New species of Australian microgastrine parasitoid wasps (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Microgastrinae) documented through the ‘ Bush Blitz’ surveys of national reserves
Author
Fagan-Jeffries, Erinn P.
Author
Cooper, Steven J. B.
Author
Austin, Andrew D.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-02-26
4560
3
401
440
journal article
27415
10.11646/zootaxa.4560.3.1
08d6b159-99f8-4a24-b8c0-c7f5f6a33b54
1175-5326
2627733
CAFAD1A2-9A50-4B24-A8A9-4C4F0D9FFCE1
Choeras
Mason, 1981
Choeras
Mason, 1981
: 76
;
Austin & Dangerfield 1992
: 18
; van
Achterberg 2002
(treated as a subgenus of
Apanteles
Foerster
);
Song
et al.
2014
: 502
(treated as a subgenus of
Apanteles
); Ghafouri
Moghaddam
et al.
2018
: 457
. See
Shenefelt (1973)
for earlier bibliographic history of species, and
Fagan-Jeffries and Austin (2018)
for a review and comments on the Australasian fauna.
Type
species:
Apanteles
(
Pseudapanteles
)
consimilis
Viereck 1911
, by original designation.
Diagnosis.
Fore wing areolet absent, small or large; propodeum either with median longitudinal carina or carina absent, but never with any indication of an areola, surface smooth to coarsely rugose; T1 usually parallel-sided or narrowing posteriorly; T2 either transverse rectangular, subtriangular, broadly pentagonal or almost linear; hypopygium medio-longitudinally folded with several striae (as in
Apanteles
), degree of striations variable to the point where hypopygium has only faint lateral creases; ovipositor sheaths from about half as long as metatibia to longer.
Remarks.
Choeras
is a cosmopolitan genus, with nearly 60 species described worldwide (
Yu
et al.
2016
;
Fagan-Jeffries & Austin 2018
; Ghafouri
Moghaddam
et al.
2018
). There are currently nine species described from Australasia:
C. calacte
(
Nixon 1965
)
,
C. ceto
(
Nixon 1965
)
,
C. dissors
(
Nixon 1965
)
,
C. epaphus
(
Nixon 1965
)
,
C. helespas
Walker (1996)
,
C. koalascatocola
Fagan-Jeffries & Austin (2017)
,
C. morialta
Fagan-Jeffries & Austin (2017)
,
C. papua
(
Wilkinson 1936
)
, and
C. tegularis
(
Szepligeti 1905
)
. The genus is likely to be paraphyletic (
Williams 1988
;
Austin & Dangerfield 1992
), with the Australian fauna forming two main clades in a recent molecular study (
Fagan-Jeffries
et al.
2018b
); one clade including species possessing a small, slit-like fore wing areolet, and a second clade of species with a large fore wing areolet that includes species appearing to be morphologically intermediate between
Choeras
and
Sathon
(
Fig. 1
). It is clear that the genus needs to be revised, however, a world-wide sampling effort and inclusion of several morphologically-related genera such as
Sathon
and
Lathrapanteles
Williams would be required for a detailed treatment that does not cause further confusion to generic boundaries in the Microgastrinae. As such, we here place species from both of the Australian molecular clades (with fore wing areolet both large and small) into
Choeras
, but present detailed descriptions, images and molecular data, so that they can be more easily assessed in future studies. For the Australian fauna, we provisionally separate
Choeras
and
Sathon
based on form of the hypopygium (
sensu
Austin & Dangerfield 1992
), with the species that we place in
Choeras
possessing a hypopygium with at least some flexibility, medial folds, or striation, whilst the species we place in
Sathon
has a completely inflexible hypopygium. The distribution of two of the new species of
Choeras
are restricted to a single collection locality in
Tasmania
, whilst the third species has a broad distribution across south-western
Australia
(
Fig. 2
).
We here formally recognise the corrected species name
Choeras ceto
(Nixon)
, which was mistakenly changed to
Choeras cetus
by
Austin and Dangerfield (1992)
.