Revision of the Afrotropical species of Pristomerus (Ichneumonidae: Cremastinae), with descriptions of 31 new species
Author
Rousse, Pascal
B06C2640-700A-429B-AA2F-1BE09251C845
Natural History Department, Iziko South African Museum, PO Box 61, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa. & Stellenbosch University, Department of Botany and Zoology, Evolutionary Genomics Group, Private Bag X 1, Stellenbosch, 7602, South Africa. & Email: rousse. pascal @ wanadoo. fr (corresponding author) & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: B 06 C 2640 - 700 A- 429 B-AA 2 F- 1 BE 09251 C 845
rousse.pascal@wanadoo.fr
Author
Noort, Simon van
7CCD166F-F1FA-43DA-B582-4E84EAF59AD1
Natural History Department, Iziko South African Museum, PO Box 61, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa. & Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, Private Bag, Rondebosch, 7701, South Africa. & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 7 CCD 166 F-F 1 FA- 43 DA-B 582 - 4 E 84 EAF 59 AD 1
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2015
2015-05-28
124
1
129
journal article
22420
10.5852/ejt.2015.124
19721b2c-e043-4635-a299-6b1517b4e649
2118-9773
3780218
8E33A9C0-0940-4EF8-8105-7B71D9282635
Key to females of
Pristomerus
1. Fore wing with abscissa of M between rs-m and 2m-cu short, less than 0.5× rs-m (A); female ocelli distinctly reduced (POL> 1.5) (B); ovipositor stout and evenly up-curved with apex down-curved (C); female femoral tooth absent (FFT = 0) (C); south-western
South Africa
.................................. 2
– Fore wing with abscissa of M between rs-m and 2m-cu longer, distinctly longer than 0.5× rs-m (a); female ocelli larger (POL <1.5) (b); ovipositor straight to slightly down-curved, usually more slender and apically unevenly sinuous (c); female femoral tooth present or absent (FFT various) (c) ............. 3
2. Face totally black, deeply and densely punctate, inter-puncture area smooth (A); area superomedia subquadrate (
ASM
<1) (B) ......................................................................................
P. protea
sp. nov.
– Face mostly lighter, densely punctate-granulate (a); area superomedia longer than wide (
ASM
>1) (b) ..........................................................................................................................................
P. restio
sp. nov.
3. Entire face black to dark brown, including orbits (A, B) .................................................................. 4
– At least facial orbits distinctly lighter, pale yellow to testaceous-orange; median face almost always similarly coloured though sometimes more or less infuscate (a, b) ................................................ 16
4. Frons with a strong mid-longitudinal flattened protuberance (A); femoral tooth nearly absent with minute following denticles (B); ovipositor short (OT <1.5)......................................
P. kuku
sp. nov.
– Frons without distinct mid-longitudinal protuberance (a); femoral tooth and ovipositor various, usually both longer (b)....................................................................................................................... 5
5. Female femoral tooth absent, femur without any distinct subapical protuberance ventrally (FFT = 0) (A, B); tropical rainforest of central mainland Africa ....................................................................... 6 – Female femoral tooth distinct, small to very strong (FFT> 0) (a, b) ................................................ 7 6. Female with tergites 3–6 bicoloured, black and yellowish-orange (A); propodeum polished with
punctures (B) ...............................................................................................................
P. tutsi
sp. nov.
– Female with tergites 3–6 entirely orange (a); propodeum rugose with punctures (b).........................
...............................................................................................................................
P. yangere
sp. nov.
7. Scutellum smooth or nearly so, distinctly smoother than mesoscutum (A–C).................................. 8 – Scutellum distinctly punctate, punctation denser than on mesoscutum (a–c) ................................. 10
8. Small (fore wing length <
3.5 mm
); malar line very long (ML> 1.2) (A); ovipositor moderately long (OT> 1.5) (B);
South Africa
................................................................................
P. khoikhoi
sp. nov.
– Larger (fore wing length>
3.5 mm
); malar line short to very short (ML <0.7) (a); ovipositor short (OT <1.5) (b); tropical rainforest of central mainland Africa........................................................... 9
9. Ovipositor very short (OT <1) and apically straight (A); mesosoma rather stout, scutellum not unusually flat (A) .....................................................................................................
P. mbaka
sp. nov.
– Ovipositor longer (OT> 1) and apically sinuous (a); mesosoma distinctly elongate with scutellum quite flat (b)...................................................................................................................
P. teke
sp. nov.
10. Mesosoma partly to totally yellowish-orange (A) to testaceous (B); Southern Africa and Indian Ocean islands ....................................................................................................................................11 – Mesosoma entirely black (a, b); tropical mainland Africa .............................................................. 13
11. Speculum and pronotum entirely punctate (A); ovipositor long (OT> 1.5) (B);
Réunion
................. .....................................................................................................
