less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Distance between hind- ocelli approximately 0.8  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Anterior half of scutum covered with silvery pubescence. Scutellum flat, without impressions. Length of petiole almost equal to flagellomere II. Tomentum sparse on metasomal tergum I, absent on tergum II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 23.2-26.8 mm. Wing veins dark brown. Free clypeal margin truncate, slightly concave medially. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.25  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Anterior half of scutum covered with black pubescence. Scutellum convex, with shallow medial impression. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal terga I and II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few black bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VI largely glabrous, sternum VII covered with erect black setae, sternum VIII with dense fringe of silvery setae medially. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin straight. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3242A8607FC93177E4473542F8305A9D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
04C5C50BDBD0DD8BB5603E2BF68F00AC.text	04C5C50BDBD0DD8BB5603E2BF68F00AC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex mimulus R. Turner 1910	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex mimulus R. Turner, 1910</p>
            <p> Sphex mimulus R. Turner, 1910: 419, ♀. Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: Queensland: Cairns (BMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>AUSTRALIA:QLD: Cape York, 1♀, 1♂, 1904, Elgner (ANIC), 2♀, 1908, Elgner (ANIC); Claudie River, 4 miles W of Mount Lamond, 1♀, 31.12.1971 (AMS); Iron Range, Cape York Peninsula, 1♀, 01.-09.06.1971, S. R. Monteith (ANIC), 3♀, 26.-31.05.1971, S. R. Monteith (ANIC); Mid Claudie River, Iron Range, 1♀, 26.08.1974, G. Daniels (AMS), 1♀, 16.09.1974, G. Daniels (AMS); Mount Lamond, Iron Range, 1♀, 18.09.1974, G. Daniels (AMS); 1 mile NE of Mount Lamond, 1♂, 21.12.1971, D. K. McAlpine, G. A. Holloway, D. P. Sands (AMS); Mungumby Lodge near Helenvale, 1♀, 09.06.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS).</p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 24E.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Females of  Sphex mimulus are unique among the Australian members of the  Sphex resplendens group in having black legs and the first three segments of the metasoma while the apical three segments are bright ferruginous.  Sphex decoratus and some females of  Sphex rugifer vary among similar colors, but as a member of the  Sphex argentatus group, the former has a pair of distinct tubercles on the metanotum, whereas  Sphex mimulus , as a member of the  Sphex resplendens group, lacks the metanotal tubercles.  Sphex rugifer lacks the yellow tinge in the cellular wing area that is present in  Sphex mimulus . Until now, the male of  Sphex mimulus is the only one in the  Sphex resplendens group with a partially orange or yellowish metasoma. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Base of wing membrane darkened, apex slightly fuscous, cellular wing area with pale yellowish tinge. Clypeus with small indentation medioventrally. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery, erect setae on clypeus and frons  black . Pubescence on mesosoma silvery, on scutum longer and denser laterally. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure sparse and thin, leaving sculpture completely visible. Tomentum on metasomal tergum I moderately dense, on tergum II sparse. </p>
            <p>Female: Body length 26.4-32.8 mm. Body black, but apical three metasomal terga and apical 3-4 metasomal sterna orange. Wing veins light to dark brown. Forebasitarsal rake with nine spines. Free clypeal margin with two lobes medially, bulging slightly above; distance between lobes less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Clypeus with medial, narrow, more or less glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli slightly greater than their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum completely flat, without impressions. Petiole slightly shorter than flagellomere II.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 19.6-25.4 mm. Body black, but apical three metasomal terga pale yellowish-orange. Wing veins dark brown. Free clypeal margin truncate. Clypeus  medially with mostly glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.75  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutum with faint longitudinal posteromedian impression. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Length of petiole 1.3  × length of flagellomere II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few silvery bristles. Metasomal sterna II and III mostly glabrous,  IV–VII with increasingly dense (but still rather sparse) fringes of brown setae laterally, sternum VIII with dense, silvery fringe near apical margin. Metasomal sternum VIII relatively long and tongue-shaped, entire, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The type of  Sphex mimulus was not examined, because the characters in the original description (metasoma black anteriorly, apical metasomal segments red) are sufficient to unambiguously identifiy this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/04C5C50BDBD0DD8BB5603E2BF68F00AC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
3A89DE50FCBCEAFFDD73A6009ED26D8E.text	3A89DE50FCBCEAFFDD73A6009ED26D8E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex resplendens Kohl 1885	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex resplendens Kohl, 1885</p>
            <p> Sphex nitidiventris F. Smith, 1859: 158, ♀, junior primary homonym of  Smith nitidiventris Spinola, 1853. Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Indonesia: Maluku: Aru Island (OXUM). Synonymized with  Sphex gratiosissimus by Turner (1910: 346), and with  Sphex refulgens by Turner (1919: 238). Not examined. </p>
            <p> Sphex resplendens Kohl, 1885: 200. Substitute name for  Sphex nitidiventris F. Smith. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> [COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀, 09.01.1952 (AMS), 2♂ (ANIC). AUSTRALIA:NSW: 50 km NW of Taree, Doyles River, 31°31'S, 152°14'E, 1♀, 10.03.2010, D. Bray (AMS), Rosebank, 1♀, 10.11.1990, N. W. Rodd (AMS); QLD: "North Queensland", 1♀ (BMNH), [no specific locality], 1♂ (ZMB); Bulburin State Forest via Many Peaks, 1♂, 02.-05.04.1972, S. R. Monteith (ANIC); Capricorn Group, NW Islet, 4♂, Dec 1925, A. Musgrave (AMS); Cooktown, 1♂, 18.07.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Mackay, 1♀, 1947, A. Marriage (AMS), 4♂ (BMNH); Meringa, 1♂, 14.02.1926, A. N. Burns (ANIC); Mid Claudie River, Iron Range, 1♀, 25.09.1974, G. Daniels (AMS); Rockhampton, 1♀ (ZMB); TAS: Key Island, 1♀, 1♂, Rolle (ZMB). PAPUA NEW GUINEA:[province unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀, Jan-Feb 1910, Neuhauss (ZMB), 1♀,  Bürgers (ZMB). </p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 23B.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex resplendens differs from all other examined species in having completely fuscous both fore- and hindwings, a black metasoma that often has a metallic blue lustre, and dark setae on the propodeal enclosure.  Sphex gilberti is similar, but has bright yellowish wings. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black, legs dark maroon. Metasoma often with blue lustre. Wing membrane uniformly dark, with violet lustre. Wing veins black. Erect setae on clypeus black. Pubescence on collar silvery, with erect black setae. Scutum with silvery pubescence that is denser laterally, anteriorly interspersed with black setae. Propodeal enclosure covered with erect black setae, not concealing sculpture. Length of petiole nearly equal to flagellomere II.</p>
            <p> Female : Body length 22.1-26.9 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with eight long spines. Free clypeal margin with two incosnpicuous lobes medially, bulging above; distance between lobes less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons sparse, thin and silvery. Clypeus medially with large glabrous area. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.9  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum and metanotum with sparse, erect black setae. Tomentum sparse on metasomal tergum I and II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 20.5-25.4 mm. Free clypeal margin truncate, concave towards center. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons dense and golden. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe, most of ventral clypeal area glabrous. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.8  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum and metanotum with sparse, erect silvery setae, laterally with erect black setae. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I and II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few black bristles. Metasomal sterna II and III mostly glabrous, sterna  IV–VII with brassy pubescence and long black setae at apical margin, densest on sternum  VI . Metasomal sternum VIII entire, with few short silvery setae posteriorly, its lateral margin slightly concave there. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The types of  Sphex resplendens and its synonyms were not examined because the character combination in the original description (black pubescence on propodeum, fuscous wings) is sufficient to unambiguously identifiy this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3A89DE50FCBCEAFFDD73A6009ED26D8E	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
2A823A615FCEB963EEBCA106374D8EB4.text	2A823A615FCEB963EEBCA106374D8EB4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex rhodosoma (R. Turner 1915) R. Turner 1915	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex rhodosoma (R. Turner, 1915)</p>
            <p> Chlorion rhodosoma R. Turner, 1915: 65, ♀. Syntypes: ♀, Australia: Western Australia: Cue and Cunderdin (BMNH). Syntype examined. - As  Sphex rhodosoma : Bohart and Menke (1976: 116) (new combination, in checklist of world  Sphecidae ). </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Syntype. ♀, AUSTRALIA:WA: Cue, H. W. Brown (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex rhodosoma (of which only the female is known) is unique among the Australian  Sphex in combining the features of the  Sphex resplendens group with a mostly orange body including orange legs and a petiole which is slightly longer than flagellomere II. A partially orange mesosoma is also found in  Sphex sericeus . In that species, however, the propodeal enclosure is ridged and the metanotum has a pair of distinct tubercles, while  Sphex rhodosoma lacks both these features. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 20.2 mm. Body orange, but the following are black: apical mandibular tooth, frons, vertex, gena, flagellomere II above and flagellomeres  III–X entirely, parts of metasomal terga II, III and IV, parts of metasomal sternum II. Wing membrane yellow, with slightly fuscous band near apex. Wing veins brown, orange near base. Forebasitarsal rake with six long spines. Free clypeal margin with two lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery-white, on the latter longer and denser laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum flat, shiny, without impressions. Propodeal enclosure with short, appressed silvery-white pubescence, sculpture almost completely visible. Length of petiole approximately 1.1  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum on metasomal sternum I moderately dense, on sternum II sparse. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2A823A615FCEB963EEBCA106374D8EB4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
03018C67993E54B8D6B908F3AD8BC1D1.text	03018C67993E54B8D6B908F3AD8BC1D1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex rugifer Kohl 1890	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex rugifer Kohl, 1890</p>
            <p> Sphex rugifer Kohl, 1890: 393, ♀. Syntypes: Australia: no specific locality (ZMB) and Western Australia: Swan River (NHMW). One syntype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Syntype: ♀, AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], Preiss (ZMB).</p>
            <p> Other material. </p>
