A new genus of protorhyssaline wasps in Raritan amber (Hymenoptera, Braconidae)
Author
Engel, Michael S.
Author
Thomas, Jennifer C.
Author
Alqarni, Abdulaziz S.
text
ZooKeys
2017
711
103
111
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.711.20709
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.711.20709
1313-2970-711-103
5E782B9EA87643829F183C620114A212
5E782B9EA87643829F183C620114A212
Rhetinorhyssalites
gen. n.
Type species.
Rhetinorhyssalites emersoni
sp. n.
Diagnosis.
Head cyclostome, with hypoclypeal depression deep; antenna with 20-24 flagellomeres (18-20 in
Protorhyssalus
Basibuyuk et al.); flagellum with scattered multiporous plate sensilla; occipital carina present and complete, albeit particularly weak dorsally; compound eyes not emarginate, without evident setae. Pronotal collar short, with subpronope scarcely indicated; notauli deeply impressed, percurrent; mesoscutal lateral areas sculptured as on remainder of mesoscutum; mesoscutellum not raised relative to mesoscutum (distinctly raised in
Protorhyssalus
); epicnemial carina absent (present in
Protorhyssalus
: "prepectal carina" sensu
Basibuyuk et al. 1999
); postpectal carina absent. Forewing (Fig. 4) with minute costal cell apically, otherwise C+Sc+R fused, without indication of fusion line except proximally; 1Rs present, forming straight line with 1M (1Rs/1M straight), slightly more than one-half length 1M (very short in
Protorhyssalus
); rs-m present; 1m-cu meeting second submarginal cell, second submarginal cell narrowly elongate postero-proximally (not so in
Protorhyssalus
); 2m-cu absent; 1cu-a strongly postfurcal; 2cu-a scarcely present (represented only by hint of stub at angle in 3Cu; stubs 1a and 2a present. Hind wing with sc+r-m lacking bulla, much shorter than 1M; bulla lacking between 1A and stub of 2Cu (present in
Protorhyssalus
); minute stub of 2Cu present. Metasomal tergum I with dorsope and laterope deeply impressed; dorsal carina strong, extending to posterior margin of tergum.
Etymology.
The generic name is a combination of
Rhetinorhyssalus
Engel, a genus with somewhat similar venation, and the suffix -ites (Greek, "having the nature of"). The gender of the name is feminine.