Review of Palpostilpnus Aubert (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Phygadeuontinae), with the description of ten new species
Author
Reshchikov, Alexey
Author
Santos, Bernardo F.
Author
Liu, Jing-Xian
Author
Barthélémy, Christophe
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2019
2019-12-03
582
1
63
journal article
24721
10.5852/ejt.2019.582
6c09e75c-a60b-44e7-8492-0cc892b84d23
3564360
6DF295A1-1E15-454A-B122-AE4AB4553D17
Palpostilpnus
Aubert, 1961
Palpostilpnus
Aubert, 1961: 56–58
(
type
species:
Townostilpnus
(
Palpostilpnus
)
palpator
Aubert, 1961
; designated in
Townes 1970
).
Expanded diagnosis
Head short and depressed; gena narrow, in frontal view not bulging behind eyes. Mandible small, subbasally swollen, with basal, transverse groove. Malar sulcus indistinct. Maxillary palp reaching base of hind coxa or almost so. Antenna slightly shorter to distinctly longer than body, strongly enlarged and somewhat flattened at midlength, ventral face distinctly flattened, lighter in colour. Occipital carina reaching base of mandible. Mesosoma stout, short to moderately long, but always somewhat obliquely sloped. Sternaulus shallow, complete or distinct only on anterior 0.5. Episternal scrobe deep or shallow. Hind tibia gradually and distinctly enlarged towards apex. Hind tarsal claws very small. Areola fused with petiolar area; median longitudinal carinae, when present, parallel. Forewing crossvein 2m-cu inclivous, with one bulla. T1 1.5–2.5 times as long as apically broad, without median dorsal carina. Ovipositor very slender, needle-like, as long as 0.20–3.50 of hind basitarsus.
Remarks
The most readily recognizable diagnostic feature of
Palpostilpnus
is the very long maxillary palp, reaching the base of the hind coxa. Although very characteristic, this trait is not unique of
Palpostilpnus
: most of the genera placed in Townes’ subtribe
Chiroticina
show somewhat elongated palpi.
Palpostilpnus
can be readily differentiated from these taxa by having the mandible small and slender, with a basal transverse groove, and a very slender, needle-like ovipositor. Since
P. rufinator
(
Aubert, 1961
)
stat. rev.
also shows all these character states, and bears much more morphological and biogeographical affinities with the remaining species of
Palpostilpnus
than with
Townostilpnus chagrinator
Aubert, 1961
(
Aubert
1961
,
1980
;
Di Giovanni & Scaramozzino
2019
), we hereby transfer it back to
Palpostilpnus
.
The characteristic body shape is another diagnostic feature of
Palpostilpnus
, with the head being short and depressed, and the mesosoma stout and obliquely sloped. The PCA derived from geometric morphometric data (
Fig. 4B
) clearly shows that the shape of the mesosoma in species of this genus is fairly distinct from all other analyzed species. The results also support the division of the species recognized as
Palpostilpnus
into two reasonably clear species groups. Both show the distinctive features of the genus such as the long palp, the needle-like ovipositor and the obliquely sloped mesosoma. However, one group shows a somewhat elongated (more than 1.4 times as long as its height) and strongly slanted mesosoma (e.g.,
P. ranui
sp. nov.
), while in the other group the mesosoma is very short, stout (1.25–1.4 times as long as its height) and only slightly obliquely slanted (e.g.,
P. singaporensis
sp. nov.
). While it is unclear whether these two groups represent reciprocally monophyletic units, we suggest that they are informally designated as two species groups: (1) the
palpator
group for the “stout” species, including
P. angkor
sp. nov.
,
P. brevis
,
P. maculatus
,
P. palpator
(
Aubert, 1961
)
,
P. papuator
,
P. rufinator
stat. rev.
,
P. singaporensis
sp. nov.
and
P. striator
; (2) the
hainanensis
group for the “elongated” species, including
P. aki
sp. nov.
,
P. angka
sp. nov.
,
P. hainanensis
sp. nov.
,
P
.
mangrovi
sp. nov.
,
P. pterodactylus
sp. nov.
,
P. ranui
sp. nov.
,
P. rotundatus
,
P. tamasek
sp. nov.
and
P. trifolium
sp. nov.
We have also encountered specimens that show a similar habitus to the species of
Palpostilpnus
recognized herein, with a depressed head and a short, stout, obliquely sloped mesosoma. However, these species lack the long palpi observed in the species of this genus. Hence, we prefer to wait for a comprehensive phylogenetic assessment of the species of
Palpostilpnus
and similar taxa before deciding upon the placement of these species.
Biology
Unknown.
Distribution
Oriental and Australasian. Known species are recorded from
Brunei
,
China
(
Hainan
,
Hong Kong
, Jiangxi, Yunnan),
Indonesia
(
Sulawesi
),
Malaysia
(
Sarawak
),
Philippines
,
Singapore
and
Thailand
in the Oriental region and
Papua New Guinea
in the Australasian region.
The
hainanensis
group