Tersilochinae (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) of Costa Rica, part 1. Genera Allophrys Förster, Barycnemis Förster and Meggoleus To w ne s
Author
Khalaim, Andrey I.
Author
Broad, Gavin R.
text
Zootaxa
2012
3185
36
52
journal article
45492
10.5281/zenodo.279989
4657bda3-51b4-4a8c-ae92-3b2c390d879e
1175-5326
279989
Allophrys
Förster, 1869
Type
species:
Thersilochus oculatus
Ashmead, 1895
.
Predominantly small species with body length 2.8–4.0 mm, rarely to
5.4 mm
(
A. hansoni
sp. nov.
). Eyes of male enlarged and convergent dorsad so that temples are very narrow. Clypeus lenticular. Mandible slender with upper tooth longer than lower tooth. Flagellum of antenna more or less filiform, usually with 13–15 flagellomeres (18 flagellomeres in
A. hansoni
sp. nov.
); flagellomeres 4–6 (flagellomeres
3–13 in
A. hansoni
sp. nov.
) of all examined females and probably at least some males (e.g.
A. divaricata
Horstmann
) bearing finger-shaped sensory structures at apex on outer surface (
Figs 8
,
10
). Occipital carina complete or absent dorsally. Hypostomal carina present (
Fig. 1
). Mesosoma cylindrical or compressed laterally. Notaulus present or absent. Scutellum with lateral carinae developed only at extreme base. Foveate groove of mesopleuron present, variable shape and length, usually rather thin and sharp (
Figs 3
,
11
) but sometimes short and weak (
Fig. 5
). Propodeum with basal area narrow, widened anteriorly, usually short, or rarely with basal groove. Apical area of propodeum long and narrow, usually pointed anteriorly. Fore wing with vein 2
m-cu
present or absent, slightly antefurcal to postfurcal. Veins
Rs
+2
r
and
Rs
angled about 90°.
Hind
wing with vein
cu
1&
cu-a
moderately to strongly reclivous (slanted more than 30° from horizontal). Legs slender or in some species slightly thickened, with hind tibial spurs almost straight to rather strongly curved at apex. Tarsal claws not pectinate. First metasomal segment slender, round in cross-section, gradually and very weakly widened from base to apex in dorsal view, without glymmae. Second tergite at least twice as long as anteriorly wide. Thyridia much longer than wide. Ovipositor short and thin, upcurved, without teeth neither dorsally nor ventrally (
Figs 6
,
12
), its sheath 0.45–1.2 x as long as first tergite.
The genus can be distinguished from other Costa Rican tersilochine genera by the combination of a small propodeal spiracle, the first metasomal segment slender, round in cross-section and lacking glymmae, and the vein
cu
1&
cu-a
of the hind wing moderately to strongly reclivous (slanted more than 30° from horizontal). Males are readily distinguished by their enlarged eyes.
This is a moderately small tropical genus with some described species throughout the world:
A. oculata
(Ashmead)
from
Grenada
in the West Indies,
A. divaricata
Horstmann
occurring from southeastern
U.S.A.
to northern
Argentina
(
Horstmann 2010
),
A. bruneiensis
Khalaim
from
Brunei
and
A. occipitata
Khalaim
from
Vietnam
and
India
(Khalaim 2011). A few undescribed species are rather common in the Afrotropical region (Khalaim pers. obs.), and two undescribed species were recorded from
Australia
by
Gauld (1984)
. Over ten species of
Allophrys
occur in
Costa Rica
; six distinct species are here described as new, all of them are rarely collected and represented by one to several specimens in our material. Over
800 specimens
cannot be readily segregated in to discrete species at the moment, belonging to two species groups, and require further study.
Very little is known about the biology of any species of this genus. The only host record is from
A. divaricata
, which was reared from an unidentified sap beetle (
Nitidulidae
) in fallen guava fruits (
Psidium guajava
L.,
Myrtaceae
) in
Trinidad and Tobago
(
Horstmann 2010
). Morphologically
Allophrys
is very similar to the genus
Phradis
Förster
, which in Europe parasitize larvae of nitidulid beetles of the genus
Meligethes
Stephens
living in flowers of crucifers (
Khalaim
et al
. 2009
). It is quite possible that both genera parasitize the same family of hosts in similar ecological conditions, but
Allophrys
predominate in the tropics and over 90% of
Phradis
species occur in the Holarctic region. Some species of
Allophrys
(
A. bruneiensis
in
Brunei
and
A. barycnemica
sp. nov.
,
A. megafrons
sp. nov.
and
A. compressor
sp. nov.
in
Costa Rica
) also resemble the genus
Barycnemis
with their ventrally displaced antennae, elongate and sometimes strongly compressed mesosoma, thickened femora, apically strongly curved hind tibial spurs and short upcurved ovipositor. This may suggest that the host range of
Allophrys
exceeds nitidulid beetles living in flowers as similar adaptations in
Barycnemis
are associated with seeking hosts in soil and oviposition in active beetle larvae (
Horstmann 1981
).