            <p>AUSTRALIA:WA: Applecross, 1♂, 28.01.1940, K. R. Norris (ANIC); Bunbury, 1♀, 2♂, 01.01.1961, A. Snell (AMS); Eradu, 1♀, J. Clark (ANIC); Fremantle City, 1♀, 28.01.1935, K. R. Norris (ANIC); 1♂, 09.02.1935, K. R. Norris (ANIC), 2♂, 09.02.1936, K. R. Norris (ANIC); Geraldton, 1♂, 1914 (ANIC), 1♀, 09.02.1931, L. F. Graham (ANIC); Perth, 1♀, 09.04.1914, J. Clark (ANIC); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32°52'51"S, 115°40'35"E, 1♀, 4♂, 25.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32°52'49"S, 115°40'57"E, 1♀, 27.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32.880879°S, 115.676464°E, 1♂, 27.01.2010, S. Krause (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32°52'49"S, 115°40'57"E, 2♂, 27.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32.880879°S, 115.676464°E, 1♂, 27.01.2010, S. Krause (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32°52'49"S, 115°40'57"E, 5♂, 27.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Shire of Waroona, Yalgorup National Park, 32.880879°S, 115.676464°E, 1♂, 27.01.2010, S. Krause (ZMB).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex rugifer differs from other Australian  Sphex through a combination of the following characters: uniformly darkened forewing membrane without yellow tinge, hindwing membrane fuscous beyond the cellular area (Fig. 24  A–C ), and silvery-white pubescence on the propodeal enclosure. Females can also be identified, in addition to the aforementioned features, in having a red metasoma, though the tone is often very dark. Both sexes of  Sphex resplendens differ in having dark pubescence on the propodeum; and in  Sphex fumipennis , the distal part of the hindwing membrane is hyaline (Fig. 16B). Males of  Sphex fumipennis also have a conspicuous fringe of silvery setae near the apex of metasomal sternum VIII (Fig. 16C), whereas males of  Sphex rugifer lack this pubescence (Fig. 24D). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Pro- and mesosoma black, but the following are light to dark brown: legs excluding coxae and basal half of claws excluding claw teeth. Basal half of mandible reddish. Forewing membrane uniformly fuscous. Hindwing membrane hyaline basally, remainder fuscous. Wing veins dark brown. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery, erect setae on clypeus black, on frons silvery. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery, on scutum denser laterally. Scutellum slightly convex, with shallow medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure sparse enough to leave sculpture clearly visible. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. </p>
            <p>Female: Body length 18.0-20.6 mm. Metasoma ranges from bright red to black with few dark red blurs. Forebasitarsal rake with 9-10 long spines. Free clypeal margin slightly scoop-shaped, with inconspicuous notch medially. Distance between hind- ocelli equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Propodeal enclosure with approximately 20 fine transverse ridges. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal terga I and II.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 14.5-19.0 mm. Metasoma black. Free clypeal margin truncate, slightly concave medially. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.1  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Propodeal enclosure with approximately 8-10 faint transverse ridges. Tomentum dense on metasomal terga I and II. Metasomal terga V and  VI with few bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VI mostly glabrous, sternum VII with erect silvery setae laterally. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, with silvery pubescence, its lateral margin straight. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03018C67993E54B8D6B908F3AD8BC1D1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
BC7883472FC91AA0F6A18D716A95EBAB.text	BC7883472FC91AA0F6A18D716A95EBAB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex ahasverus Kohl 1890	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex ahasverus Kohl, 1890</p>
            <p> Sphex ahasverus Kohl, 1890: 397, ♀. Holotype or syntypes: Australia: southern Australia: no specific locality (NHMW). Presumed holotype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype (presumed). ♀, AUSTRALIA:SA: [no specific locality], 1804, Fichtel (NHMW).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> This species (of which only the female is known) is unique among the members of the  Sphex subtruncatus group in the distance between hind- ocelli being less than 60 % of their shortest distance to the compound eyes. Also, the combination of dense, erect, short black setae on the scutum and the dense golden pubescence on the propodeum makes it easy to identify. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 29.4 mm. Body black. Wing membrane with brown tinge, forewing also with slightly darker band at apex. Wing veins brown. Forebasitarsal rake with eight long spines; it is, however, likely that at least one additional spine was present, but has broken off. Free clypeal margin with two inconspicuous lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons golden, long erect setae black. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli less than 0.6  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar silvery. Scutum with short black pubescence which is denser laterally than medially. Scutellum convex, with shallow medial impression. Propodeum with dense, appressed pubescence and longer, more sparse, erect golden setae. Propodeal sculpture completely concealed by pubescence. Length of petiole 1.5  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I and II. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
            <p>Geographic distribution.</p>
            <p> Sphex ahasverus is known solely from the type locality, which is listed only as South Australia. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BC7883472FC91AA0F6A18D716A95EBAB	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
67E13E73645757E1D1D08AC4A9610A0B.text	67E13E73645757E1D1D08AC4A9610A0B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex argentatissimus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae </p>
            <p> Sphex argentatissimus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:NT: 27.5 km SE of Katherine, 14°34'0"S, 132°28'5"E, 08.04.2008, G. Williams &amp; W. Pulawski (AMS). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA:NT: Buley Rockpools, Litchfield National Park, 2♀, 19.-22.04.2008, G. Williams &amp; W. Pulawski (AMS); Litchfield National Park: Wangi Falls, 13°09.7'S, 130°40.9'E, 1♀, 22.04.2008, W. J. Pulawski &amp; G. A. Williams (CAS); 29 km NW Mataranka, 14°45.5'S, 132°51.1'E, 2♂, 06.04.2008, W. J. Pulawski &amp; G. A. Williams (CAS).</p>
            <p> Diagnosis . </p>
            <p> Females of  Sphex argentatissimus are unique among the members of the  Sphex subtruncatus group in combining the following characters: appressed pubescence on clypeus golden, wing membrane without yellow tinge, and pubescence on propodeal enclosure silvery-white. Males differ from those of the other species in possessing, additionally to the aforementioned features, a petiole that is considerably longer than flagellomere II and a conspicuous notch on the apical margin of metasomal sternum VIII. The former feature separates  Sphex argentatissimus from  Sphex ermineus , of which the petiole is shorter than flagellomere II, the latter one from  Sphex cognatus and  Sphex formosellus , in which the apical margin of metasomal sternum VIII is pointed. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black. Wing membrane hyaline, with fuscous band at apex. Wing veins dark brown to black. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons and erect setae on frons golden. Clypeus almost entirely covered with pubescence. Pubescence on collar and scutum brassy, except laterally and posteriorly on scutum, where it is denser and silvery-white. Scutellum convex. Propodeal enclosure covered with silvery-white pubescence, completely concealing sculpture.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 20.8-21.8 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with nine long spines. Free clypeal margin concave medially, with two lobes there, distance between which is less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Clypeus with erect golden setae. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.1  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum without impressions. Length of petiole 1.6  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum dense on metasomal tergum I and II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 23.3-24.6 mm. Free clypeal margin truncate. Clypeus with few erect silvery-golden setae. Distance between hind- ocelli equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Posterior half of scutum with longitudinal median impression. Scutellum with medial impression near posterior margin. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I, sparse on tergum II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few bristles. Metasomal sternum VII with small fringe of silvery setae posterolaterally, sterna  VI–I each with decreasing amount of setae. Apical margin of metasomal sternum VIII conspicuously notched so that two small lobes are formed, its lateral margin slightly concave posteriorly. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> The males of this species have very reliable and distinctive features in which they differ from the other Australian  Sphex . These features, however, are male sexual characters (free clypeal margin and metasomal sternum VIII) and thus do not help in establishing the sex association. Still, several characters indicate that both males and females belong to a single species. </p>
            <p> In the  Sphex subtruncatus group, there are only two species whose clypeal and propodeal pubescence resembles that of  Sphex argentatissimus . One of them,  Sphex pretiosus , is easily identifiable in possessing both silvery-white and golden pubescence on the propodeum. The females of the other one,  Sphex cognatus , have golden, silvery-golden or silvery pubescence on the propodeal enclosure and are indeed very similar to those of  Sphex argentatissimus . However, of the many examined females of  Sphex cognatus , none had propodeal pubescence with the conspicuous white tone of silver that is characteristic of the males and females of  Sphex argentatissimus . </p>
            <p> Wing coloration is a similar case. Females of  Sphex cognatus usually have a partially yellow tinged wing membrane, but sometimes it is almost entirely hyaline. On the other hand, the wings of  Sphex argentatissimus have no hint of yellow at all. </p>
            <p>Fig. 26B shows that the males and females of this species occur at least in the same overall region.</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>Argentatissimus is the superlative of the Latin adjective argentatus (silvery) and refers to the fact that the silvery color of the propodeal pubescence is much more intense in this one than in the similar species.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/67E13E73645757E1D1D08AC4A9610A0B	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
271FDD0CEE7E32174482383C191B43F0.text	271FDD0CEE7E32174482383C191B43F0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex basilicus (R. Turner 1915) R. Turner 1915	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex basilicus (R. Turner, 1915)</p>
