Two new species of Allorhogas (Hymenoptera, Braconidae, Doryctinae) from southeast Brazil reared from seed pods of Inga vera Willd. and Anadenanthera colubrina (Vell.) (Fabaceae)
Author
Oliveira, Tamires Camila Talamonte De
Author
Sáenz, Ernesto Samacá
Departamento de Biología Celular y Fisiología. Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3 er Circuito Exterior s / n, Cd. Universitaria, Copilco, Coyoacán, A. P. 70 - 228, C. P. 04510 Ciudad de México, México & Colección Nacional de Insectos, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3 er Circuito Exterior s / n, Cd. Universitaria, Copilco, Coyoacán, A. P. 70 - 233, C. P. 04510 Ciudad de México, México
Author
Faria, Lucas Del Bianco
Department of Ecology and Conservation, Institute of Natural Science, Federal University of Lavras, Lavras, Brazil
Author
Riverón, Alejandro Zaldívar
Colección Nacional de Insectos, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3 er Circuito Exterior s / n, Cd. Universitaria, Copilco, Coyoacán, A. P. 70 - 233, C. P. 04510 Ciudad de México, México
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-02-20
5415
1
106
116
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5415.1.4
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5415.1.4
1175-5326
10692660
B6513D0C-DA14-497D-8C00-1D81DC32020F
Allorhogas margitae
Oliveira, Samacá-Sáenz & Zaldívar-Riverón
sp. nov.
(Figures 4A–F).
Diagnosis.
This new species can be morphologically distinguished from the species of
Allorhogas
which were reared from
Fabaceae
species and which are mentioned in the diagnosis of
Al. lavraensis
by having a: 1) body honey yellow with lateral mesoscutal lobes, anterior edge of mesopleuron and propodeum dark brown, legs pale yellow; 2) tarsomeres brown to dark brown; 3) fore wing vein r about as long as vein 3RSa; 4) fore wing vein m-cu interstitial to 2RS; propodeum rugose-areolate, slightly rugose and coriaceous basally; and 6) ovipositor 0.7 × as long as metasoma.
FIGURE 3.
Allorhogas margitae
sp. nov.
(female, holotype): A. Habitus, lateral view;
B.
Head, frontal view;
C.
Head and mesosoma, dorsal view;
D.
Head and mesosoma lateral view;
E.
Metasoma, dorsolateral view;
F.
Fore wing.
Description.
Female. Body size
3.5 mm
(Fig. 4A), fore wing 3.0 mm.
Colour
: body entirely honey yellow, lateral mesoscutal lobes, anterior edge of mesopleuron and propodeum dark brown; scape and pedicel dark brown to black, flagellomeres dark brown to black; eyes silverish black; ocelli black, area surrounding ocelli yellow; palpi pale yellow; legs pale yellow, tarsomeres brown to dark brown; claws brown; wings hyaline; fore wing veins brown, stigma brown; hind wing veins brown; ovipositor sheaths dark brown to black, ovipositor yellow, apex strongly sclerotized black.
Head
: transverse in dorsal view, 1.5 × wider than its median length (dorsal view) (Fig. 4B), and 0.85 × as long as high (lateral view); occipital carina complete and reaching hypostomal carina before mandible; post ocellar line (POL) as long than ocellar diameter (OD), 0.5 × ocular ocellar line (OOL); vertex, frons, and temple acinosecoriaceous, gena coriaceous; face sparsely pilose, rugose (Fig. 4B); frons excavation distinct, without a median longitudinal carina, not defined by sharp lateral margins; clypeus with dense and long pilosity; eye 1.3 × longer than wide; eye width 2.3 × longer than temple in dorsal view; malar space 0.4 × eye height and 2.0 × longer than width of hypoclypeal depression; mandibles tridentate; antenna with at least 11 flagellomeres (broken), first flagellomere about 4 × longer than wide, 1.15 × longer than second flagellomere.
