ENCYRTIDAE OF COSTA RICA (HYMENOPTERA: CHALCIDOIDEA), 4 Subfamily Encyrtinae: tribes Arrhenophagini, Habrolepidini, Cerapterocerini, Cheiloneurini, Trechnitini, Cercobelini, Polaszekiini, Protyndarichoidini, Gahaniellini and Syrphophagini (part), mainly primary parasitoids and hyperparasitoids of Coccoidea and Psylloidea (Hemiptera)
Author
Noyes, John Stuart
text
Taxonomic Monographs on Neotropical Hymenoptera
2023
Oxford, England
2023-06-30
2
11
5228
5239
http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8074943
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.8074943
2754-9844
8074943
BCAD06E8-0AFE-46ED-B7FA-930983CD44C4
Adelencyrtus
bifasciatus (Ishii)
(
Figs 33-40
; Hab. E 6)
Anabrolepis bifasciata
Ishii, 1923:106-107
.
Lectotype
E, designated by
Japoshvili et al., 2016:350
,
Japan
, NIAES, not examined.
Adelencyrtus bifasciatus
(Ishii)
;
Compere & Annecke, 1961:57
DIAGNOSIS.
Female
(length about
1.1-1.5mm
): head with frontovertex metallic green to blue-green; purple above scrobes and between eye and scrobe; a few setae along inner eye margin, these continuing below eye on to gena as a conspicuous line; maxillary palpus white; antenna mainly dark brown, but with F5 pale orange, mixed brown proximally and F6 pale yellow; thorax dark brown to black with a metallic lustre; mesoscutum mostly with a purple and blue-green sheen, axilla and dorsal part of scutellum similar to mesoscutum, but much less shiny, side and apex of scutellum bright, metallic blue-green; all coxae dark brown; fore femur dark brown with extreme apices very pale orange, tibia dark brown with apical one-third pale orange; mid femur white in proximal half, a broad, subapical brown band, apex very pale orange, tibia very pale orange with a subbasal, brown band, spur and tarsus very pale orange, almost white; hind femur dark brown with extreme base pale orange, tibia dark brown with apical 0.3X white; fore wing (
Fig. 38
) hyaline proximad of parastigma, otherwise mostly infuscate, but with a pair of opposite, subrectangular, marginal, hyaline spots distad of apex of venation and more or less hyaline apically; gaster dorsally with a coppery purple sheen mixed slightly brassy and green, Gt1 with a proximal metallic purple band then a dark metallic blue and blue-green band and distally coppery purple; gonostylus dark brown; head (
Fig. 33
) about 4.5-5.4X as wide as frontovertex, which is narrowest a little behind posterior ocelli and immediately above scrobes; ocelli forming an angle of about 55-75°; frontovertex with relatively deep, punctate-reticulate sculpture; antenna as in
Figs 34, 35
; scape hardly broadened and flattened, about 4.1-4.3X as long as broad; F1 and F2 relatively small, anelliform, subequal, F3-F4 a little larger, transverse or quadrate, F5-F6 quadrate or longer than broad, smaller specimens with F3-F4 transverse; linear sensilla present only on F3-F6; clava in smaller specimens a little longer than funicle, but in larger specimens about as long as F2-F6 combined; eye clothed with moderately conspicuous setae, each of which is very nearly as long as diameter of facet; mandible with 4 teeth, two upper teeth very short sometimes forming a truncate margin; thorax (
Fig. 37
) with polygonally reticulate to imbricate-reticulate sculpture on mesoscutum; scutellum dorsally with fine, more or less regular punctate-reticulate sculpture that is clearly deeper than that on mesoscutum, side and apex completely smooth and shiny; scutellum with 3 or 4 smaller setae and 4 larger setae, including a pair of longer, slender, subapical setae; fore wing with venation and setation as in
Figs 38, 39
; gaster with hypopygium as in
Fig. 36
; ovipositor (
Fig. 40
) slightly exserted, the exserted part about 0.8X length of mid tibial spur or about 0.3X mid tibia.
Male
(length about 0.9-1.0mm): similar to female but for wider frontovertex, hyaline fore wing and structure of antenna and genitalia; head about 2X as wide as frontovertex, antenna with 2 anelliform funicle segments and a long clava that is about 7-8X as long as broad and about as long as head width; fore wing with linea calva interrupted by 2 or 3 setae; genitalia with aedeagus slender, digiti well developed, each about 2X as long as broad with a single apical hook.
DISTRIBUTION.
USA
(
Hawaii
),
Bangladesh
,
India
,
China
,
Taiwan
,
Japan
(see
Noyes 2019
). Also recorded below from
Costa Rica
(
new record
).
HOSTS. Recorded from
Aonidiella aurantii
(Maskell)
,
Aonidiella orientalis
(Newstead)
,
Gannaspis glomerata
(Green)
,
Hemiberlesia lataniae
(Signoret)
,
Lepidosaphes
Shimer
,
Lindingaspis setiger
(Maskell)
,
Pinnaspis
Cockerell
,
Pseudaonidia duplex
(Cockerell)
and
Pseudaonidia trilobitiformis
(Green)
(see
Noyes, 2019
). Also, apparently insectary reared on
Ceroplastes rubens
Maskell
(
Hemiptera
:
Coccidae
) (see below) which suggests that the record of this species being reared once from the same host by
Yasumatsu & Tachikawa (1949)
may be correct, albeit unusual. A male of this species has also been reported emerging from
Ceroplastes japonicus
Green (
Xu & Huang, 2004
)
.
MATERIAL EXAMINED.
COSTA RICA
, 3E,
Alajuela
,
RF
Arenal, Stor Colada,
LN
269900
456750, 600m
,
26.x-22.xi.1999
,
ii.2000
and v-vi.2000 (G. Carballo); 1E Alajuela, PN Arenal, Sendero Ceibo,
10°27’N
84°44’W
,
620m
,
22- 23.ii.2016
(J.S. Noyes).
CHINA
, 1E,
Hainan
, Hengsheng Co., ex
Pseudaonidia
sp.
on
Citrus
sp.
, 92-620- 21,
17.vi.1992
(H.W. Browning).
JAPAN
, 4G,
Nagasaki
, ex
Ceroplastes rubens
,
17.iii.1916
(C.P. Clausen) [
USA
:
California
, State Insectary 1224], “G
Adelencyrtus bifasciatus
det. Compere”. Material in
MZUCR
and
NHMUK
.
COMMENTS. I have not been able to examine
type
material of this species, but the specimens agree well with the original description by
Ishii (1923)
and also material determined as this species from
China
. Initially I thought that the material from
Costa Rica
belonged to a separate species characterised by relatively longer funicle segments. However, the antenna of a smaller specimen collected in the same locality matches the description and the Chinese specimen very well. Given this range of variation it seems possible that
Adelencyrtus biannulatus
Zhang and Shi (2010)
, described from
China
, may be merely larger specimens of
bifasciatus
and thus the two may be synonymous.