Center for Systematic Entomology, Gainesville, Florida

 

Document Type

Article

Date of this Version

2025

Citation

Insecta Mundi (2025) 1113

March 28, 2025

ZooBank registration: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:07019980-098D-4422-901C-DE364B5C48F2

Comments

Copyright 2025, the author. Open access

License: CC BY-NC 3.0

Abstract

Several Nearctic spider wasp genera and subgenera in the subfamily Pompilinae (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae) in the arid western United States and northern Mexico are characteristically blue, violet, or purple in color: Aporus Spinola; Plectraporus Bradley; Chelaporus Bradley; Psorthaspis Banks; Chalcochares Banks; Evagetes Lepeletier; and Allochares Banks. Other genera and subgenera of Pompilinae in western United States and northern Mexico have one or more bluish or violaceous species: Episyron Schiødte; Notiochares Banks; Pompilinus Ashmead; Anoplius Dufour; Hesperopompilus Evans; Ammosphex Wilcke; and Arachnospila Kincaid. In California, 27/79 (34.2%) species of Pompilinae are blue, violet, or purple. The number of blue, violet, or purple Nearctic species in the subfamily Pepsinae in the western United States and northern Mexico is significantly fewer than in the subfamily Pompilinae. Only Pepsis Fabricius (Pepsini) and Auplopus Spinola and Ageniella Banks (Ageniellini) have bluish, bluish-green, greenish, or violaceous species. Black spider wasps predominate in the moist, densely vegetated, often forested, and mountainous areas of the eastern United States and Canada. Only 6/81 (7.4%) species of Pompilinae in the eastern United States and Canada are blue, violet, or purple. Four of the species are in the genus Evagetes.

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