Chrysis aswathiae ROSA, 2021

Rosa, Paolo & K, Atoposega, 2024, Three chrysidid genera newly recorded for India, with description of new species (Hymenoptera, Chrysididae), Linzer biologische Beiträge 56 (1), pp. 253-276 : 262

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14681819

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14681869

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/133587CD-FF9B-7372-FF6E-4DE9FCB7FE52

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chrysis aswathiae ROSA, 2021
status

 

Chrysis aswathiae ROSA, 2021 ( Figs 7 View Fig A-7D, 8A-8D)

M a t e r i a l e x a m i n e d: Pondicherry: 4♁♁, Karikal [= Karaikal], South India, [without further information] ( NHMW) ; 1♁: Keraikkal [= Karaikal], II.1962 leg. P. Susai Nathan (Naturalis) ; 1♀, same locality and collector, II.1963 ( RMNH) ; 1♀, Tanjore province [= Thanjavur, currently Tamil Nadu], Nedungadu , 28.II.1938, P.S. Nathan ( RMNH) .

I n d i a n r e c o r d s: Pondicherry *, Tamil Nadu ( ROSA et al. 2021a).

D i s t r i b u t i o n: India ( ROSA et al. 2021a).

R e m a r k s. Chrysis aswathiae was described based on a single male from Tamil Nadu. After that, additional five specimens were found from Pondicherry at RMNH and NHMW, all conform to the original description. At Naturalis two undescribed females were observed, one collected in the same locality where the male of Chrysis aswathiae was found, Karaikal in Pondicherry, and the second one from Tamil Nadu. These females significantly differ from the male of C. aswathiae by larger size and shape of the apical margin of the last tergum with two lateral teeth and a convexity on lateral margin. However, they both belong to the elegans- group, they share the shape of the head and body sculpture with dense, small and subcontiguous punctures. Sex associations in Chrysididae may be often challenging, but in this case, based on experience, the collecting localities and the fact that there are only two Oriental species known in the elegans group, C. aswathiae and C. lapislazulina in China, known on the female sex only, I consider these two unidentified specimens as the undescribed female of C. aswathiae and the observed differences as sexual dimorphic characters. However, a confirmation based on specimens found in copula or based on molecular analyses is needed. A third Oriental species included in the elegans group by Kimsey & Bohart (1991), Chrysis dissimilis DAHLBOM, 1854 , was transferred to the scutellaris species-group by ROSA (2023b).

NHMW

Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien

RMNH

National Museum of Natural History, Naturalis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Masaridae

Genus

Chrysis

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