A Taxonomic Revision of Nearctic Conostigmus (Hymenoptera: Ceraphronoidea: Megaspilidae)
Author
Trietsch, Carolyn
Author
Mikó, István
Author
Ezray, Briana
Author
Deans, Andrew R.
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-06-15
4792
1
1
155
journal article
21681
10.11646/zootaxa.4792.1.1
dd8ef826-0c0f-4261-b127-1d1afa7f5601
1175-5326
3895976
326F6A15-216E-439A-AD59-3CDF7551D3F6
Conostigmus bacilliger
(
Kieffer, 1906
)
Species Comments and History.
Kieffer (1906)
described this species from material collected from San Mateo,
California
, with the female unknown. According to
Kieffer (1906)
, characteristics of this species include a black body with light brown legs, wings present and macropterous, notauli and median mesoscutal sulcus complete, and “1. Glied kaum so lang wie die zwei folgenden mitsammen” (pg. 258), which we interpret as the scape being barely as long as the pedicel and F1 together (the redescription provided in
Kieffer (1914)
specifies “Scapus kaum so lang wie die 2 folgenden Glieder zusammen”, pg. 220). The key in
Kieffer (1906)
distinguishes this species from others by the “2. Fühlerglied nicht halb so lang wie das 3.” (pg. 258) and the “analsegment mit zwei langen stäbehenartigen Auhängseln” (pg. 258), which we interpret as the harpe protruding from the metasoma. This is hardly a speciesspecific characteristic, though it may hint that this species has long harpe, like
C. longiharpes
,
C. abdominalis
or
C. pulchellus
.
Kieffer (1914)
repeats much of the original description, though the key adds that this species has “Scheitel ohne Mittellängefurche” (pg. 170), as opposed to “Scheitel mit einer Mittellängefurche hinter den ocellen” (pg. 170), which we interpret as the species lacking a preoccipital furrow. This would distinguish it from
C. longiharpes
,
C. abdominalis
and
C. pulchellus
, which all have a preoccipital furrow.
The location of Kieffer’s
type
material is unknown, and the characters given in the original description could apply to several different species of
Conostigmus
. We consider
Conostigmus bacilliger
as a
species inquirenda
.