P. rivier
Rousse & Villemant, 2012
– Pronotum centrally and ventral half of speculum smoother (a); ovipositor short (OT <1.5) (b) ....... ......................................................................................................................................................... 12
12. Female femoral tooth distinctly smaller than basally wide (FFT = 1) (A); malar line short (ML <0.6) (B);
Madagascar
............................................................
P. melissa
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Female femoral tooth longer than basally wide (FFT = 2) (a); malar line long (ML> 0.6) (b); Southern Africa..........................................................................................................
P. sotho
sp. nov.
13. Small (fore wing length <
3.5 mm
) (A); mesoscutum coriaceous without punctures (B)................... ......................................................................................................................................
P. aka
sp. nov.
– Larger (fore wing length>
3.5 mm
) (a); mesoscutum distinctly punctate (b)................................. 14
14. Speculum entirely punctate (A); propodeum with area basalis strongly petiolate (B); female femoral tooth much shorter than basally wide (FFT = 1) (C); antenna with less than 32 flagellomeres.......... ................................................................................................................................
P. mbama
sp. nov.
– Speculum distinctly smoother ventrally (a); propodeum with area basalis widely sessile (b); female femoral tooth much longer than basally wide (FFT = 2) (c); antenna with more than 32 flagellomeres ............15
15. Notauli coarsely rugose and lateral lobes of mesoscutum apically nearly smooth (A); ovipositor stout and apically straight (B)................................................................................
P. nzakara
sp. nov.
– Notauli more finely sculptured and lateral lobes of mesoscutum apically more uniformly punctate (a); ovipositor slender and apically sinuous (b)......................................................
P. dikidiki
sp. nov.
16. Facial orbits, and most often entire face, whitish (A, B);
Madagascar
and Southern Africa .......... 17 – Facial orbits, and most often entire face, yellow to testaceous orange (a, b) .................................. 22
17. Female femoral tooth present (FFT> 0) (A); metasoma mostly black with apical margins of most tergites white (B);
Madagascar
and
South Africa
............................................................................ 18
– Female femoral tooth totally absent (FFT = 0) (a); metasoma differently coloured, mostly orange with sometimes infuscate markings (b);
Madagascar
...................................................................... 19
18. Face entirely whitish, malar line moderately long (ML> 0.5) (A); hind femur uniformly orange, female femoral tooth nearly as long as basally wide (FFT = 1–2) (B);
Madagascar
.......................... ...................................................................................
P. guinness
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Face medially testaceous, malar line short (ML <0.5) (a); hind femur testaceous, apically pale, female femoral tooth distinctly longer than basally wide (FFT = 2) (b);
South Africa
....................... .....................................................................................................................................
P. zulu
sp. nov.
19. Clypeus narrow (CT <1.7) (A); ovipositor short (OT <1.5) (B)........................................................ ......................................................................................
P. vahaza
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Clypeus wider (CT> 1.7) (a); ovipositor longer (OT> 1.5) (b) ..................................................... 20
20. Ovipositor very long (OT> 2.5) (A); pterostigma light testaceous, moderately enlarged (B)............ ....................................................................................
P. hansoni
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Ovipositor shorter (OT <2.5) (a); pterostigma dark brown and strongly enlarged (b)................... 21
21. Fore wing with abscissa of M between rs-m and 2m-cu very long, far longer than rs-m (A); ovipositor very long (OT> 2.0) (B)......................................
P. ranomafana
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Fore wing with abscissa of M between rs-m and 2m-cu shorter, about as long as rs-m (a); ovipositor shorter, moderately long (OT <2.0) (b) ..............................................................
P. caris
Fitton, 1994
22. Mesonotum usually entirely black (A, B), sometimes mesoscutum partially lighter with scutellum totally black; female femoral tooth always distinct though sometimes reduced (FFT> 0) ............ 23
– Mesonotum nearly always distinctly lighter, yellowish orange to partially testaceous (a, b); female femoral tooth variable; if, rarely, mesoscutum almost entirely dark testaceous (some
P. moramora
), then female femoral tooth absent (FFT = 0).................................................................................... 24
23. Mesonotum densely punctate-granulate, punctures somewhat confluent along notaulus line (A); femoral tooth weak (B); tropical central Africa..........................................................
P. hutu
sp. nov.
– Mesonotum coriaceous, without punctures (a); femoral tooth strong (b);
Seychelles
........................ .................................................................................................................
