Revision of Ceranisus and the related thrips-attacking entedonine genera (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) of the world
Author
Triapitsyn, Serguei V.
text
African Invertebrates
2005
2005-12-31
46
261
315
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.7909932
2305-2562
7909932
Entedonomphale margiscutum
Girault, 1915
,
stat. rev.
Figs 26, 27
Entedonomphale margiscutum
Girault, 1915: 216
. (
Type
locality:
Bank of Tweed River
,
Chindera
[= Chinderah],
New South Wales
,
Australia
)
Entedonomphale stalini
Girault, 1934: 2
. Synonymised under
Ceranisus margiscutum
(Girault)
by Boucek
1988: 734.
Entedonomphale margiscutum
Girault
: Dahms 1984: 792, 793.
Entedonomphale stalini
Girault
: Dahms 1986: 562.
Ceranisus margiscutum
(Girault)
: Boucek 1988: 734; Loomans & van Lenteren 1995: 130, 196.
Diagnosis: Female. Body mostly brown to dark brown; midlobe of mesoscutum (narrow stripes laterally and posteriorly only), antenna, and legs light brown. Head: malar sulcus apparently straight, not split ventrally; vertexal suture angulate (broadly V-shaped). Antenna (
Fig. 26
) with scape relatively slender, 4.3–5.1 x as long as wide; F1 and F2 subequal and slightly longer than wide (F2 a little wider), both with several sensilla; clava oval, with several sensilla. Dorsal mesosoma with fine cellulate sculpture; notauli indistinct; midlobe of mesoscutum with 2 pairs of short setae. Forewing (
Fig. 27
) about 2.5 x as long as wide; disc with numerous very short setae behind and beyond marginal and stigmal veins (these setae so inconspicuous that forewing disc appears asetose), slightly infumated behind stigmal vein (darker spot not reaching wing’s margins or base of marginal vein); longest marginal setae about 1/4 maximal width of forewing. Hind wing about 6.5 x as long as wide; disc hyaline and with numerous very short and inconspicuous setae, similar to ones on forewing; longest marginal setae about equal to maximal width of hind wing. Petiole trapezoidal, about as wide as long; ovipositor occupying about 4/5 length of gaster, not exserted; ovipositor length/metatibia length ratio about 1.6:1.
Figs 26, 27.
Entedonomphale margiscutum
, female (holotype): (26) antenna, (27) forewing. Scale lines = 0.1 mm.
Male. Unknown.
Type material examined:
Holotype
female of
E. margiscutum
[
QMBA
], labelled: 1. Type Hy/2544. 2545
A. A. Girault
”; 2. “
Queensland
Museum
Parzaommomyia tenuicorpus
Gir.
^”; 3. “
Entedonomphale margiscutum
Gir.
^”
.
Holotype
dissected into many parts under two coverslips (middle and bottom ones, the upper coverslip contains parts of the
holotype
of another entedonine eulophid,
Parzaommomyia tenuicorpus
Girault, 1915
); metasoma, mesosoma with all the legs, and one forewing mounted under the middle coverslip, head with antennae mounted under the bottom coverslip, one forewing is missing.
Holotype
female of
E. stalini
[
QMBA
], labelled: 1
.
Holotype
T.9997. E.C.D. 1985"; 2. “Dep.Ag. & Stk. Qld. ^
Entedonomphale stalini
Girault Indooroopilly
Type No.
11 Dec.1932
Window”. Only the metasoma (lateral), mesosoma, several legs (detached from the body), and a part of head remain from the
holotype
specimen, all are mounted under one broken coverslip.
Other material examined:
AUSTRALIA
:
Queensland
:
Tea Tree Cave
,
4 km
SE Chillagoe
,
17°11'S
:
144°34'E
,
25.iv.1997
,
C.J. Burwell
, 1^ [
QMBA
]
.
Distribution:
Australia
(
New South Wales
,
Queensland
).
Hosts: Unknown.
Comments: Although Boucek (1988) transferred this taxon, which is the type species of the genus
Entedonomphale
, to
Ceranisus
, it is undoubtedly congeneric with the species placed by him in
Entedonastichus
.Availability of a high-quality slide-mounted specimen of
E. margiscutum
from
Queensland
,
Australia
, was crucial for confirmation of its true identity following my examination of the poorly mounted
holotype
of this species, the only specimen studied by Dr Z. Boucek. All morphological features of
E. margiscutum
fit well in the current generic concept of
Entedonomphale
with the exception of a straight malar sulcus, but this character does not seem to be reliable in differentiating
Entedonomphale
from
Ceranisus
as at least one species of the latter has a distinctly split malar sulcus whereas at least in
E. margiscutum
and
E. quasimodo
sp. n.
it is clearly straight.
Boucek (1988) synonymised
E. stalini
under
E. margiscutum
and he might be right, based on the comparison between the fresh specimen of
E. margiscutum
from
Queensland
and the very short original description of
E. stalini
. However, the true identity of this species will never be revealed as only a few body parts remain from the
holotype
female specimen.