            <p> Chlorion basilicus R. Turner, 1915a: 65, ♀. Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: Queensland: probably Cape York Peninsula (BMNH). Not examined. - As  Sphex basilicus : Bohart and Menke (1976: 116) (new combination, in checklist of world  Sphecidae ). </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>AUSTRALIA:QLD: Claudie River near Mount Lamond, 1♂, 02.06.1966, D. K. McAlpine (AMS); 1 mile NE of Mount Lamond, 1♀, 26.12.1971, D. K. McAlpine, G. A. Holloway, D. P. Sands (AMS); 4 miles W of Mount Lamond, 3♀, 2♂, 12.01.1972, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS), 1♂, 13.01.1972, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS).</p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 35B.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex basilicus differs from most other Australian  Sphex by the color of its legs, which are orange from the distal half of the femur up to but excluding the claws, while the remaining parts are black or dark brown (sometimes, tarsomeres V are also black). As opposed to other species with orange legs, the metasoma and scutellum of  Sphex basilicus are completely black. The males of this species are also recognizable by the shape of metasomal sternum VIII, which, like  Sphex bilobatus and  Sphex latilobus , carries two prominent lobes that are visible from above. Unlike these two species, where the lobes are the only visible part of sternum VIII and mostly straight, the lobes of  Sphex basilicus are conspicuously curved upward, and a large, undivided portion of sternum VIII is also visible (Fig. 27B). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Body black, but the following are orange: distal part of forefemur, mid- and hindfemora at least below; tibiae, tarsi, and proximal half of claw. Forewing membrane yellow near base, fore- and hindwings with fuscous band at apex. Wing veins brown. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.7  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar and scutum golden, on scutum denser laterally than medially. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Propodeal enclosure with long, somewhat dense, golden setae; sculpture not completely concealed. </p>
            <p> Female: Body length 27.2-31.2 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with eight long spines. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Free clypeal margin medially with indistinct emarginations and an indentation directly above, distance between  lobes less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Length of petiole 1.2  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum golden, dense on metasomal tergum I, moderately dense on tergum II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 34.4-43.6 mm. Metasomal sternum VIII orange. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. A single lobe emerging medially and slightly posteriorly from free clypeal margin. Length of petiole 1.6  × the length of flagellomere II. Tomentum golden, very dense on metasomal tergum I where it is also interspersed with dense, long, erect golden setae, moderately dense on tergum II. Metasomal terga V and VI with long, golden setae facing posteriorly, especially at apical margin. Metasomal sterna mostly glabrous, several long golden setae laterally on sterna  V–VII . Metasomal sternum VIII with two lobes that are curved upward and diagonally truncate posteriorly. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The type of  Sphex basilicus was not examined because the character combination in the original description (black body, golden pubescence on clypeus and propodeum, partially ferruginous legs) is sufficient to unambiguously identifiy this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/271FDD0CEE7E32174482383C191B43F0	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
8778171472A01AF72824E814A7BFC583.text	8778171472A01AF72824E814A7BFC583.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex bilobatus Kohl 1890	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex bilobatus Kohl, 1890</p>
            <p> Sphex canescens F. Smith, 1856: 246, ♀, ♂, junior primary homonym of  Sphex canescens Scopoli, 1786. Syntypes: Australia: no specific locality (BMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p> Sphex bilobatus Kohl, 1895: 59, ♀, ♂. Syntypes: Australia: South Australia: Adelaide (ZMB). Synonymized with  Sphex canescens F. Smith, 1856, by Turner (1910a: 346). Syntypes examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> Syntypes (of  Sphex bilobatus ). ♀, ♂ AUSTRALIA:SA: Adelaide (ZMB). </p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p> [COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀, 14.11.1944 (AMS). AUSTRALIA:ACT: Cotter Road, Weston Creek, 1♀, 10.01.1931, G. Jefferies (ANIC); NSW: 6 km N of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 1♂, 27.11.1979, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 6 km NE of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 1♂, 14.11.1980, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 22.01.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Blue Mountains, 1♀, 01.02.1915, A. Musgrave (AMS); 3 km S of Blue Mountains, 1♂, 19.01.1976, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Calumet, 26 km NE of Binnaway, 1♂, 29.12.1932, C. F. Garnsey (AMS); Clarence, Blue Mountains, 1♂, 23.09.1980, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 21.01.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♂, 07.01.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 10.01.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 2♀, 27.01.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 27.01.1992, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 40 km W of Cobar, 1♂, 12.11.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS);  French’s Forest, Sydney, 1♀, 1♂, 09.11.1912, A. Musgrave (AMS); Goarra Ridge Trail, Royal National Park, 1♀, 29.01.1979, G. Daniels (AMS); 25 km SE Grafton, Yuraygir Crown Reserve, 25°53'S, 153°05'E, 1♀, 06.01.2009, D. Bray (AMS); Guyra, 1♀, 01.02.1992, E. N. McKie (AMS); Jinki Creek, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 10.01.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Kuringgai Chase, 20 miles N of Sydney, 1♀, 04.-08.01.1970, H. E. Evans (ANIC); Lane Cove, 1♂, 12.12.1943 (AMS); Lightning Ridge, 1♀, 14.10.1989, I.  D . Buddle (AMS); Loftus, 1♀, 11.12.1957, G. Dobcal (AMS); Mount Banks, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 27.11.1980, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Mount Tomah, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 20.12.1980, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Mount Towinhingy, near Kandos Weir, 1♀, 30.12.1977, G. Daniels (AMS); Mount Victoria, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 28.12.1981, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Mount Vincent, near Running Stream, 1♂, 29.12.1977, G. Daniels (AMS); Mount York, Blue Mountains, 1♂, 22.12.1980, G. &amp; T. Williams (AMS), 1♀, 20.01.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Pearl Beach, 1♀, 04.01.1979, John Alcock (ANIC); 11 km E of Three Ways, 32°47'S, 150°29'E, 1♂, 31.12.1977, G. Daniels (AMS); Warrumbungle National Park, 1♀, 13.-18.12.1977, G. A. Holloway (AMS); SA: Adelaide, ♂ (ZMB); VIC: Churchill National Park, Melbourne, 1♀, 1♂, 06.01.1976, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); Fernshaw, 1♀, 26.01.1955, A. N. Burns (ANIC); Healesville, 1♀, 1♂, Dec 1913, M. Arnold (BMNH); Janalli, 1♂, 04.12.1932, Stoyles (AMS); near Lake Hindmarsh, Big Desert National Park, 1♂, 29.-30.11.1992, Moulds, McAlpine, McEvey (AMS); WA: Yallalong Homestead, 1♂, 29.11.1999, M. S. Moulds &amp; M. Humphrey (AMS). </p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 34B.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Females of  Sphex bilobatus differ from the other Australian  Sphex by the following character combination: metanotum without tubercles, metasoma black, wing veins light to dark brown, appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus silvery-white, and scutellum convex medially. Males of  Sphex bilobatus are also characterized by their metasomal sternum VIII, which consists of two large separate lobes (Fig. 28B). This character is only shared with males of two other Australian species. One of them,  Sphex basilicus , has a single lobe emerging from below the center of the free clypeal margin, is much larger in size and has orange pubescence on the propodeal enclosure, whereas  Sphex bilobatus does not have lobes on the free clypeal margin, and its propodeal pubescence is silvery. In the other one,  Sphex latilobus , the free clypeal margin is bright orange, while that of  Sphex bilobatus is black. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Body length 19.0-22.6 mm. Body black. Wing membrane hyaline, forewing with slightly fuscous band at apex. Wing veins light to dark brown. Free clypeal margin medially with broad, insignificant lobe that emerges slightly posteriorly of clypeal surface. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery-white, on scutum not significantly denser laterally than medially. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Propodeal enclosure with sparse, silvery-white pubescence, sculpture well visible. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum rather sparse on metasomal tergum I, moderately dense on tergum II. </p>
            <p>Female: Hindwing entirely hyaline. Forebasitarsal rake with 11 long spines. Free clypeal margin slightly scoop-shaped. Distance between hind- ocelli slightly smaller than their shortest distance to compound eyes.</p>
            <p> Male: Hindwing with slight fuscous band at apex. Distance between hind- ocelli equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Metasomal terga V and VI with few bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VII with few, erect silvery setae posterolaterally. Visible part of metasomal sternum VIII forming two separated lobes. </p>
            <p> Notes on type material. </p>
            <p> The types of  Sphex canescens F. Smith, 1856 (the original, invalid name of the species) were not examined, but we did study the types of  Sphex bilobatus Kohl, 1890, which was synonymized with  Sphex canescens by R. Turner (1910). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8778171472A01AF72824E814A7BFC583	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
60B7D4EDAF2798B83ED9F139A86CD6DD.text	60B7D4EDAF2798B83ED9F139A86CD6DD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex brevipetiolus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex brevipetiolus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♀, AUSTRALIA:WA: 3 miles N of Moora, 05.01.1966, J. A. Grant (BMNH).</p>
            <p>The collecting locality is shown in Fig. 35B.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex brevipetiolus (of which only the female is known) is one of the few species in the  Sphex subtruncatus group with a petiole shorter than flagellomere II. It differs from females of  Sphex ermineus and  Sphex corporosus , which are similar, in having bright orange veins near the wing base and a markedly convex scutellum with a distinctly developed impression medially.  Sphex ermineus has black wing veins, and the scutellum of  Sphex corporosus is flatter and often lacks an impression. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 31.6 mm. Body black. Wing membrane hyaline, with fuscous spot beyond marginal cell. Wing veins orange, darker near apex. Forebasitarsal rake with nine long spines. Free clypeal margin with two small lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.8  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar, scutum, metanotum and propodeum silvery-white, on scutum denser laterally. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure not concealing sculpture. Length of petiole 0.8  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I, slightly denser on tergum II. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> In the  Sphex subtruncatus group, there are eight species of which females are yet unknown or where matching of males and females was first proposed in this study.  Sphex brevipetiolus can theoretically be the female of one of them. Of these, only three have wing veins that are not uniformly dark. One of them (  Sphex flammeus ) has a bright orange metasoma and largely orange legs. The second one (  Sphex pretiosus ) has a sharp transition between golden and silvery pubescence on the propodeum and, like the former, a petiole that is considerably longer than flagellomere II. Finally, the reasons for ruling out  Sphex corporosus are given in the respective discussion. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>Brevipetiolus is a composite of the Latin adjective brevis (short) and the noun petiolus (stem), referring to the short petiole of this species.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/60B7D4EDAF2798B83ED9F139A86CD6DD	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
F6945A6D0BCBF8CB906FF718ADCB4CB4.text	F6945A6D0BCBF8CB906FF718ADCB4CB4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex caelebs	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae </p>
            <p> Sphex caelebs sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:WA: Westonia, 31°11'53"S, 118°45'31"E, 15.03.2007, L. C. &amp; M. G. Brooker (AMS).</p>
