Etymology
The name comes from Latin 'carinata', meaning 'keeled', referring to the keeled hind trochanter.Description
Like other species in its genus, ''S. (A.) carinata'' is small, slender, and wasp-like. In male specimens, body length is 6.8 to 8.0 millimeters and wing length is 5.3 to 6.5 millimeters. The face is black, strongly concave dorsally with a weakly developed frontal prominence. The gena is shiny black; frons and vertex dull black, lunula shiny brown; occiput dull black; antenna brown, basal flagellomere darker dorsally; thorax black; pro- and mesoleg yellow,Related Species
''S. (A.) carinata'' is similar to '' S. (A.) index'', though they differ by the two most lateral of the enlarged setae on the left side of male sternite IV (twice as long as the longest medial setae in ''S. (A.) index'', five times as long in ''S. (A.) carinata''), the male superior lobe (in ''S. (A.) index'' bearing an inconspicuous lobe baso-dorsally as well as a large flip-like lobe ventrally, partly covering a recurrent finger-like lobe, and in ''S. (A.) carinata'' bearing a pointed finger-like lobe as well as a small flip-like lobe in a more dorsal position, far from the ventral straight finger-like lobe). Both these species are similar to '' S. (A.) malaisei'', though ''S. (A.) malaisei'' lacks the infuscated wing pattern. Unlike other similar species, ''S. (A.) carinata'' and ''S. (A.) malaisei'' both possess a transverse ventral carina on the metatrochanter as well as having the two lateral strongest setae on the left side of male sternite IV longer than the other more medial setae. The male genitalia are similar, but differ in the details of the superior lobe: in ''S. (A.) carinata'' there is a curved sharp finger-like lobe basodorsally (in ''S. (A.) index'' and ''S. (A.) malaisei'' there's a rounded low lobe) and a large flip-like lobe in ventral position on the right side (the homologic lobe is smaller and more dorsal in the other two species). ''S. (A.) carinata'' resembles '' S. (A.) gigas'', '' S. (A.) bispinosa'', and '' S. (A.) hansoni'' in having long subapical, antero-dorsal setae on the metafemur and by having its sternite VI with a finger-like process, covered with long pile. However, ''S. (A.) bispinosa'' differs by having 7 long, strong setae on the left side of male sternite IV instead of just two, and by having 2–3 long subapical anterolateral setae on metafemur instead of only one. ''S. hansoni'' differs by having three setae on sternite IV instead of just two, and by having nearly symmetrical surstyli. Within the species which have male sternite IV asymmetrical and armed with spinose setae, and which have male sternite VI with one or two processes, ''S. (A.) carinata'' belongs to a group which has the right side surstylus broader than the left side one, together with '' S. (A.) crassispina'', ''S. (A.) gigas'', ''S. (A.) index'', ''S. (A.) malaisei'', and '' S. (A.) trispina''.References
Brachyopini Insects described in 2015 Diptera of Asia {{Brachyopini-stub