P. ruficaput
(
Morley, 1912
)
24. Malar line exceptionally long, longer than mandible base (ML> 1) (A, B);
South Africa
............. 25 – Malar line shorter, usually much shorter than mandible base (ML <1) (a, b) ................................ 26
25. Femoral tooth reduced to a subapical point, followed by minute denticles (A); mesosoma mottled black, orange and pale yellow (B) ............................................................................
P. xhosa
sp. nov.
– Femoral tooth strong, followed by 5 strong denticles (a); mesosoma reddish-orange with black markings (b)..............................................................................................................
P. kagga
sp. nov.
26. Ovipositor tip straight (A); clypeus unusually narrow and long (CT = 1.5) with eyes slightly converging ventrally (B); small (F ≤ 3.5); female femoral tooth present but often hardly distinct (C);
Madagascar
, Eastern and Southern Africa...............................................
P. albescens
(
Morley, 1917
)
– Ovipositor most often at least slightly sinuous apically (a, b); if, rarely, ovipositor tip barely sinuous, then not fully agreeing with the above combination ....................................................................... 27
27. Female femoral tooth totally absent, not even distinct as a subapical protuberance, and never with following denticles (FFT = 0) (A, B)............................................................................................... 28
– Female femoral tooth weak to moderate, at least distinct as a subapical ventral protuberance (a) and distinctly shorter than basally wide, sometimes followed by secondary denticles (FFT = 1) (b) ... 34
– Female femoral tooth strong, about as high as wide (aa) to strongly higher than basally wide (bb), always followed by secondary denticles (FFT = 2) .................................................................................................42
28. Hind femur, and often other femora, with an obvious apical white patch (A); anterior margin of pterostigma white (B); tropical mainland Africa ............................................................................. 29
– Femora without distinct apical white patches, though often lighter apically (a); pterostigma uniformly dark (b); southern Africa and
Madagascar
....................................................................................... 30
29. Ovipositor short (OT <1.4) and apically nearly straight (A); clypeus long (CT <2) (B) .................. ...................................................................................................................................
P. zande
sp. nov.
– Ovipositor moderately long (OT> 1.4), apically sinuous (a); clypeus shorter (CT> 2) (b)............... .....................................................................................................................................
P. sara
sp. nov.
30. Penultimate flagellomere distinctly wider than long (Fl
n-1
≤ 0.9) (A); large (F>
5 mm
); ovipositor very long (OT> 2.0) (b);
Namibia
.............................................................
P. herero
sp. nov
(in part)
– Penultimate flagellomere subquadrate to distinctly elongate (a); distinctly smaller (F <
5 mm
); ovipositor shorter (OT<2.0) (b) ...................................................................................................... 31
31. Malar line rather long (ML> 0.5) (A); pronotum almost entirely smooth with some punctures postero-dorsally (B); ovipositor moderately short (OT <1.6); entire body without obvious dark markings except sometimes some infuscate markings around scutellum and on basal tergites; Southern Africa.............................................................................................................
P. san
sp. nov.
– Malar line short (ML <0.5) (a); pronotum more extensively punctate (b); ovipositor usually longer (OT> 1.5); colour various, often with large brown to black dorsal markings ................................ 32
32. Metasoma uniformly yellow to orange (A); mesonotum almost smooth, only scutellum and apex of mesoscutum weakly punctate (B); antenna with more than 30 flagellomeres;
Madagascar
..................................................................
P. kelikely
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Metasoma with at least basal tergites distinctly black maculated (a); entire mesonotum distinctly punctate (b); antenna with at most 30 flagellomeres ....................................................................... 33
33. Dark markings of body strongly extended: all metasomal tergites largely black maculated (A), mesosoma with dark testaceous markings dorsally and laterally (A, B);
Madagascar
........................ ................................................................................
P. moramora
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Body lighter, with only basal tergites partially dark (a); mesosoma uniformly pale (a, b), but sometimes with infuscate markings around scutellum; Southern Africa..................
P. venda
sp. nov.
34. Hind femur, and often other femora, with an obvious apical white patch (A, B); tropical mainland Africa ............................................................................................................................................... 35 – Femora without distinct apical white patches, though often lighter apically (a, b)......................... 37 35. Scutellum smooth (A).............................................................................................
P. mboum
sp. nov.
– Scutellum distinctly punctate (a, b) ................................................................................................. 36
36. Ocelli enlarged, posterior ocelli close together (POL <0.8) (A); tergites 1–3 at least half black, and occiput black-maculated in female (B); femoral tooth moderate (C); widespread in tropical Africa ........................................................................................................................
P. masai
sp. nov.