            <p>The collecting locality is shown in Fig. 42D.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The presence of a few dark erect setae on the clypeus combined with partially orange legs (mainly parts of the anterior surface of the foreleg, as seen in Fig. 30B, and the inner hindtibial spur including pecten) make  Sphex caelebs unique among the male Australian  Sphex (the female of this species is unknown). The habitus and mesosomal sculpture resemble some  Sphex modestus , which possesses an only inconspicuously raised metanotum and dense white or yellowish tufts of setae on the metasomal sterna that are absent in  Sphex caelebs . </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Female: Unknown.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 18.1 mm. Body black, but the following are orange-brownish: basal half of mandible, anterior surface of foreleg from distal half of femur up to tarsomere IV, distal half of anterior surface of midfemora, inner hindtibial spur including pecten, basal half of claw. Wing membrane hyaline, forewing with slightly fuscous band at apex. Wing veins dark brown. Free clypeal margin simple, concave medially. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery-white, a few dark erect setae on clypeus, remaining erect setae on clypeus as well as those on frons uniformly silvery-white. Clypeus medioventrally with narrow glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli nearly equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery-white, on scutum slightly denser laterally. Scutellum convex, with shallow medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure sparse, leaving sculpture fully visible. Length of petiole 1.6  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I and II. Metasomal terga V and VI sparsely covered with erect silvery setae. Metasomal sterna  II–VI mostly glabrous, apical half of sternum VII and all sternum VIII covered with silvery pubescence. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> It must also be assessed if  Sphex caelebs is the undescribed male of an already known species. In the  Sphex subtruncatus group, there are seven species of which males are yet unknown or where matching of males and females was first proposed in this study. In none of these, however, is the leg coloration comparable to  Sphex caelebs , and additional characters indicate its status as a separate species. For example, only two of the seven species also have dark erect setae on the clypeus. These two, however, are much larger than  Sphex caelebs ; one of them,  Sphex ahasverus , has darkened wings and golden pubescence on the propodeum and the other one,  Sphex corporosus , has an unusually short petiole, the characters that are lacking in  Sphex caelebs . </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p>Caelebs is a Latin noun meaning "unmarried man", referring to the fact that the species is currently known only from a single male.</p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F6945A6D0BCBF8CB906FF718ADCB4CB4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
80C75F89EFC41D5974F4F1C0895502A6.text	80C75F89EFC41D5974F4F1C0895502A6.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex cognatus F. Smith 1856	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae </p>
            <p> Sphex cognatus F. Smith, 1856</p>
            <p> Sphex cognatus F. Smith, 1856: 248, ♀ (as  cognata , incorrect original termination). Holotype or syntypes: Australia: no specific locality (BMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p> Sphex formosus F. Smith, 1856: 254 (as  formosa , incorrect original termination). Holotype or syntypes: ♂, Indonesia: Seram: no specific locality (BMNH). Synonymized with  Sphex cognatus by Turner (1910a: 345). Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> [COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 2♀, 2♂ (AMS). AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀, 1♂ (BMNH); "Coopers Pk", 1♂, 21.02.1965, J. Varley (AMS); NSW: Ashcroft, 1♂, 01.01.1977, S. Brousek (AMS); Ballina, 1♀, 16.12.1930, C. E. Chadwick (AMS), 1♀, 07.12.1989, D. J. Scambler (AMS); Bill Weiley Bridge, Esk River near Fluka, 2♀, 31.12.1978, B. J. Day (AMS); Bilpin near Kurrajong, 1♀, 2♂, 28.01.1981, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♂, 03.02.1981, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 6 km NE of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 20.01.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 06.04.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Brushgrove, 1♂, 04.04.1973, G. A. Holloway (AMS); Cabramatta, 1♀, 01.12.1962, M. I. Nikitin (BMNH); Cheltenham, 1♂, 14.01.1951 (AMS); 3-5 km NE of Harrington, 1♂, 02.02.1991, G. Williams (AMS); Kensington, 1♀, 19.02.1976, Fluhoelhower (AMS), 1♀, 20.02.1976, Fluhoelhower (AMS), 1♀ (AMS); Lane Cove, 1♂, 05.02.1944 (AMS), 1♀, 21.01.1945 (AMS); Lennox Head, 1♀, 04.04.2001, M. Elliott (AMS); McKanes Bridge, Coxs Road, 2♀, 26.01.1991, R. de Keyzer &amp; G. A. Clark (AMS); Middle Pocket, 1♀, 12.01.1929, C. E. Chadwick (AMS); North Narrabeen, 1♂, 28.02.1954, M. I. Nikitin (BMNH); Pearl Beach, 1♀, 16.03.1974, D. Feughelman (AMS), 1♀, 28.01.1989, C. A. P. Urquhart (AMS), 1♂, 29.01.1989, C. A. P. Urquhart (AMS); Randwick, 1♀, 08.01.1965, J. Varley (AMS); 16 km W of South Grafton, 1♀, 05.01.1978, G. Daniels (AMS); Woronora, 1♂, 22.01.1982, M. L. Bason (AMS); NT: Groote Eylandt, 1♀, 06.02.1925, G. H. Wilkins (BMNH); Litchfield National Park: Wangi Falls, 13°09.7'S, 130°40.9'E, 1♂, 21.04.2008, W. J. Pulawski &amp; G. A. Williams (CAS); 29 km NW Mataranka, 14°45.5'S, 132°51.1'E, 1♂, 05.04.2008, W. J. Pulawski &amp; G. A. Williams (CAS); Port Darwin, 1♂ (BMNH); QLD: [no specific locality], 2♂ (BMNH); "Mid Queensland", 2♂ (BMNH); "North Queensland", 1♂ (BMNH); Agnes Water, 40 km E of Miriam Vale, 1♂, 04.01.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 04.11.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Archer River crossing Coen Cape York Road, 1♂, 30.10.1974, M. S. Moulds (AMS); Ball Bay near Cape Hillsborough, 1♀, 26.06.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Ball Bay near Mackay, 1♀, 09.10.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Bertie Creek, 11°46'S, 142°36'E, 1♀, 21.03.1992, S. F. McEvey (AMS); Bloomfield, 1♀, 01.12.1980, T. M. Moulds (AMS); Brisbane, 1♀, 2♂, 09.09.1953, F. G. T. Smith (BMNH); Byfield State Forest, 1♀, 31.12.1975, G. Daniels (AMS); Cairns, 1♀, 09.-30.12.1962, E. C. Corbet (BMNH); Cape York, 1♂, 28.05.1991, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Cape York Peninsula, Iron Range, 1♀, 20.05.1974, M. Walford-Huggins (AMS); Claudie River near Mount Lamond, 1♀, 21.12.1971, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS); Middle Claudie River, Iron Range, 1♀, 23.09.1974,  M . S. Moulds (AMS), 1♂, 07.10.1974, G. Daniels (AMS); Clermont, 1♂, K. K. Spence (AMS); Clohesy River, Kuranda, 1♂, 09.11.1972, O. W. Richards (BMNH); near Dalga, 24°31'39.1"S, 151°28'15.6"E, 1♂, 13.04.2006, D. R. Britton &amp; J. R. Weiner (AMS); Iron Range, 1♂, 16.10.1974, M. S. Moulds (AMS), 1♂, 20.04.1975, M. S. Moulds (AMS); Lizard Island, NNE of Cooktown, 1♂, 17.11.1974, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS), 1♀, 18.11.1974, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); Mackay, 1♂, 1947, A. Marriage (AMS); Moore Park, Bundaberg, 1♀, 20.04.1973 (AMS); Murray Island, 1♀, Aug-Oct 1907, Hedley &amp; McCullock (AMS); 11 km from Portland Roads on Iron Range Road, 1♀, 21.09.1974, M. S. Moulds (AMS); Proserpine, 1♀, 08.12.1971, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS); Redlynch, 1♂, Dec 38, R. F. Sternitzky (BMNH); Walsh River, Kuranda, 1♂, 14.11.1972, O. W. Richards (BMNH); Wondecla near Herberton, 1♂, 06.01.1990, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); Woodgate, 35 km E of Childers, 1♀, 06.11.1984, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Yeppoon, 3♀, 17.11.1978,  R . Eastwood (AMS); SA: Adelaide, 1♀, 20.05.1898 (ZMB). INDONESIA:Maluku Province: Ambon Island, 1♂ (ZMB); Jilo, Seram Island, 1♂, 1884, C. Rubbe (ZMB); North Maluku Province: Sanana Island, 1♂, Doherty (ZMB); Papua: 30 km S Nabire, 1♀, 26.07.1998, Balke (NHMW); Yerelua, 2♀, 26.07.1998, Balke &amp; Konyorah (NHMW); West Papua Province: Wondiwoi Mountains, Wasior, 1♂, 01.07.1926, E. Mayr (ZMB), 1♀, 01.07.1928, E. Mayr (ZMB). PAPUA NEW GUINEA:[province unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀, 1896,  Biró (ZMB), 1♂, 29.06.1899, Ramu Expedition (ZMB), 1♀, 1♂, Ramu Expedition (ZMB); East New Britain Province: Mutupit, 10 km W Warangoi, 4°29'S, 152°07'E, 2♂, 06.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB); "Queen Emmas Bath", 5 km W Kokopo, 4°28'S, 152°19'E, 1♂, 09.-10.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB); Rabaul, 1♂, May 1902, H. Schoede (ZMB), 1♀, 2♂, May 1905, H. Schoede (ZMB); Ralum, 1♂, 14.05.1886, F. Dahl (ZMB), 3♀, 2♂, 14.05.1896, F. Dahl (ZMB), 2♀, 5♂, 1896-1897, F. Dahl (ZMB), 1♀, 23.05.1891, F. Dahl (ZMB), 1♀, 1♂, F. Dahl (ZMB); Vudanplata, 15 km W Keravat, 4°12'S, 152°00'E, 1♀, 05.-13.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB); Vunabaur, 30 km S Kokopo, 4°28'S, 152°19'E, 4♂, 07.-12.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB); Maluku Province: around Tehoru, Seram Island, 1♀, 23.02.1989, Schillhammer (ZMB); Morobe Province: Finschhafen, 1♂, 1910, Hertle (ZMB); Sialum, 2♀, Nov-Dec 1909, Neuhauss (ZMB); Oro Province: Mount Lamington, 1♂, 1927, C. T. McNamara (AMS), 1♂, 01.07.1927, C. T. McNamara (AMS); West New Britain Province: 5 km E Kimbe, 5°32'S, 150°10'E, 2♀, 1♂, 18.-27.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB), Lamavoro, 10 km S Hoskins, 5°28'S, 150°26'E, 1♂, 21.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB), Makasili, 20 km E Hoskins, 5°28'S, 150°26'E, 1♂, 19.-24.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB), Namundo Mill, 20 km W Kimbe, 5°30'S, 150°00'E, 1♀, 22.-25.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB);3 km S Mosa, 5°38'S, 150°14'E, 1♀, 17.-20.06.2003, T. Osten (ZMB). SOLOMON ISLANDS:Guadalcanal: Lavoro Plantation, 1♂, 1925, C. E. Hart (AMS), 1♂, 07.11.1923, C. E. Hart (AMS), 1♂, 1926-1927, C. E. Hart (AMS); Western Province: Gizo, 1♀, 01.01.1974, N. L. H. Krauss (BMNH). </p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 40C.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Males of  Sphex cognatus differ from all other Australian  Sphex in combining the following features: two lobes emerge from the center of the free clypeal margin, the entire clypeus is densely covered with pubescence, and the pubescence on the propodeum conceals the sculpture. Females are distinguished from those of similar species by the same characters and additionally in having hyaline wings that are at least partially yellow tinged. By contrast,  Sphex ahasverus possesses uniformly darkened wings, and the females of  Sphex argentatissimus have no hint of yellow on their wings. Also, the similar  Sphex vestitus has a longitudinal impression with slightly raised borders on the posterior half of its scutum, whereas  Sphex cognatus has an even scutum. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Body length 21.8-27.6 mm. Body black. Forewing with rather distinct, hindwing with fainter fuscous band at apex. Free clypeal margin medially with two lobes, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Clypeus entirely pubescent. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.1  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubes  cence on collar and scutum golden, the latter with denser, brighter pubescence laterally. Scutellum markedly convex. Propodeal enclosure with dense appressed and more sparse, erect, either golden or silvery pubescence, sculpture almost completely concealed. Length of petiole 1.6  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum quite dense on metasomal tergum I and II, but very short. </p>
            <p>Female: Fore- and hindwing membrane yellowish, sometimes only inconspicuously. Wing veins brown, sometimes partially orange. Lobes on free clypeal margin in same plane as clypeal surface. Forebasitarsal rake with 8-10 long spines. Scutellum without impression.</p>
