Revision of the genus Jethsura Cameron, 1902 (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae: Ichneumoninae: Phaeogenini)
Author
Claridge, Brandon
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-11-23
5071
2
223
241
journal article
3291
10.11646/zootaxa.5071.2.3
ca6226eb-f64a-44d1-9f7b-fd0dd870cc7a
1175-5326
5723563
31D8526A-85B8-4483-B414-EBF3ADA86399
Jethsura
Cameron, 1902
Jethsura
Cameron, 1902: 373
.
Type
species:
Jethsura ferruginea
Cameron. Monotypic
and original designation.
Generic diagnosis
.
Jethsura
is distinguished by the combination of the following characters: 1) mandible slightly narrowed to moderately wide and nearly unidentate, with the ventral tooth greatly reduced and represented only by a small notch; 2) dorsal face of propodeum usually with carinae obsolete (moderately to weakly-developed in
J. pyriformis
); 3) gastrocoelus and thyridium of T2 varying from subobsolete to moderately well-developed but always narrower than interthyridial interval; 4) males without tyloids; and most notably, 5) female with T6 anteriorly constricted. The latter character is unique among phaeogenine genera, and thus makes the females instantly recognizable. Males of
J. pyriformis
superficially resemble a few species of
Stenodontus
, particularly several undescribed species in
Mexico
and the southwestern
U.S.A.
Jethsura pyriformis
males can be readily distinguished from these species by the broader, bidentate mandible as opposed to the narrower, sickle-shaped, unidentate mandible in
Stenodontus
.