– Ocelli not enlarged, posterior ocelli more widely separated (POL> 0.8) (a); tergites 1–3 mostly yellow, at most basally blackened, and occiput not black-maculated (b); femoral tooth strongly reduced (c); Western Africa .......................................................................................
P. wolof
sp. nov.
37. Area superomedia not defined postero-laterally (A, B); large wasps (F>
6 mm
); ovipositor long (OT> 1.7) ........................................................................................................................................ 38
– Area superomedia most often fully delimited (a), though sometimes weakly so in
P. keyka
(b) but then specimens very small (F <
4.5 mm
); otherwise small to moderately large wasps (F <
5.5 mm
); ovipositor variable ........................................................................................................................... 39
38. Female femoral tooth moderate in size (A); antenna with more than 35 flagellomeres, penultimate flagellomere elongate (B);
Madagascar
........................
P.
patator
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Female femoral tooth reduced to a subapical protuberance followed by small denticles (a); antenna with fewer than 35 flagellomeres, penultimate flagellomere transverse (b);
Namibia
........................ ....................................................................................................................
P. herero
sp. nov
(in part)
39. Ovipositor long (OT> 1.7) (A); notauli concolourous with remainder of mesoscutum (B);
Madagascar
..........................................................................................................................................40 – Ovipositor shorter (OT <1.7) (a); notauli often distinctly lighter than remainder of mesoscutum (b)....41
40. Mesoscutum coriaceous with punctures along notauli lines (A); small species (F <3.2) (B); antenna with less than 28 flagellomeres (B) ................................
P.
keyka
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Mesoscutum distinctly punctate (a) (coriaceous in male); larger species (F> 3.2) (b); antenna with at least 28 flagellomeres (b)...........................................
P.
roberti
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
41. Clypeus strongly transverse (CT> 2.4) (A); female femur unusually stout (B); ovipositor short (OT ≤ 1.3) (C); body without dark markings (C); Eastern Africa..............................
P.
bullis
Fitton, 1994
– Clypeus less transverse (CT <2.4) (a); female femur more slender (b); ovipositor longer (OT ≥ 1.3) (c); body most often with dark dorsal markings (c) ..........................
P.
pallidus
Kriechbaumer, 1884
42. Clypeus strongly transverse (CT> 2.4) (A); inner margins of eyes distinctly diverging ventrally (A); antenna with more than 34 flagellomeres (B); Central Africa...............................
P. babinga
sp. nov.
– Clypeus less transverse (CT <2.4) (a); inner margins of eyes at most slightly diverging ventrally (a); antenna various (b) ......................................................................................................................... 43
43. Mesoscutum, and often scutellum, densely punctate over entire surface (A, B)............................. 44 – Mesoscutum largely to entirely coriaceous, scutellum often quite smooth (a, b) ........................... 46
44. Malar line moderately short (ML <0.6) (A); antenna with fewer than 32 flagellomeres (B); size moderate (F <5.0) (B); Western Africa..................................................................
P. yoccolo
sp. nov.
– Malar line moderately long (ML> 0.6) (a); antenna with more than 32 flagellomeres (b); large (F> 5.0) (b);
South Africa
and
Madagascar
.................................................................................... 45
45. Area superomedia stouter (ASM <1.8) and punctate (A); metasoma black (B);
Madagascar
........... ......................................................................................
P.
veloma
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Area superomedia elongate (ASM> 2.0) and transversely rugulose (a); metasoma lighter (b);
South Africa
...................................................................................................................
P. afrikaner
sp. nov.
46. Scutellum punctate (A); antenna with less than 27 flagellomeres; mesosoma rufous, ventrally and posteriorly black (B); tropical Africa.......................................................................
P. bemba
sp. nov.
– Scutellum smooth (a); antenna with more than 27 flagellomeres; mesosoma usually uniformly yellow to orange (b), postero-dorsally black in
P. swahili
(b, inset) ............................................... 47
47. Femora and trochanters without obvious apical white patches (A); antenna with more than 31 flagellomeres (B);
Madagascar
.........................................
P.
yago
Rousse, Villemant & Seyrig, 2013
– Femora and trochanters with obvious apical white patches (a); antenna with fewer than 31 flagellomeres (b); Eastern Africa ..................................................................................................... 48
48. (47) Clypeus weakly transverse (CT <1.8) (A); flagellum uniformly dark brown (B); propodeum dorsally black (B) ...................................................................................................
P. swahili
sp. nov.
– Clypeus more transverse (CT> 1.8) (a); flagellum brown, basally distinctly lighter and sometimes with a long whitish segment in apical half (b); propodeum uniformly yellowish-orange (b)............. ...............................................................................................................................
P. yakoma
sp. nov.