Istiochrysis gen. nov., a new chrysidid genus from Oriental China (Hymenoptera, Chrysididae)
Author
Rosa, Paolo
Author
Feng, Jun
Author
Xu, Zai-Fu
text
Zootaxa
2016
4111
5
591
597
journal article
39042
10.11646/zootaxa.4111.5.5
c748b3ea-936c-4b08-b383-8562550266a5
1175-5326
263662
C4F0DD2F-4230-4E05-8236-CFE78DDF26EE
Istiochrysis
Rosa & Xu
,
gen. nov.
(
Figs 1A–1
F, 2A–2D, 3A–3D, 4A–4F)
Type
species:
Istiochrysis ziliolii
Rosa, Feng & Xu
,
sp. nov.
Diagnosis.
Istiochrysis
Rosa & Xu
,
gen. nov.
is similar to the Nearctic and Neotropical genus
Caenochrysis
Kimsey & Bohart, 1981
, and the Palaearctic and Oriental genera
Chrysidea
Bischoff, 1913
and
Trichrysis
Lichtenstein
, 1876
. However, this new genus can be separated from
Caenochrysis
,
Chrysidea
and
Trichrysis
by male genitalia with extended longitudinal crest on aedeagus (
Figs 1A–1
C); apex of aedeagus enlarged and folded laterally (
Figs 1A, 1
B) (not enlarged in the other genera and tapering in
Caenochrysis
); facial fovea between antennal socket and lower margin of eye hardly visible and shallowly depressed and finely punctate (
Figs 2A, 2
B) (usually deeply depressed in
Caenochrysis
); pronotum without sublateral carina (
Fig. 3A
) (usually with sublateral carina in
Trichrysis
); fore wing discoidal cell with thin and completely sclerotised outer vein (faint in
Chrysidea
); apex of T3 without teeth (laterally dentate and medially undulate in
Chrysidea
, tridentate in
Trichrysis
); S2 with large, subrectangular, black spots extending to lateral margins (
Fig. 3
B), somehow similar to those in the genus
Praestochrysis
Linsenmaier, 1968
(small, suboval, not extending to lateral margins in
Caenochrysis
; suboval and separated in
Chrysidea
(
Fig. 3
D), subtriangular and medially fused or nearly so in
Trichrysis
(
Fig. 3
C)) (
Bohart & Kimsey 1982
;
Linsenmaier 1984
; Rosa & Xu 2015;
Rosa
et al.
2016a
) (
Fig. 2
D).
Description.
Male
. Head broader than high. Scapal basin with shallow depression on each side between antennal socket and lower margin of eye; depression visible only under certain angle (
Figs 2A, 2
B); bottom of depression filled with micro-punctures and densely setose. Scapal basin topped by TFC (
Figs 2A
,
4
B); scapal basin with white setae, especially along lateral sides (
Fig. 2A
). F1 l/w>3; MS=1 MOD. Genal carina developed from gena to mandible. Subgenal area well defined. Median ocellus not lidded. Vertex without posterior depression beneath posterior ocellus. Mandible unidentate. Pronotum nearly as long as mesoscutellum with deep lateral depression, without sublateral carina. Mesopleuron with large episternal sulcus and scrobal sulcus (
Fig. 4
D); area between episternal sulcus and scrobal sulcus large and subtriangular. Metanotum with raised median area. Fore wing with thin but completely sclerotized outer veins of discoidal cell (
Fig. 3A
). T2 and T3 with shallow median longitudinal carinae (
Fig. 4
E). Apex of T3 without teeth, but with shallow concavity, thus appearing bilobate (
Fig. 4
F); pit row well developed with enlarged and partly fused pits (
Fig. 4
F). Black spots on S2 elongate, fused along lateral margins (
Fig. 3
B) and distinctly separated mesally. Male genitalia with gonostyle of gonocoxa elongate and slender, aedeagus with enlarge longitudinal crest, well visible in lateral view (
Fig. 1
C).
Female
. Unknown.
Biology.
Unknown.
Distribution.
China
(Yunnan).
Etymology.
From Greek noun
istion
(= sail), referring to the unique subsidiary structure longitudinally placed on aedeagus, looking like a sail in lateral view. The gender is feminine.