            <p> Male: Forewing membrane hyaline or with slight yellow tinge, hindwing membrane hyaline. Wing veins brown. Lobes on free clypeal margin emerge slightly posteriorly of clypeal surface. Scutellum with shallow medial impression. Metasomal tergum V with few, tergum VI with considerable number of silvery-golden bristles. Metasomal sterna  IV–VIII each with increasingly dense brown pubescence apically. Apical margin of metasomal sternum VIII arcuate, its lateral margin concave. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The types of  Sphex cognatus and its synonyms were not examined, because the character combination in the redescription of the type of its synonym  Sphex formosus F. Smith, 1856 by Kohl (1890) (black body, golden pubescence on face and propodeum, convex scutellum, wing membrane sometimes yellowish), which was synonymized with  Sphex cognatus by Turner (1910), is sufficient to unambiguously identify this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/80C75F89EFC41D5974F4F1C0895502A6	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
DB9478D0F6ED22BC8F811B5CF51671AF.text	DB9478D0F6ED22BC8F811B5CF51671AF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex corporosus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex corporosus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:NSW: Pooncarie, 26.11.1992, N. W. Rodd (AMS). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA:NSW: "20 SW" of Bourke, 2♀, 1♂, 28.10.1949, E. F. Riek (ANIC); Broken Hill, 1♀, 27.02.1941, C. E. Chadwick (AMS), 1♂, 26.12.1942, C. E. Chadwick (AMS), 1♂, 31.10.1943, C. E. Chadwick (AMS), 1♂, 03.12.1947, C. E. Chadwick (AMS), 1♂, 11.11.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS), Hay, 1♂, 27.11.1992, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 30 km N of Euston, 1♂, 28.11.1988, N. W. Rodd (AMS); 20 km N of Menindee, 1♀, 1♂, 10.11.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Narromine, 1♀ (AMS); Pooncarie, 3♀, 1♂, 28.11.1992, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Round Hill Nature Reserve, 1♀, 27.12.1976, G. Daniels (AMS), 1♀, 25.10.1977, G. Daniels (AMS); 75 km W of Wilcannia, 4♂, 09.11.1985, N. W. Rodd (AMS); QLD: 20 S of Tickalara, 1♂, 14.09.1949, E. F. Riek (ANIC); SA: Adelaide, 1♀ (ZMB); Lake Gilles Conservation Park, 1♀, 01.02.1995, L. Packer, M. Schwarz, P. Hurst, Y. Pamula (ZMB); 60 km W of Nullarbor, 31°34'S, 130°15'E, 1♀, 14.12.1995, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds &amp; K. A. Kopestonsky (AMS); Wilpena Pound Resort, 1♀, 18.01.1976, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); VIC: [no specific locality], 1♀, 1909, C. French (ANIC); Swan Island, 1♂ (BMNH); WA: Champion Bay Beach, 1♂ (BMNH); Hamelin Telegraph Station, 26°23.9'S, 114°09.9'E, 1♀, 1♂, 08.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS), 3♂, 10.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Kalbarri National  Park : Ross Graham Lookout, 27°48.6'S, 114°28.3'E, 1♂, 06.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Marloo Station, 1♀, 01.01.1936, A. Goerling (ZMB), 1♀,  Feb–Mar 35, A. Goerling (ZMB), 1♀,  Oct–Nov 34, Gebr. Goerling (ZMB); Shire of Northampton, Kalbarri National Park, 27°39'13"S, 114°27'24"E, 1♀, 10.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Tuckanarra Hill, 2♂, 16.11.1961, A. Snell (AMS); Urawa Nature Reserve ca 5 km N Mullewa, 28°29.6'S, 115°29.5'E, 1♂, 11.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Wydgee Station near Mount Magnet, 2♂, 16.11.1961, A. Snell (AMS). INDONESIA:Bali Island: Dedari, 1♀, 01.01.1948 (BMNH). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex corporosus can be distinguished from most other members of the  Sphex subtruncatus group through a combination of the following characters: petiole shorter than flagellomere II and pubescence on propodeal enclosure not concealing sculpture. Presence of these traits is sufficient to identify males, while females of  Sphex corporosus resemble those of  Sphex brevipetiolus . The former, however, has a flat scutellum (Fig. 32B) as well as dark erect setae on the clypeus, whereas in the latter the scutellum is convex and only silvery-white erect setae are present on the clypeus. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body black, mandible medially with ferruginous stripe, legs and metasoma dark maroon to black. Wing membrane hyaline, forewing with fuscous spot beyond marginal cell. Wing veins dark orange to dark brown. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons as well as erect setae on frons silvery. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery-white. Propodeal enclosure covered with long, erect, silvery-white pubescence, not concealing sculpture. Pubescence denser on posterior end of propodeum.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 27.5-31.8 mm. Apical margin of forewing fuscous beyond submarginal cell III, medial cell II and cubital cell II. Forebasitarsal rake with 10-11 long spines. Free clypeal margin slightly scoop-shaped, clypeus elevated medially above margin. Erect setae on clypeus black. Most of central clypeal area glabrous. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.9  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutum glabrous except for area between admedian lines and lateral and posterior margins. Scutellum flat, sometimes with shallow medial impression. Length of petiole 0.7  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense medially on metasomal tergum I, metasomal tergum II glabrous. Metasomal terga V and VI with few bristles. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 20.3-27.4 mm. Apical margin of forewing nearly hayaline beyond submarginal cell III, medial cell II and cubital cell II. Free clypeal margin truncate, slightly concave towards center. Erect setae on clypeus silvery. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe which broadens towards free clypeal margin. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.3  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on scutum much denser laterally. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Length of petiole 0.8  × length of flagellomere II. Metasomal tergum I and anterior half of metasomal tergum II very densely covered with silvery-white tomentum. Metasomal sternum VII with small fringe of dark bristles posterolaterally. Metasomal sternum VIII notched apically, its lateral margin concave. </p>
            <p>Variation.</p>
            <p> In most of the examined specimens, the metanotum is moderately raised, and in a few with an inconspicuous median impression. A raised metanotum with an impression is usually distinctive for species of the  Sphex argentatus group, but since  the raising of the metanotum and the depth of the impression in the most extreme known cases of this species are only comparable to the least extreme cases of examined specimens of the  Sphex argentatus group,  Sphex corporosus is tentatively placed in the  Sphex subtruncatus group. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Save for two other species besides  Sphex corporosus , all members of the  Sphex subtruncatus group have a petiole longer than flagellomere II. One of them,  Sphex ermineus , is set apart by having exceptionally long and dense pubescence on the propodeal dorsum. Of the other one,  Sphex brevipetiolus , only a single female is known. This specimen differs in a few features from the specimens that have been designated the females of  Sphex corporosus , and partially surpasses them in resemblance to the males of  Sphex corporosus . Arguments in favor of pairing males and females of  Sphex corporosus are addressed in the subsequent paragraph. </p>
            <p> The following attributes are shared by  Sphex brevipetiolus and males of  Sphex corporosus , but not between males and females of the latter: erect setae on clypeus uniformly silvery-white, and scutellum convex and medially impressed. However, the scutellar structure is usually not constant among sexes in the Australian  Sphex . On the other hand,  Sphex brevipetiolus has several features that differentiate it from both males and females of  Sphex corporosus : considerably shorter tomentum on metasomal tergum I, brassy setae on metasomal sterna, and wing veins that are bright orange in the basal half of the wing. For these reasons, males and females of  Sphex corporosus are considered to be one species, and  Sphex brevipetiolus is treated as a separate one. </p>
            <p>Lastly, the geographic range of both sexes is also indicative of the status as a single species, particularly since the number of examined individuals was rather large. Males and females were often found in close proximity to each other, or even in the same areas (Fig. 32C).</p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> Corporosus is a Latin adjective, meaning  “corpulent” . A few members of this species from the ANIC were already labeled with this name, although it is unclear by whom. There are no related publications, but the species will be named  Sphex corporosus to minimize the risk of confusion in case there are more specimens already so labeled. It undoubtedly refers to the large size of the species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DB9478D0F6ED22BC8F811B5CF51671AF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
AF52367616415DFD7FE68A669E37B03E.text	AF52367616415DFD7FE68A669E37B03E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex ermineus Kohl 1890	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex ermineus Kohl, 1890</p>
            <p> Sphex ermineus Kohl, 1890: 412, ♀. Syntypes: Australia: Western Australia: Swan River (NHMW). Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> AUSTRALIA:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀ (ZMB);"North Australia", 1♀ (BMNH); NSW: Bourke, 1♀, 03.01.1954, C. M. Moore (AMS); 25 miles SE of Coonabarabran, 1♀, 01.01.1973, A. Smith (AMS); Round Hill Nature Reserve, 1♀, 26.12.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); NT: Groote Eylandt, 1♀, 28.01.1925, G. H. Wilkins (BMNH); 27.5 km SE of Katherine, 14°34'0"S, 132°28'5"E, 1♂, 08.04.2008, G. Williams &amp; W. Pulawski (AMS); Port Darwin,  1 ♀, 2♂ (BMNH); Stuart Point Road 14.5 km N Arnhem Highway, 12°43.6'S, 131°50.0'E, 1♀, 27.04.2008, W. J. Pulawski &amp; G. A. Williams (CAS); QLD: "North Queensland", 1♂ (BMNH); Bluff Range, Biggenden, 25°36'S, 152°03'E, 1♂, 21.12.1970, H. Frauca (ANIC); Cape York, 1♀, 01.08.1986, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Duaringa, 4♀, 26.12.1946, C. W. Smith (AMS); Goldsborough Road, Mulgrave River, 1♂, 19.01.1962, E. B. Britton &amp; J. G. Brooks (BMNH); Heathlands, 11°45'S, 142°35'E, 1♀, 15.-26.01.1992, I. Naumann &amp; T. Weir (ANIC); WA: Bunbury, 1♂, 01.01.1961, A. Snell (AMS); Marloo Station, 1♀, 02.03.1935, A. Goerling (ZMB). </p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 42D.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex ermineus differs from all other Australian  Sphex in the combination of a petiole distinctly shorter than flagellomere II, and the dense, long, silvery-white pubescence on the propodeal enclosure that conceals the sculpture.  Sphex corporosus has a similar appearance, but its propodeal pubescence is less dense, leaving parts of the sculpture still visible. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Body length 28.8-30.8 mm. Body black. Wing membrane hyaline, forewing with dark fuscous spot beyond marginal cell. Wing veins black. Distance between hind- ocelli approximately 1.2  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery-white, denser laterally and posteriorly. Propodeal enclosure densely covered with silvery-white pubescence, sculpture completely concealed. Length of petiole approximately 0.9  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum on metasomal tergum II mostly absent. </p>
            <p>Female: Forewing with fuscous band at apex. Forebasitarsal rake with 12 long spines. Free clypeal margin simple, bulging above center. Appressed pubescence on clypeus and frons silvery-white, erect setae on frons silvery-white, most erect setae on clypeus silvery-white, a few light or dark brown. Clypeus medioventrally with glabrous spot. Central area of scutum and scutellum glabrous. Scutellum and metanotum conspicuously flat, without impressions (Fig. 33C). Tomentum on metasomal tergum I moderately dense.</p>
            <p> Male: Forewing almost hyaline at apex except for fuscous spot beyond marginal cell. Free clypeal margin concave medially. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe. Central area of scutum and scutellum pubescent. Tomentum on metasomal tergum I dense. Metasomal sternum I medially densely covered with long, silvery setae. Sterna  II–VIII with increasingly dense fringes of silvery setae laterally, sterna VII and VIII completely covered. Metasomal sternum VIII anteriorly with large hole, conspicuously notched apically, its lateral margin concave (Fig. 33B). </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The type of  Sphex ermineus was not examined, because the character combination in the original description (dense silvery-white propodeal pubescence, flat scutellum, flat metanotum) is sufficient to unambiguously identify this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AF52367616415DFD7FE68A669E37B03E	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
