Psomizopelma macropterum n. sp.
Figs 41–53
Type material. Holotype ♀ (CNC). COSTA RICA: Gste. [Guanacaste] Pr. | 9kmS Santa Cecilia | Estacion Pitilla | 700m, 1989 / HOLOTYPE ♀ | Psomizopelma | macropterum | Gibson. Holotype point-mounted; entire; uncontorted.
Paratypes. Belize. C.A. [ Central America ?] , Toledo Dist., Blue Creek, 89°3'W 16°12'N, 18.I.1982, A.T. Finnamore, sweep (1♀ CNC) . Bolivia. Santa Cruz, 5 km SSE Buena Vista, 17°29.925'S 63°39.128'W, 440 m, 24- 31.XII.2003, S.&J. Peck, forest, FIT (1♀ CNC, CNC Photo 2017-14) . Brazil. Amazonas, Estirar do Equador, Rio Javari, IX.1979, M. Alvarenga (1♀ CNC) . Espirito Santo, Conceição da Barra, FLONA Rio Preto, 39°51'W 18°21'S , 16.IV-1.V.2013, M.T. Tavares & eq. col., MT 1 (1♀ UFES n° 139750), MT 4 (1♀ UFES n° 139984). Conceição da Barra, Res. Biol, Córrego Grande, 18°14'S 39°49'W , 17-30.IV.2013, M.T. Tavares & eq. col., MT (1♀ UFES n°142494, CNC Photo 2017-13). Pinheiros, Res. Biol, Córrego do Veado, 18°21'S 40°10'W , 27.XI- 6.XII.2011, M.T. Tavares & eq. col., MT 5 (1♀ UFES n°99023). Mato Grosso, Vila Vera, 12°46’S 55°30'W , 500 m, X.1973, M. Alvarenga (1♀ CNC). Colombia. Amazonas, PNN [ Parque Nacional Natural] Amacayacu, Matamata, 150 m, 27.III-3. IV.2 0 0 0, A. Parente, Mal #2 (1♀ CNC) . Costa Rica. Alajuela, 20 km S Upala, 11- 20.IV.1991, F.D. Parker (1♀ EMUS) . Heredia, La Selva Biol. Sta., 50 m, II.1991, J. Noyes (1♀ BMNH, NHMUK 010834345). Puerto Viejo, La Selva , II.1980, W.R. Mason, MT (1♀ CNC), 100 m, 21.I-3.II.1989, J. Noyes (1♀ BMNH, NHMUK 010834344). Limón, 16 km W Guápiles, 400 m, II.1989, P. Hanson (1♀ BMNH, NHMUK 010834347) . Puntarenas, Pen. [insula] Osa, Rancho Quemado, rivera rio Riyito, XI-XII.1990, Quiros & Hanson (1♀ BMNH, NHMUK 010834346) . Ecuador. Napo, Yasuni Nat. Pk. Biol. Sta., 0.6°S 76.39°W, 18-26.V.1996, P. Hibbs (1♀ CNC) . Pichincha, Tinalandia, 15 km SE Santo Domingo de los Colorados, 3.VII.1982, M. Wasbauer & J. Slansky, MT, SA-SP (1♀ CSCA). French Guiana. Emerald Jungle Village, junc. Rtes. N2 & D5 , 15-18.IV.1999, G.B. Edwards, secondary forest, flight trap (1♀ FSCA). Saül, 3°37'22.08"N 53°12'33.84"W , 20.X.2010 (1♀ CNC), 7.III.2011 (1♀ CNC), S.E.A.G. [Société entomologique Antilles-Guyane] via Y. Braet, FIT. Saül, 26.X.2010, S.E.A.G. (1♀ AICF). Saül, Point de vu du Belvédère, 14.III.2011, FIT, S.E.A.G. no. 837 (1♀ AICF). Saül, 06.VI– 11.XII.2012, S.E.A.G. no. 861, 862, 871 (5♀ AICF). Panama. Canal Zone, 16.I.1911, E.A. Schwarz (1♀ USNM) . Panama, 2 km S Cerro Jefe, 20.VI.1993, A. Gillogly, UV light (1♀ TAMU) . Trinidad. Curepe, CIBC lab. grounds, 13.VII-21.VIII.1974, F.D. Bennett (1♀ CNC); Sta. Margarita, Circular Rd., 15-27. IX.1 974, F.D. Bennett (1♀ CNC, CNC Photo 2017-15). Simla Res. Sta. , 2-15.VI.1984, G.E. Bohart (1♀ EMUS). St. George, St. Augustine, 16.VI.1976, wasteground (1♀ BMNH, NHMUK 010834348).
Etymology. Derived from the Greek words macro, “long” and pteron, “wing”, in reference to the females being fully winged.
