Description of 91 new species of DIssomphalus Ashmead (Hymenoptera: Bethylidae) from New Guinea Island and surrounded areas
Author
Mugrabi, Daniele F.
John T. Huber
Author
Azevedo, Celso O.
John T. Huber
text
Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle
2016
209
451
564
journal article
1243-4442
Dissomphalus kina
n. sp.
Figures 35, 130, 222, 380-382
TYPE MATERIAL
—
Holotype
,
♂
,
Papua New Guinea
. Province
Madang
, Mount Wilhelm (
-5.731961
,
145.2522
),
700m
,
26-27/05/2013
Coll. by Sam
et al.,
understorey, Malaise - MAL-MW0700’D-14/16-d14, P4762-20553 (
MNHN
).
Paratypes
.
Papua New Guinea
. Province
Madang
, Mount Wilhelm (
-5.731961
,
145.2522
),
700m
, Coll. by Sam
et al.
, understorey, Malaise,
1♂
18-19/05/2013
, MAL-MW0700’D-06/16-d06, P4754-20852 (
MNHN
);
1♂
22-23/05/2013
,
MAL-
MW
0700’D-10/16-d10, P4758-20624 (
MNHN
).
DESCRIPTION
— MALE: Body length
2.7-3.6 mm
. Head and mesosoma black; metasoma dark castaneous. Head (Figure 35). Mandible with two apical teeth. Clypeus with median lobe subtrapezoidal; median tooth rounded, outlined by carina; median carina distinctly incomplete apically and straight in profile. Frons strongly coriaceous. Mesosoma. Pronotal disc with anterior margin ecarinate, strongly coriaceous. Metapectal-propodeal complex with lateral and posterior areas partly carinate. Metasoma (Figure 130). Tergal process with shallow, subtriangular and sublateral pair of depression, 0.3 x as long as tergite II, diverging posterad, with long and thin setae on anterior and lateral areas; tubercle absent, instead with small pit, with small few setae posterad. Hypopygium (Figure 222) with median stalk 1.3 x as long as hypopygial plate; lateral stalk triangular; posterior margin straight or nearly so. Genitalia (Figures 380-382). Basal margin of paramere strongly excavated. Aedeagal dorsal body with apex lower than parameral apex, wider medially, narrowing progressively apicad; apex with circular and crenulated projection on ventral region. Aedeagal ventral ramus with apex as high as aedeagal dorsal body apex; apical and median regions with digitiform projections. Genital ring straight, each half convex in dorsal view.
FEMALE: Unknown.
ETYMOLOGY
— The noun in apposition kina means
kina
,
the standard monetary unit of
Papua New Guinea
.