996B450C63B3F5488E7CF02D2C906BB3.text	996B450C63B3F5488E7CF02D2C906BB3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex flammeus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae </p>
            <p> Sphex flammeus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♀, AUSTRALIA:NT: 50 km E of Three Ways, 11.04.1995, L. Packer (ZMB). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA:SA: Hermannsburg, 2♀, Leonhardi (ZMB).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Females of  Sphex flammeus (the male is unknown) differ from other Australian  Sphex by the following combination of features: appressed pubescence on clypeus silvery-white, scape, legs and metasoma largely orange, and wing membrane  without a yellow tinge.  Sphex decoratus ,  Sphex sericeus ,  Sphex darwiniensis and  Sphex rhodosoma are also largely orange, but they are members of different species groups.  Sphex staudingeri differs in having golden pubescence on clypeus and scutum instead of silvery-white one and moderately fuscous wings instead of hyaline ones, while also being considerably larger. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Female: Body length 19.6-20.2 mm. Body orange, but the following are black: mandible and claws distally, head excluding clypeus, antenna from the pedicel onward, scutum, sometimes scutellum and metanotum. Wing membrane hyaline, forewing with faint fuscous band at apex. Wing veins range from orange to dark brown. Forebasitarsal rake with 11 long spines. Free clypeal margin straight. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.9  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on mesosoma partly golden, partly silvery, on scutum denser laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum convex, with distinct medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure short; mostly concealing sculpture. Length of petiole approximately 1.2  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I, sparse on tergum II. </p>
            <p>Male: Unknown.</p>
            <p>Variation.</p>
            <p> One of the three examined specimens has a median impression on the metanotum; this trait is also distinctive for species of the  Sphex argentatus group. However, it is there accompanied by a conspicuous raising of the metanotum, which  Sphex flammeus lacks. Therefore, this species is tentatively placed in the  Sphex subtruncatus group. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> The character combination of the available females makes it clear that this species has not yet been described. Based on species group membership, there are eight species of which females are yet unknown or where matching of males and females was first proposed in this study.  Sphex flammeus can theoretically be the female of one of them. However, only one of them,  Sphex semifossulatus , is also colored bright orange. Still, both differ in the color of scapes and propodeum, as well as in the orientation of the mesosomal pubescence, which is denser and more appressed in  Sphex flammeus . </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> Flammeus is a Latin adjective, meaning  “flame-colored” . It refers to the color of this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/996B450C63B3F5488E7CF02D2C906BB3	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
517E9BFEF7ADDD0F37F933B7D06742AB.text	517E9BFEF7ADDD0F37F933B7D06742AB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex formosellus van der Vecht 1957	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex formosellus van der Vecht, 1957</p>
            <p> Sphex formosellus van der Vecht, 1957: 366, ♀, ♂. Holotype: ♀, Indonesia: Timor: no specific locality (RMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> [COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 2♀, 1♂ (ZMB). AUSTRALIA:NSW: Bumberry, 1♀, 30.12.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); Clarence, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 16.01.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Mount Tomah, Blue Mountains, 1♂, 06.04.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS); NT: Edith Falls, 38 km NNW Katherine, 14°1'1"S, 132°03'6"E, 1♂, 16.04.2008, G. Williams &amp; W.  Pulawski (AMS); QLD: Moorooka, 2♀, 3♂,  Feb–Mar 44, E. F. Riek (ANIC); VIC: Gunbower, 1♂, 03.03.1933 (BMNH); Oakleigh, 1♀, 11.04.1917, C. French, junr. (ANIC); WA: Bunbury, 2♂, 01.01.1957, A. Snell (AMS), 1♂, 03.01.1957, A. Snell (AMS), 1♂, 09.01.1957, A. Snell (AMS), 1♂, 01.01.1961, A. Snell (AMS), 2♀, 10.-22.12.1958, A. Snell (AMS). INDONESIA:East Nusa Tenggara: Timor, 1♂ (ZMB). </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex formosellus differs from other members of the  Sphex subtruncatus group in combining the following characters: the clypeus is entirely covered with dense pubescence, the pubescence on the propodeal enclosure is sparse enough to leave the sculpture visible, and the legs are black. In contrast, the legs of  Sphex staudingeri and at least the foretibia of  Sphex caelebs are bright orange. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body length 18.2-21.0 mm. Body black. Wing membrane with slight fuscous band at apex. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Clypeus entirely pubescent. Pubescence on scutum longer and denser laterally. Scutellum convex. Propodeal enclosure with sparse pubescence, sculpture clearly visible. Length of petiole twice length of flagellomere II.</p>
            <p>Female: Membrane of cellular wing area yellow, remainder hyaline. Wing veins yellowish-orange, darker near apex. Forebasitarsal rake with nine long spines. Free clypeal margin with two lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Distance between hind- ocelli equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar, scutum and propodeal enclosure silvery-golden. Scutellum without impressions. Tomentum dense on metasomal terga I and II.</p>
            <p> Male: Wing membrane hyaline. Wing veins light brown. Free clypeal margin truncate. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.3  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar, scutum and propodeal enclosure silvery-white. Scutellum with medial impression. Tomentum very dense on metasomal tergum I and II. Metasomal terga V and VI covered with silvery-golden bristles. Metasomal sterna  VI–VIII with fringes of silvery setae laterally, densest on sternum VII. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin concave. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The types of  Sphex formosellus were not examined, because the character combination for females in the original description (black body, two lobes on free clypeal margin, wing membrane hyaline with yellow tinge, clypeus and propodeal enclosure with brassy pubescence, pubescence less dense than in  Sphex cognatus ) is sufficient to unambiguously identify this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/517E9BFEF7ADDD0F37F933B7D06742AB	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
5B05444858F826A14D70E739619669E3.text	5B05444858F826A14D70E739619669E3.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex fortunatus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex fortunatus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:QLD: "North Queensland" (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> This species differs from other members of the  Sphex subtruncatus group mainly in the color of the wing membrane, which is markedly fuscous near the base and around the subcosta as well as below the submedial cell. This seems to be the only character that differentiates the species from  Sphex jucundus , which has the wing mem  brane hyaline in this area. The absence of tubercles on the metanotum and the lack of erect dark setae on the clypeus distinguish  Sphex fortunatus from  Sphex finschii in the  Sphex argentatus group, which has similar wing coloration. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>♀. Unknown.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 20.6 mm. Body black, mandible dark ferruginous in center, femora maroon. Wing membrane light brown, markedly fuscous around subcosta and below submedial cell. Wing veins dark brown to black, cellular area around veins on forewing fuscous. Free clypeal margin slightly concave towards center, with minute lobe there. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery. Clypeus glabrous ventrally and with narrow glabrous stripe medially. Distance between hind- ocelli slightly smaller than their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery-white, on scutum longer and denser laterally and posteriorly.  Scutellum convex, with shallow medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure sparse, sculpture completely visible. Length of petiole 1.5  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I, sparse on tergum II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VI mostly glabrous, VII and VIII with moderately sparse silvery pubescence. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin concave. </p>
            <p>Geographic distribution.</p>
            <p> Only one specimen of  Sphex fortunatus could be studied, and no specific geographic information is available. Its origin is given as "North Queensland". </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> There are seven species in the  Sphex subtruncatus group of which males are yet unknown or where matching of males and females was first proposed in this study.  Sphex fortunatus can theoretically be the male of one of them. Two of them have a petiole that is markedly shorter than flagellomere II, while two others differ in having pubescence on the propodeal enclosure that is dense enough to conceal the sculpture. One of the three remaining species (  Sphex flammeus ) is mostly orange in its body color, and another one (  Sphex pretiosus ) has a mix of golden and silvery pubescence on the propodeum and wing veins that are bright orange in the basal wing half. The last species,  Sphex jucundus , differs, as already mentioned, in having wings that are completely hyaline except near the apex. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> Fortunatus is a Latin adjective, meaning  “happy” or  “lucky” . The name was chosen in reference to  Sphex jucundus , which is very similar in appearance. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5B05444858F826A14D70E739619669E3	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