Description. FEMALE (habitus: Figs 44, 45). Length about 3.0–4.0 mm. Head (Figs 44–47) usually mostly yellow to orangish except rim of torulus dark and lower parascrobal region between torulus and inner orbit at least slightly brownish and usually brown (Fig. 47), and sometimes scrobal depression, interantennal prominence and frontovertex also variably dark brown. Labiomaxillary complex yellowish. Antenna (Figs 41–45) with scape extensively yellow but brown basally and ventrally over compressed part to or almost to apical margin, and at least pedicel also similarly yellowish, but flagellum more variable in color pattern, rarely entirely dark except for slightly paler fl1 (Fig. 41), to entirely yellow except for clava (Fig. 42). Mesosoma (Figs 48, 49) mostly similarly coloured as head except pronotum dorsally often somewhat darker brown (Fig. 48) and often one or more of pronotal panel, propleuron, prosternum and prepectus paler to whitish-yellow, whereas mesopectus and acropleuron sometimes slightly darker, more brownish-orange (Fig. 49). Legs (Fig. 45) similarly coloured as mesosoma except middle leg with basal four tarsomeres paler, more whitish to yellow than orangish femur and tibia and orangish to brown apical tarsomere, and hind leg with coxa usually somewhat darker brownish, tibia with convex ventral part more orangish to brown than dorsally compressed paler, more yellowish part, and tarsus with basotarsomere more or less orangish, at least basally, and apical tarsomere variably dark brown but middle three tarsomeres similarly pale as dorsal margin of metatibia. Gaster (Fig. 53) mostly similarly coloured as mesosoma except Gt1–Gt5 variably extensively darker brown dorsally to dorsomedially, particularly along posterior margins (Gt1 usually paler basally and sometimes with paler band subapically), Gt1 except basolaterally and Gt2 laterally white, and all but apical two sternites white.
Head with face (Fig. 46) almost uniformly punctate-reticulate and completely setose except for scrobes or for Π-shaped bare region composed of scrobes and scrobal depression dorsally; eyes and at least frontovertex with dark hairlike setae, but interantennal prominence and at least ventral half of parascrobal region with shorter, lanceolate, white setae; scrobal depression comparatively deep ventrally and extending indistinctly to about one ocellar diameter from anterior ocellus, delimiting very slender (Figs 46, 47), carinately margined, sinuate parascrobal region lateral of torulus, with minimum width of parascrobal region between torulus and inner orbit conspicuously less than width of torulus and at most about 0.25× distance between toruli; malar space about 0.25× eye height; OOL: POL: LOL: MPOD = 14: 22: 14: 13; interorbital distance about 0.4× head width. Antenna (Figs 41–43) with scape about 3.6–4.3× as long as wide and compressed over most of length, widest basally and only slightly tapered apically; clava slightly longer than combined length of apical 5 funiculars to almost as long as apical 6 funiculars.
Macropterous (Figs 44, 45); fore wing (Fig. 52) more or less distinctly orangish-infuscate with orangish to brown hairlike setae, but somewhat more hyaline behind parastigma and about basal half of marginal vein and apically beyond level of stigmal vein. Mesonotum (Fig. 48) similarly punctate-reticulate as head, with variably extensive mixture of white and dark hairlike setae, the setae sometimes mostly white except dorsally along angulate part of mesoscutal medial lobe (Fig. 48: arrow), but often dark setae more extensive, including within concave medial part of mesoscutum, but at least scutellar-axillar complex with mostly dark setae; scutellum (Fig. 48) teardrop shaped, length about 1.6× width and subequal to width of scutellar-axillar complex. Prepectus bare (Fig. 49). Acropleuron (Figs 49, 50) similarly isodiametric meshlike reticulate anteriorly and posteriorly, but with much smaller, more punctate reticulations medially just beyond setation. Metapleuron and metasternum setose (Fig. 50). Front leg (Figs 44, 45) with femur comparatively slender, only slightly expanded subapically such that ventral margin almost straight and dorsal length about 4× maximum width; tibia similarly slender as femur, length about 6× greatest length. Hind leg (Fig. 45) with coxa similarly setose at least dorsally and ventrally, with outer surface uniformly though usually less conspicuously setose; femur almost uniformly slender; tibia conspicuously compressed with dorsal margin uniformly curved; basitarsomere subcylindrical. Propodeum with foramen archlike incurved to anteromedial margin (Fig. 51).
Metasoma with petiole an almost equilateral triangle (Fig. 51). Gaster (Fig. 53) dorsally shiny and at most inconspicuously meshlike coriaceous except syntergum more distinctly reticulate; setose laterally but mostly bare to inconspicuously setose dorsally, Gt1 and Gt2 bare, Gt3 and Gt4 with single row of setae, and apical three tergites increasingly more extensively setose.
MALE. Unknown.
Distribution. Neotropical: Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, French Guiana, Panama, Trinidad.
Remarks. Although the flagellum is described as varying from essentially entirely dark to entirely pale except for the clava, the variation is not continuous. All females from Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Panama have at most fl1–fl3 pale (Figs 41, 43, 44), whereas the females from French Guiana and all but one female from Trinidad have at least the basal six funiculars pale (Fig. 42). The female from the Simla Research Station differs from the other females in having fl1–fl4 pale and the apical four funiculars and clava dark. However, I could find no other differences that indicate more than one species may be represented by macropterous females. Males of P. macropterum likely closely resemble those of P. albiclava, as discussed under the latter species.