Mesosoma
: 2.3 × longer than high (Fig. 4D) and 1.6 × longer than wide (Fig. 4C); pronotal collar short, nonvisible in dorsal view, pronotal furrow wide, rugose; mesoscutum transverse in dorsal view, its median length 0.95 × its width; mesoscutal lobes coriaceus-acinose, sparsely pilose along notauli; median mesoscutal lobe with poorly defined longitudinal furrow; notauli wide, deep and scrobiculate, not meeting, reaching the end of mesoscutum in a longitudinally rugose-acinose area; scutellar disc acinose, prescutellar furrow with six transverse carinae; mesopleuron coriaceus; subalar groove wide and scrobiculate; precoxal sulcus wide, deep, smooth, running along most part of mesopleuron; metapleuron entirely rugose—areolate; propodeum rugose-areolate, coriaceous basally, with two indistinct diverging carinae.
Wings
: fore wing 3.0 × longer than wide (Fig. 4G). Pterostigma 4 × as long as wide and 0.65 × as long as R. Vein r about as long as 3RSa, 0.4 × as long as 3RSb, and as long as r-m. Vein 2RS interstitial with m-cu, vein RS+Mb absent. Hind wing vein M + CU 0.9 × as long as 1 M, vein m-cu slightly curved towards wing base.
Legs
: hind coxa with distinct, pointed basoventral tooth, sparsely pilose, ventrally coriaceous. Hind femur 4.1 × longer than wide.
Metasoma
: first tergite 1.4 × wider than long, costate-punctate, with two longitudinal carinae running at the base; transverse basal carina distinct (Fig. 4F). Second and basal half of third tergite costate—slightly punctate, line between second and third tergites distinct and straight; apical half of third punctate, fourth tergite mostly smooth, slightly costate, remaining tergites smooth. Ovipositor 0.7 × as long as metasoma.
Variation.
Body size 3.0–4.0 mm. Antenna with 26–31 flagellomeres.
Male.
Unknown
Holotype
.
Female
(
IBUNAM
).
Brasil
,
Minas Gerais
,
Lavras
,
UFLA
21° 30’ 36” S
–
44° 54’ 01” W
;
ex
Anadenanthera colubrina
seeds,
25.IV.2019
; A15, FR1,
T
.C.
T
.
Oliveira
col.
Paratypes
.
(
IBUNAM
).
2 females
, same data as holotype.
25.IV.2019
,
1.V.2019
.
Biology.
Four adult
specimens of
Allorhogas margitae
were reared from three out of 120 pod seeds approximately two weeks after the pods were collected. We carefully examined each pod and seeds, and there was no evidence that suggested that specimens of
Al. margitae
were parasitoids, since there were no remnants of other insects, such as larvae’s cephalic capsule (
Morales-Silva and Modesto-Zampieron 2017
). Each specimen of
Al. margitae
completed its biological cycle in a single seed. We reared
two specimens
in the same pod, but multiple exit holes suggest there were at least
three specimens
of
Al. margitae
consuming different seeds from the same pod (
Figs 5A,B
).
FIGURE 5.
Fruits and seeds of
Anadenanthera colubrina
, with seeds consumed by the phytophagous
Allorhogas margitae
sp. nov.
A.
Seed partially consumed and the exit hole where
Al. margitae
emerged from;
B.
Seeds almost completely consumed and the exit holes where specimens of
Al. margitae
emerged.
We found other fruits of
An. columbrina
with similar seed predation patterns and exit holes; however, the insects appeared to have exited the pods before we collected them. We observed 10 unidentified
Curculionidae
(
Coleoptera
) specimens consuming seeds of this plant species. However, we did not observe whether they were co-existing in the same fruit. The seeds are stenospermic, with their shape ranging from round to reniform; The shell is rough, leathery, glabrous, brown and highly polished, with the presence of stretch marks and ripples (
Barretto & Ferreira 2011
). Each pod has between 5 to 10 seeds (
Lorenzi & Matos 2002
). We also observed that the
type
specimens of
Al. margitae
consumed almost all content of the seed before its emergence, and no galls were observed in the fruit or seeds (
Figure 5A
).
Etymology.
The specific epithet of this species is given homage to the mother of the senior author, Elsa Margit Talamonte, who has always supported and encouraged her during all her life to do what she loves.