70075103DFC77090A14BAC7BE5F75D48.text	70075103DFC77090A14BAC7BE5F75D48.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex jucundus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex jucundus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p> Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:WA: 6 km N of Winning HS, 23°06'S, 114°33'E, 30.03.1971, E. F. Riek (ANIC). Paratypes. [COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[state unknown]: [no specific locality], 1♀ (ZMB). AUSTRALIA:NSW: Bourke, 1♀, 03.01.1954, K. M. Moore (AMS); Broken Hill, 1♂, 09.03.2001, M. Ohl (ZMB); 10 km N of Broken Hill, 2♀, 3♂, 11.03.2001, M. Ohl (ZMB), 4♀, 10♂, 12.03.2001, M. Ohl (ZMB), 1♀, 1♂, 13.03.2001, M. Ohl (ZMB); NT: Alexandria, Nicholson, 2♂, W. Stalker (BMNH); Port Darwin, 1♀, 01.02.1902 (BMNH), 2♂ (BMNH); QLD: Camooweal, 1♂, 18.05.1972, G. B. &amp; S. R. Monteith (ANIC); 45 km S of Collinsville, 1♀, 16.01.1987, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); Westwood, 1♀, 25.11.1923, A. N. Burns (ANIC); SA: Adelaide, 1♂ (ZMB); Clements Gap Conservation Park, 33°28.7'S, 138°03.9'E, 2♂, 18.12.2010, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Cocata Conservation Park, 33°17.0'S, 135°19.7'E, 1♂, 03.01.2011, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); 55 km ESE of Kimba, on Kimba/Iron Knob road, 1♂, 12.12.1995, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds &amp; K. A. Kopestonsky (AMS); Lake Gilles Conservation Park, 1♀, 01.02.1995, L. Packer, M. Schwarz, P. Hurst, Y. Pamula (ZMB); WA: Bullsbrook, 1♂, 13.02.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH); Bunbury, 2♂, 03.01.1957, A. Snell (AMS), 1♂, 01.01.1961, A. Snell (AMS); Deep  Dene , Karridale, 1♂, 19.01.1965, L. M.  O’Halloran (ANIC); Kalamunda, 1♀, 09.-28.02.1914, R. E. Turner (BMNH), 1♀, 14.03.-14.04.1914, R. E. Turner (BMNH); 40 km SE Kalbarri, 27°50.9'S, 114°28.5'E, 1♀, 05.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS); Marloo Station, 1♀, 01.01.1935, Gebr. Goerling (ZMB), 1♀, 1♂, 01.02.1935, Gebr. Goerling (ZMB), 1♀, 01.01.1936, A. Goerling (ZMB), 1♀, Dec 34, Gebr. Goerling (ZMB); Meekatharra, 1♂, 18.01.1961, A. Snell (AMS); 55 km S of Newman, 1♀, 1♂, 08.04.1971, E. F. Riek (ANIC); Perth, 1♂, 10.-18.02.1936, R. E. Turner (BMNH); S of Perth, 1♀, 12.01.1905, H. M. Giles (BMNH), Serpentine Falls, Darling Ranges, 1♀, 20.01.1971, G. A. Holloway (AMS); Shire of Shark Bay, Francois Peron National Park, 25.906233°, 113.526010°, 1♀, 12.01.2010, L. Breitkreuz (ZMB); Tuckanarra Hill, 2♂, 16.11.1961, A. Snell (AMS); Urawa Nature Reserve ca 5 km N Mullewa, 28°29.6'S, 115°29.5'E, 1♂, 11.11.2008, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS) </p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The combination of black legs, a black metasoma, wings hyaline at the base, exclusively silvery-white pubescence on the clypeus and a petiole considerably longer than flagellomere II separates  Sphex jucundus from all other species in the  Sphex subtruncatus group except  Sphex bilobatus . In contrast to  Sphex bilobatus which possesses a convex scutellum with a medial impression, females of  Sphex jucundus have a flat scutellum without any impressions; while the visible part of metasomal sternum VIII in male  Sphex bilobatus is modified into two long lobes that are even visible from above, while sternum VIII of  Sphex jucundus is entire. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Body length 18.7-20.0 mm. Body black, mandible ferruginous basally. Wing membrane completely hyaline, only with slightly fuscous band at apex of forewing. Wing veins light to dark brown. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medialglabrous stripe. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery-white, on scutum denser laterally and posteriorly. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I, sparse on tergum II.</p>
            <p> Female: Free clypeal margin simple, clypeus elevated medially above margin, pubescent near margin. Distance between hind- ocelli almost equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Forebasitarsal rake with 12 long spines. Scutellum flat, without impressions. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure mostly concealing sculpture. Length of petiole 1.25  × length of flagellomere II. </p>
            <p> Male: Free clypeal margin truncate, concave towards center. Clypeus near margin glabrous. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.25  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure sparse enough to leave sculpture visible. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. Several erect silvery setae on metasomal terga  V–VII . Silvery pubescence on margin of metasomal sternum VII and on metasomal sternum VIII. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, its lateral margin concave. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> In this species, males and females closely resemble each other, except for commonly sexually dimorphic characters such as the scutellum. Due to this dimorphism, however, the females are easier to define as a new species than the males. At most, only four other females in the  Sphex subtruncatus group are known to have a flat scutellum.  Two of those are distinguished in having golden pubescence on the propodeal enclosure, and the petiole of the other two is considerably shorter than flagellomere II. </p>
            <p> One character was found in which males and females of  Sphex jucundus differ from each other and which is usually not a sexually dimorphic feature among Australian  Sphex , the density of the pubescence on the propodeal enclosure. However, this argument alone would not be sufficient to demonstrate that they belong to different species. The identical coloration of the wings in males and females as well as the conspicuously dense tomentum both have on their metasomal tergum I are only a few of their shared features. Finally, a great number of males and females come from the same or from nearby localities, which is another indication that both form one species (Fig. 26). </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> Jucundus is a Latin adjective, meaning  “pleasant” or  “merry” . The name was apparently chosen by J. van der Vecht when he so labeled individuals of this species in the 1970s, but without describing it. The name was adopted to credit J. van der Vecht. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/70075103DFC77090A14BAC7BE5F75D48	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
8F321894090227A35C6D1C9B6A8AB90E.text	8F321894090227A35C6D1C9B6A8AB90E.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex latilobus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex latilobus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:WA: Bolgart, 14.12.1961, E. B. Britton &amp; A. Douglas (BMNH). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA:WA: Bolgart, 2♂, 14.12.1961, E. B. Britton &amp; A. Douglas (BMNH); Cervantes, 1♂, 26.12.1988, I. L. Hamer (BMNH).</p>
            <p>The collecting localities are shown in Fig. 40C.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> The males of this species (females are unknown) are easily identifiable by the bright orange coloration along the free clypeal margin, combined with the visible part of the metasomal sternum VIII modified into two completely separate lobes (Fig. 38B).  Sphex bilobatus and  Sphex basilicus possess similar structures, but the free clypeal margin is black in both species, and the latter also has golden pubescence on the propodeal enclosure, whereas the pubescens is silvery-white in  Sphex latilobus . </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Female: Unknown.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 18.8-24.5 mm. Body black, but the following are orange: mandible from base up to base of inner tooth, clypeus along free margin, fore- and at least partially midfemur, posterior half of tegula. Wing membrane almost completely hyaline, wing veins dark brown. Free clypeal margin straight or minimally convex. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli equal to or slightly smaller than their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on mesosoma silvery-white, on scutum denser laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum convex, with distinct medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure short, not completely concealing sculpture. Length of petiole 1.3  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I, sparse on tergum II. Metasomal terga V and VI with only few bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VIII mostly glabrous. Visible part of metasomal sternum VIII forming two large, completely separated lobes (similar to  Sphex bilobatus , shown in Fig. 28B; but lobes of  Sphex latilobus are wider). </p>
            <p> Variation . </p>
            <p>Of the three examined specimens, the legs of one are almost entirely black, whereas the fore- and parts of the midfemur of the other two are orange.</p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Sphex latilobus is clearly an undescribed species. It also seems unlikely that it can be associated with one of the species based solely on females. Within the  Sphex subtruncatus group, there are seven species of which males are unknown or where matching of males and females was first proposed in this study. Since most diagnostic characters of this species are suspected to be sexually dimorphic, the number of potential candidates was first narrowed down by eliminating all species where matching of males and females is well-founded (  Sphex jucundus ,  Sphex corporosus and  Sphex pretiosus ), which leaves four species. One of them (  Sphex brevipetiolus ) has partially orange wing veins and a petiole that barely reaches the length of flagellomere II; another one (  Sphex ahasverus ) has dark setae on the clypeus, fuscous wings and golden propodeal pubescence. Of the remaining two, one (  Sphex argentatissimus ) has a clypeus with golden pubescence; the body of the other one (  Sphex flammeus ) is mostly bright orange. Thus,  Sphex latilobus is unlikely to match any of the currently recognized species. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> Latilobus is a composite of the Latin words latus (wide) and lobus (elongated projection), referring to the lobes on male sternum VIII which are similar to those of  Sphex bilobatus but wider. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8F321894090227A35C6D1C9B6A8AB90E	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
013CE6C384496CFF13A422D4A9FEBE05.text	013CE6C384496CFF13A422D4A9FEBE05.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex pretiosus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex pretiosus sp. n.</p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype. ♂, AUSTRALIA:NSW: 56 miles W of Cobar, Baznatos Tank, 01.01.1966, O. W. Richards (BMNH). Paratypes. AUSTRALIA:NSW: Binnaway, 1♀, Dec 73, A. Smith (AMS); Gilgandra, 1♀, 06.11.1987, G. A. Holloway (AMS); between Whitecliff and Wilcannia, 2♂, 09.03.2001, M. Ohl (ZMB); SA: 27 km WSW Whyalla, 33°06.5'S, 137°19.0'E, 1♀, 28.12.2010, V. Ahrens &amp; W. J. Pulawski (CAS).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> This species is unique among the Australian  Sphex in having a more or less sharp transition in the color of the pubescence on the clypeus and the propodeal dorsum. On the ventral part of the clypeus and the outer and posterior margin of the propodeal enclosure, the pubescence is silvery-white; while it is golden on the dorsal part of the clypeus and silvery-golden to golden on the propodeal enclosure. Moreover, the metasomal sternum VIII in males is spoon-shaped and has a gentle notch at the apical margin (Fig. 39B). </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Forewing membrane posterobasally with slight yellow tinge, with fuscous band at apex. Wing veins bright orange, brown near apex. Appressed pubescence on ventral part of clypeus silvery-white, on dorsal part and frons silvery-golden. Erect setae matching respective color of appressed pubescence on clypeus, silvery-white on frons. Clypeus almost entirely covered with pubescence. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.25  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on scutum denser  laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure not completely concealing sculpture. Propodeal pubescence outside enclosure and on petiole silvery-white. Length of petiole nearly twice length of flagellomere II. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum I. </p>
            <p>Female: Body length 17.7-18.8 mm. Body black except mandible reddish basally. Free clypeal margin with two lobes medially and with another less-pronounced lobe on each side of the aforementioned; distance between each two lobes less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Forebasitarsal rake with 12 long spines. Pubescence on collar, scutum and propodeal enclosure silvery-white to silvery-golden. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum II.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 18.4-18.7 mm. Body black. Free clypeal margin slightly concave, convex near center. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery-golden to golden, on propodeal enclosure golden. Tomentum very dense on metasomal tergum II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few bristles. Metasomal sterna  III–VIII with silvery pubescence. Metasomal sternum VIII mostly covered by VII; with long, narrow, spoon-shaped extension that has a small notch at apical margin. </p>
            <p>Variation.</p>
            <p> In a few of the examined specimens, the metanotum is moderately raised, and in one of these, there is a slight median impression on it. A raised metanotum with an impression is usually distinctive for species of the  Sphex argentatus group, but since the raising of the metanotum and the depth of the impression in the most extreme known cases of this species are only comparable to the least extreme cases of examined specimens of the  Sphex argentatus group,  Sphex pretiosus is tentatively placed in the  Sphex subtruncatus group. </p>
