Status of Batakomacrus Kolarov (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae: Orthocentrinae), with new generic combinations and description of a new species
Author
Broad, Gavin R.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2394
51
68
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.193913
5522f462-6fe6-4ac9-84d6-04b868d26b95
1175-5326
193913
Batakomacrus caudatus
(Holmgren, 1858)
(Figs 8–12, 17, 24)
Orthocentrus caudatus
Holmgren, 1858
:
holotype
Ƥ (NHRS) examined
Orthocentrus (Stenomacrus) caudatus
:
Thomson, 1897
Stenomacrus caudatus
:
Aubert, 1981
Batakomacrus crassicaudatus
Kolarov, 1986
syn. nov.
Stenomacrus caudatus
:
Yu & Horstmann, 1997
FIGURE 5.
Head,
Orthocentrus fulvipes
Gravenhorst, 1829
, female, Sweden, Höör district.
FIGURE 6.
Head,
Stenomacrus
sp. female, England, Awbridge.
FIGURE 7.
Head,
Picrostigeus obscurus
Horstmann, 1994
, male, England, Spratton.
FIGURE 8.
Head,
Batakomacrus caudatus
(Holmgren, 1858)
, female, England, Monks Wood.
Comments.
Similar to
B. flaviceps
and
B. noyesi
, differing principally in the characters in the key. Morphology as in the generic diagnosis and description of
B. noyesi
(below), differences noted here. In shape and structure most similar to
B. noyesi
. First flagellomere of female slenderer than that of
B. flaviceps
(3.0–3.3 x as long as apically wide, n=4). Second metasomal tergite shiny, sculpture faint coriaceous, or occasionally distinctly pustulate; basal thyridiae inconspicuous, narrow, 2nd thyridiae faint, not raised (fig. 24); 3rd tergite onwards with pronounced, rectangular posterior emargination. Ovipositor sheaths with apical section relatively longer than in
B. noyesi
, setae scattered on basal half, basal stalk not visible when ovipositor at rest. Basically dark brown with reddish legs but with dull orange markings on the clypeus (or entire clypeus orange), malar space, upper edge of face, upper hind corner of pronotum and sometimes lower edge of prepectus and pronotum. The hind coxa varies from orange, slightly darker than rest of leg, to dark brown. Apical half of 1st to 3rd metasomal tergites vary from orangey-brown to dark brown. Antennae orange to midbrown, darkened apically; maxillary and labial palps off-white.
FIGURE 9.
Metasoma,
Batakomacrus caudatus
, dorsal view, female, England, Monks Wood.
FIGURE 10.
The same, lateral view.
FIGURE 11.
The same, ovipositor sheaths.
FIGURE 12.
Metasoma,
B. caudatus
, ovipositor hinged outwards, England, Awbridge.
FIGURE 13.
Metasoma,
Stenomacrus
sp. female, England, Awbridge.
FIGURE 14.
Metasoma,
Picrostigeus recticauda
(Thomson, 1897)
, female, England, Monks Wood.
Male similar to
Picrostigeus
males but parameres not protruding to apex of metasoma; malar sulcus narrowly impressed (narrow but coriaceous groove present in
Picrostigeus
, and in this genus the parameres are large and often square-ended). Basal tergites more heavily sculptured than female, 2nd tergite with shallow diagonal grooves cutting off the anterolateral corners. Brown/black, except cream-coloured palps, entirely yellow face, reddish legs, with hind coxa brown and fore and mid coxae, trochanters, and trochantelli, creamcoloured.
Material examined.
Material in
BMNH
(numbers of specimens in brackets) from
England
(45),
Wales
(1),
Sweden
(37),
Finland
(1),
Croatia
(1),
Macedonia
(2) and possibly
Canada
(see below). Material in
NMS
from
England
(2) and
Scotland
(57). Material in
ZSMC
from
Bulgaria
(
6 specimens
,
type
material of
Batakomacrus crassicaudatus
). Listed as occurring in the following countries in
Yu
et al.
(2005)
, but it is not known whether this species has been confused with
B. noyesi
:
Azerbaijan
,
Bulgaria
,
Finland
,
Germany
,
Hungary
,
Lithuania
,
Norway
,
Poland
,
Portugal
(Madeira),
Russia
,
Sweden
and
UK
. Collection dates for British and Swedish specimens span May to September, as follows: May 3.8%, June 7.6%, July 10.1%, August 57.0%, September 21.5%.
FIGURE 15.
Male parameres,
P. recticauda
, England, Monks Wood.
FIGURE 16.
Male parameres,
P. obscurus
, England, Spratton.
FIGURE 17.
Male parameres,
Batakomacrus caudatus
, Sweden, Kranke sjö.
FIGURE 18.
Head,
Stenomacrus laricis
(Haliday, 1838)
, male, England, Tuddenham.
One female specimen from
Canada
was found in
BMNH
(Quebec, Gatineau County, Lake Duncan, VII-
VIII.1979
, A.C. Pont) and is only provisionally identified as
B. caudatus
. This Canadian specimen has a rather more pustulate sculpture to the second tergite than the majority of
B. caudatus
, and this tergite is square rather than transverse. It also has the metasoma more extended than any European specimens seen but this may be artefactual, resulting from the way it died. Whether these differences would stand up in a longer series remains to be tested.