Revision of the Western Palearctic Meteorini (Hymenoptera, Braconidae), with a molecular characterization of hidden Fennoscandian species diversity 3084
Author
Stigenberg, Julia
Author
Ronquist, Fredrik
text
Zootaxa
2011
2011-10-28
3084
1
1
95
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.3084.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3084.1.1
11755334
5244448
Meteorus pulchricornis
(Wesmael)
Fig. 23
,
28
,
50
,
72
,
118
Perilitus pulshricornis
Wesmael, 1835:42
.
Lectotype
♀
,
Belgium
:
Brussels
, coll.
Wesmael
(IRSBN,
Brussels
).
Meteorus striatus
Thomson, 1885:2157
.
Lectotype
♀
,
Sweden
:
Skåne
,
Pålsjö
(MZLU, Lund) synonymized by
Huddleston, 1980:45
—examined.
Meteorus thomsoni
Marshall, 1899: 301
.
Meteorus japonicus
Ashmead, 1906:190
.
Lectotype
♀
,
Japan
:
Gifu
,
viii.1902
(USNM, Washington), synonymized by Marsh (1979).
Meteorus nipponensis
Viereck, 1912:624
.
Holotype
♀
,
Japan
(USNM, Washington) synonymized by
Watanabe
, 1939
Meteorus macedonicus
Fischer, 1957a:104
.
Holotype
♀
,
Yugoslavia
:
Macedonia
, treskaslucht (NHM, Vienna), synonymized by
Huddleston, 1980:45
Meteorus graeffei
Fischer, 1957a:107
.
Holotype
♀
,
Italy
:’Triest’ (NHM, Vienna), synonymized with
macedonicus
by
Fischer, 1970b:287
.
Meteorus tuberculifer
Fischer, 1957a:108
.
Holotype
♀
,
Italy
:’Trieste Küstenland, coll Graeffe (NHM, Vienna), synonymized by
Huddleston, 1980:45
.
Meteorus baicalensis
Telenga, 1950
, synonymized by
Belokobylskij 2000:209
.
Diagnosis
: The dense, short and erect setae on the clypeus along with the indications of dorsope on the petiolar tergum are good characters for distinguishing
M. pulchricornis
.
It is closest to, and easily confused with
M. abscissus
.
M. abscissus
has the ventral sides of the petiolar tergum not closed, contrary to
M. pulchricornis
which have the ventral sides of the petiolar tergum closed. The dorsal pits on the petiolar tergum of
M. abscissus
are sometimes small and complicates the identification with
M. pulchrichornis
that has no true dorsal pits.
Studied material
: ~
80 specimens
.
Description
: Size about
5mm
. Antennae with 29–33 articles, long, slender; all articles distinctly longer than broad. Ocelli large, OOL=1.5. Eyes large, protuberant, moderately convergent. Malar space slightly shorter than basal breadth of mandible. Face not strongly protuberant but slightly raised medially. Clypeus strongly protuberant, evenly convex with a dense pile of erect setae. Mandibles small and strongly twisted. Precoxal sulcus reticulaterugose with emphasis on reticulate. Propodeum without distinct carinae, strongly reticulate-rugose. Petiolar tergum longitudinally striate, usually with no dorsal pits but with indications of pits. Ovipositor 1.5–2.0 times length of petiolar tergum. Legs long, slender; hind coxa generally completely rugose, this sculpture always fine, never reticulate though sometimes transverse. Tarsal claws with a strong basal lobe. Colour mostly yellow. Completely pale specimens sometimes occur. Male same as female except antennae slightly longer; face occasionally strongly raised medially; propodeum with greater variation in sculpture, smaller, and more depressed.
Distribution
: Palearctic, Oceanic and Nearctic. Country records:
Armenia
;
Austria
; Azerbaijan;
Belarus
;
Belgium
;
Bulgaria
;
Chile
;
China
;
Croatia
;
Cyprus
;
Czechoslovakia
;
Finland
;
France
; Georgia;
Germany
;
Greece
;
Hungary
;
India
;
Iran
;
Ireland
;
Israel
;
Italy
;
Japan
;
Korea
;
Lithuania
; Macedonia;
Moldova
;
Morocco
;
Netherlands
; New
Zeeland
;
Norway
;
Poland
;
Portugal
;
Romania
;
Russia
;
Slovenia
;
Spain
;
Sweden
;
Switzerland
;
Turkey
;
Ukraine
;
United Kingdom
;
USA
;
Yugoslavia
.
Biology
: We found
two specimens
within the SMTP. They were caught in September, one in a mixed forest and the other in a heather heath.
M. pulchricornis
is primarily a parasitoid of
Noctuidae
, although there are records from 17 other lepidopteran families (
Yu et al. 2005
). Amongst the studied
Meteorus
material at
Hokkaido
University in
Japan
, we found specimens that was reared from
Evergestis forficalis
,
Leucania separate, Zanclognatha
fractalis
, and
Ilema sorocula
. The biology and ecology of this species have been studied extensively (Askari et al. 1977, 1978,
Fuester et al. 1993
,
Berry et al. 2004
, Chau et al. 2009).