            <p>Discussion.</p>
            <p> Males and females of  Sphex pretiosus have nearly identical features that are also unique among the Australian species, such as the transition between golden and silvery-white pubescence on the clypeus and the propodeal dorsum. Also, the conspicuously modified sternum VIII of the male substantiates a full species status. Fig. 39C shows that the proposed males and females at least occur in the same region. </p>
            <p>Etymology.</p>
            <p> Pretiosus is a Latin adjective, meaning  “valuable” or  “costly” . It metaphorically refers to the combination of golden and silvery pubescence on the mesosoma of this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/013CE6C384496CFF13A422D4A9FEBE05	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
0B56C51396F75C95473859F84EFE5F48.text	0B56C51396F75C95473859F84EFE5F48.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex semifossulatus van der Vecht 1973	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex semifossulatus van der Vecht, 1973</p>
            <p> Sphex argentifrons F. Smith, 1868: 248, ♀, actually ♂ (see van der Vecht 1973: 349), junior primary homonym of  Sphex argentifrons Lepeletier de Saint Fargeau, 1845. Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: Western Australia: Champion Bay, now Geraldton (BMNH). Presumed holotype examined. </p>
            <p> Sphex semifossulatus van der Vecht, 1973: 349. Substitute name for  Sphex argentifrons F. Smith. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype (presumed). ♂, AUSTRALIA:WA: Champion Bay, now Geraldton (BMNH).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Males of  Sphex semifossulatus (females are unknown) are unique among the Australian  Sphex in having two lobes on the free clypeal margin that are conspicuously far apart (Fig. 40B). The distance between them is equal to almost half the length of flagellomere II. Of the other examined species, only the males of  Sphex cognatus also have two lobes on the clypeus, but those are merely separated by a small notch. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p>Female: Unknown.</p>
            <p> Male: Body length 23.2 mm. Body black, but the following are orange: base of mandible, center of free clypeal margin, tegula, metasoma, legs excluding coxae and distal part of hindtibia as well as claw teeth and distal half of claw. Forewing membrane with yellow tinge near base and slightly fuscous band at apex, hindwing membrane hyaline. Wing veins orange, darker near apex. Free clypeal margin with two lobes, distance between them more than half length of flagellomere II. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons silvery-white. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.2  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Pubescence on collar and scutum silvery-golden, on the latter denser laterally and posteriorly. Scutellum convex, with distinct medial impression. Propodeal enclosure with silvery-golden pubescence, leaving sculpture mostly visible. Length of petiole 1.25  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum dense on metasomal tergum I and II. Metasomal terga V and VI covered with silvery bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VII each with increasing amount of erect silvery setae laterally. Metasomal sternum VIII with few erect silvery setae, notched apically, its lateral margin straight, convex posteriorly. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0B56C51396F75C95473859F84EFE5F48	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
345372A7C9D9DE6FCE278687116C42E8.text	345372A7C9D9DE6FCE278687116C42E8.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex staudingeri Gribodo 1894	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex staudingeri Gribodo, 1894</p>
            <p> Sphex staudingeri Gribodo, 1894: 3, ♂ (as  Staudingeri , incorrect original capitalization). Holotype or syntypes: ♂, New Guinea: no specific locality (Genova). Presumed holotype examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>Holotype (presumed). ♂, [COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[province unknown]: New Guinea [no specific locality] (MSNG).</p>
            <p>Other material.</p>
            <p>[COUNTRY UNKNOWN]:[province unknown]: New Guinea [no specific locality], 1♀ (ZMB), 1♂ (NHMW).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Sphex staudingeri is unique among the Australian  Sphex in combining orange scapes, golden propodeal pubescence and the absence of tubercles on the metanotum.  Sphex basilicus differs in having black scapes and a black metasoma, whereas the metasoma of  Sphex staudingeri is orange, although sometimes in a very dark tone. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Wing veins brown. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Pubescence on mesosoma golden, on scutum denser laterally. Scutellum convex, with shallow medial impression. Propodeal enclosure with sparse,  erect , golden pubescence; sculpture completely visible. Length of petiole approximately 1.25  × length of flagellomere II. Tomentum dense on metasomal tergum I. </p>
            <p> Female: Body length 29.0 mm. Body black, but the following are orange: mandible proximally, mouthparts, clypeus, scape, pedicel, scutellum, metanotum, metasoma, legs excluding coxa and proximal part of trochanter as well as claw teeth and distal half of claw. Wing membrane uniformly light brown. Forebasitarsal rake with nine long spines. Free clypeal margin with indistinct emarginations. Clypeus medioventrally with glabrous spot. Distance between hind- ocelli 0.8  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Tomentum moderately dense on metasomal tergum II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 27.2-28.2 mm. Body black, but the following are orange: mandible proximally, mouthparts, metasomal segment I at least partially, legs excluding coxa and trochanter as well as claw teeth and distal half of claw. Wing membrane with yellow tinge in cellular area and with slightly fuscous border at apex. Free clypeal margin truncate, concave towards center. Clypeus with narrow medial glabrous stripe. Distance between hind- ocelli slightly smaller than their shortest distance to compound eyes. Tomentum dense on metasomal tergum II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few golden bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–IV mostly glabrous,  V–VIII with few reddish-golden bristles laterally. Metasomal sternum VIII entire, slightly arched towards ventral side, truncate at apical margin, its lateral margin straight. </p>
            <p> Geographical distribution. </p>
            <p> Although this species is listed in the catalog of Australian  Sphecidae (Cardale 1985), no indication of specimens actually collected within Australia was found; all examined individuals of  Sphex staudingeri come from New Guinea, which is also the only country recorded by Hensen (1991). Berland (1928) records the species from Port Jackson, now part of Sydney, with reference to Dumont  d’Urville as collector. This old record is likely to be inaccurate (see Discussion). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/345372A7C9D9DE6FCE278687116C42E8	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
D0D46908CBC7B13891DE9B8D2826BE34.text	D0D46908CBC7B13891DE9B8D2826BE34.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Sphex vestitus F. Smith 1856	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p>Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Sphecidae</p>
            <p> Sphex vestitus F. Smith, 1856</p>
            <p> Sphex vestitus F. Smith, 1856: 248, ♀ (as  vestita , incorrect original termination). Holotype or syntypes: ♀, Australia: no specific locality (BMNH). Not examined. </p>
            <p>Material examined.</p>
            <p>AUSTRALIA:NSW: 6 km NE of Bilpin, Blue Mountains, 1♀, 26.03.1982, N. W. Rodd (AMS), 1♀, 27.02.1983, N. W. Rodd (AMS); Brisbane Water National Park, Warrah Trig, 1♀, 15.02.1986, D. B. McCorquodale (ANIC); 13 km N of Coffs Harbour, 1♀, 05.01.1978, G. Daniels (AMS); Fairlight Road, Mulgoa, 1♀, 26.02.1985, C. A. P. Urquhart (AMS); Pearl Beach, 1♂, 01.01.1985, C. A. P. Urquhart (AMS); Sandy Creek W of Ebor, 1♂, 03.01.1978, G. Daniels (AMS); Sydney, 2♀, C. Gibbons (AMS); The Needles, Woronora River, Engadine, 1♀, 27.01.1979, R. Eastwood (AMS); Woy Woy, 1♀, 1♂, 08.05.1924, Nicholson (AMS); QLD: "North Queensland", 1♂ (BMNH); N Bundaberg, 1♀, 1♂, 21.03.1972, H. Frauca (ANIC); Byfield State Forest, 1♀, 01.01.1976, G. Daniels (AMS); Claudie River, 4 miles W of Mount Lamond, 1♂, 24.12.1971, D. K. McAlpine, G. A. Holloway, D. P. Sands (AMS), 1♂, 12.01.1972, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS), 1♂, 13.01.1972, D. K. McAlpine &amp; G. A. Holloway (AMS); Cockatoo Creek Xing, 17 km NW Heathlands, 11°39'S, 142°27'E, 1♀, 25.04.-07.06.1992, T. McLeod (ANIC); Division of Dawson, 1♀, Rothschild &amp; Bequest (BMNH); Kamerunga near Cairns, 1♀, 27.12.1974, M. S. &amp; B. J. Moulds (AMS); Kuranda, 1♂, 05.03.1950, A. N. Burns (ANIC); Lockerbie Scrub, Cape York, 1♀, 12.04.1975, M. S. Moulds (AMS); Moorooka, 1♀, 10.02.1945, E. F. Riek (ANIC); 9 miles W of Paluma, 1♂, 16.04.1969, I. F. B. Common &amp; M. S. Upton (ANIC); Pinock River, Hogback range, WSW of Bundaberg via Gin Gin, 1♀, 11.03.1972, H. Frauca (ANIC).</p>
            <p>Diagnosis.</p>
            <p> Females of  Sphex vestitus can be identified by the pubescence on the clypeus and the propodeal enclosure being golden combined with the wing membrane hyaline, without yellow tinge. A unique character differentiating this species from similar ones (like  Sphex cognatus ) is a longitudinal median impression on the posterior half of the scutum (Fig. 42B). Males of  Sphex vestitus can be identified by two longitudinal carinae on the metasomal sternum VIII which form a channel-like structure (Fig. 42C), and also by a single lobe in the center of the free clypeal margin. </p>
            <p>Description.</p>
            <p> Body black. Wing membrane hyaline, forewing with slight fuscous band at apex and light brown spot beyond marginal cell. Wing veins dark brown to  black . Clypeus medioventrally with inconspicuous indentation. Appressed pubescence and erect setae on clypeus and frons golden. Pubescence on mesosoma golden, on scutum longer and denser laterally. Posterior half of scutum with longitudinal median impression. Scutellum convex, with medial impression. Pubescence on propodeal enclosure dense, completely concealing sculpture. Tomentum very dense on metasomal sternum I, dense on sternum II. </p>
            <p> Female: Body length 26.3-30.0 mm. Forebasitarsal rake with ten long spines. Free clypeal margin with two small lobes medially, distance between them less than 1/8 length of flagellomere II. Clypeus medioventrally with triangular glabrous area. Distance between hind- ocelli almost equal to their shortest distance to compound eyes. Length of petiole 1.4  × length of flagellomere II. </p>
            <p> Male: Body length 23.0-26.6 mm. Free clypeal margin broadly emarginated, with a broad triangular median lobe. Clypeus glabrous directly above margin. Distance between hind- ocelli 1.1  × their shortest distance to compound eyes. Length of petiole 1.5  × length of flagellomere II. Metasomal terga V and VI with few golden bristles. Metasomal sterna  II–VIII with increasing number of erect golden setae laterally. Metasomal sternum VIII with two markedly raised longitudinal carinae forming a channel-  like structure, and with distinct notch at apical margin. Lateral margin of metasomal sternum VIII straight. </p>
            <p>Notes on type material.</p>
            <p> The types of  Sphex vestitus and its synonyms were not examined, because the character combination in the original description (black body, uniformly golden pubescence on clypeus and mesosoma, hyaline wing membrane) is sufficient to unambiguously identify this species. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D0D46908CBC7B13891DE9B8D2826BE34	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Pensoft via Plazi	Doerfel, Thorleif H.;Ohl, Michael	Doerfel, Thorleif H., Ohl, Michael (2015): A revision of the Australian digger wasps in the genus Sphex (Hymenoptera, Sphecidae). ZooKeys 521: 1-104, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.521.5995
