Synopsis of the rare genus Alongatepyris (Hymenoptera, Bethylidae), with description of the first extinct species from Dominican amber
Author
Colombo, Wesley D.
Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Vitória, ES, Brazil
Author
Perkovsky, Evgeny E.
Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kiev, Ukraine & Borissiak Paleontological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
Author
Azevedo, Celso O.
Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Vitória, ES, Brazil
text
Palaeoentomology
2022
2022-02-23
5
1
57
65
journal article
20453
10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.1.6
58d6d2c1-0bc7-4e88-8d42-ef231b1d4760
2624-2834
6280631
6F18CBD0-D478-464B-BC40-31C6AB199684
†
Alongatepyris pedrocai
Colombo & Azevedo
,
sp. nov.
(
Figs 2
,
3
)
Type material.
Holotype
female, piece code WDC F-3, deposited in the
IBES
collection: a complete flat wasp is embedded in a median amber piece; some scattered debris obscuring particular details; no other animals and plants are present. The amber was not subjected to any fixation.
Etymology.
The specific epithet
pedrocai
is named after Pedroca, Pedro Dhaví Colombo Zanette’s nickname, nephew of the first author.
Diagnosis.
Head as long as wide in dorsal view. Anterior ocellus posterior to supra-ocular line. Posterior pronotal sulcus absent. Forewing with 2r-rs&Rs vein long and tubular.The species
platunissimus
and
A. ingens
are redraw digitally from
Vargas & Azevedo (2008)
.
Description.
Female. Body length ~
3.8 mm
. Color: body mostly black, palpi and mandible dark castaneous; tarsi light castaneous;wings hyaline,veins light castaneous. Head as long as wide in dorsal view, not globoid in lateral view. Mandible apparently with three teeth, ventral tooth large. Clypeus with median lobe rounded and lateral lobes reduced. Eye located far from mandibular base, glabrous, elongated in lateral view, bulging in dorsal view. Antenna with flagellomeres wider than long, first flagellomeres shorter than distal ones; flagellar pubescence suberect; pedicel with apex dilated, longer than flagellomere I. Frontal line indistinct. Ocelli conspicuous. Anterior ocellus posterior to supra-ocular line. Dorsal pronotal area longer than mesoscutellum. Posterior pronotal sulcus absent. Notaulus not visible. Parapsidal signum present. Mesoscuto-scutellar suture with sulcus not visible. Mesopleuron with lower mesopleural fovea not visible. Macropterous. Forewing with three cells closed (C, R and 1Cu); C cell very narrow; 1Cu cell more than 2× shorter than R cell; Pterostigma small and prostigma large; flexion line simple distally; 2r-rs&Rs vein long and tubular. Mesotibia not spinose. Metapectal-propodeal disc long, touching posterior margin of anteromesoscutum; transverse anterior carina straight; metapostnotal median carina not visible; transverse posterior carina not visible. Tarsal claw simple. Metasoma polished.
Remarks.
The specimen described above is assigned to the genus
Alongatepyris
based on the following character states: (1) the body is flattened in the lateral view; (2) the eyes are placed forward on the head; (3) the antennae are composed by 11 flagellomeres; (4) the forewings are fully developed; and (5) the first cubital cell of the forewings is much reduced.
The specimen considered here is morphologically similar to
A
.
platunissimus
, because the head is as long as wide and the 2r-rs&Rs veins of the forewings are long and tubular. The specimen is also morphologically similar to
A
.
ingens
because the dorsal pronotal area is ecarinate and the 1Cu cell of the forewings is more than 2× shorter than the R cell. The presence of morphological features of the two species previously described,
A
.
platunissimus
and
A
.
ingens
, supports that this lineage is different from its congeners. Additionally, †
A
.
pedrocai
,
sp. nov.
lived between 15–20 million years ago, adding further support to the validity of this species.
Type
locality and horizon.
Dominican
amber,
Burdigalian
/
Langhian
terrestrial amber in
the Dominican
Republic. Miocene, 15–20 million years ago
.