Revision of world Ceroptresini (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae) with the description of a new genus and five new species
Author
Lobato-Vila, Irene
Author
Pujade-Villar, Juli
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-10-11
4685
1
1
67
journal article
22516
10.11646/zootaxa.4685.1.1
77e441b5-2bdc-4c26-b6fc-b007d8d9ca25
1175-5326
3772829
5A946337-6921-45CB-B6F8-F64BC48F2D5A
Ceroptres kovalevi
Belizin, 1973
(
Figures 4a
,
6
h–j)
Ceroptres kovalevi
Belizin, 1973
.
Revue d’Entomologie d’URSS
52(1): 37.
Type
material: ZIN [examined by pictures sent to us by Sergey Belokobylskij (ZIN)].
Ceroptres masudai
Abe, 1997
.
Appl. Entomol. Zool.
32(1): 253
syn. nov.
Type
material: KPU [not examined].
Additional material of
Ceroptres masudai
Abe, 1997
(examined)
(
2♂
&
1♀
). Material collected in
China
and deposited in
UB
with the following labels: ‘Quinliang Mountain, Linan,
Zhejiang
,
2012–09–06
, malaise trap, Shijun Wang’ (white label) / ‘
Ceroptres masudai
♀
Abe, 1997
, det. JP-V 2015’(white label) (
1♀
); ‘
Linglong Mountain
,
Linan
,
Zhejiang
,
2013–09–19
E1,
2013–11–3
emergence, Sealed feeding, Shijun Wang’ (white label) / ‘
Ceroptres masudai
♂
Abe, 1997
, det. JP-V 2015’(white label) (
1♂
); ‘
Yuyingzi Village
,
Luanping County
,
Hebei Province
,
Host
: oak (
Quercus mongolica
) B,
2015–10–19
’ (white label) / ‘
Ceroptres masudai
JP-V det. 2016’ (white label, handwritten) (
1♂
).
Diagnosis
.
Ceroptres kovalevi
is morphologically similar to
C. clavicornis
(see above), from which it can be distinguished by the shape of vertical carinae on the lower face (complete, conspicuous and slightly curved outwards in
C. kovalevi
(
Fig. 4a
), complete and conspicuous, but straight and subparallel, in
C. clavicornis
(
Fig. 11d
)); the mesoscutal sculpture (coriaceous with scarce small piliferous punctures in
C. kovalevi
(
Fig. 6j
), strongly coriaceous with weak discontinuous transversal elements in
C. clavicornis
(
Fig. 5f
)); and the length of notauli (complete and well-impressed in their whole length in
C. kovalevi
(
Fig. 6j
), almost complete, but faint in the anterior 1/
3 in
C. clavicornis
), among others (see the descriptions of both species and the key to valid species of
Ceroptres
).
Brief redescription.
Female antenna 12-segmented and subclavate, male antenna 15-segmented and filiform; vertical carinae on the lower face complete, conspicuous and slightly curved outwards, delimiting a long depressed area that is slightly bulged just above the clypeus (
Fig. 4a
); mesoscutum coriaceous with scarce small piliferous punctures (
Fig. 6j
); notauli complete and well impressed (
Fig. 6j
), sometimes weakly impressed in the anterior 1/3 (always well impressed in their whole length in males); median groove almost reaching the half of the mesoscutum; mesoscutellum (
Fig. 6j
) densely but weakly wrinkled, interspaces finely coriaceous. It is also characterized by having F1 about as long as F2 or slightly shorter; POL about 2.2 times as long as OOL (
Fig. 6j
); front and vertex finely coriaceous to alutaceous, shiny, with scarce small piliferous punctures; dorsal part of pronotal plate complete, with two distinct but small and moderately spaced foveae (
Fig. 6j
); scutellar foveae more or less well defined and impressed, ovate, oblique, sculptured and separated by a narrow carina; circumscutellar carina absent; mesopleuron smooth and shiny (
Fig. 6h
); third metasomal tergum with a more or less extended posterodorsal patch of micropunctures, subsequent terga also punctate (
Fig. 6i
); forewings with moderately long marginal setae and the radial cell about 2.6 times as long as wide; tarsal claws bidentate, with a strong basal lobe; body mainly black (
Fig. 6
h–j). For more details on the morphology of this species, consult
Ceroptres masudai
Abe, 1997
original description (
Abe 1997
) and remarks section of this species (see below).
Distribution
. Far East of
Russia
,
Japan
,
Korea
and Eastern
China
(
Belizin 1973
;
Abe 1997
;
Abe
et al.
2007
;
Wang
et al.
2012
).
Biology
. The
type
material of
C. kovalevi
was obtained from an unknown gall (
Belizin 1973
) on
Quercus dentata
Thunb.
(
Quercus
section
), according to
Abe
et al.
(2007)
. Also according to
Abe
et al.
(2007)
and
Pénzes
et al.
(2012)
,
C. masudai
is associated with galls of
Andricus kashiwaphilus
Abe, 1998
,
A. mukaigawae
(Mukaigawa, 1913)
and
Ussuraspis nervosus
(Kovalev, 1965)
from
Japan
and
Russia
(
Melika 2012
); with galls of
A. targionii
Kieffer, 1903
and
A. pseudopflos
(Monzen, 1954)
in
Japan
; with leaf galls of an undescribed
Trigonaspis
(=
Ussuraspis
) in
Russia
and, occasionally, with galls of
A. hakonensis
(Ashmead, 1904)
(=
A. attractus
Kovalev, 1965
, =
A. symbioticus
Kovalev, 1965
) (
Wachi & Abe 2010
).
Ceroptres masudai
has been obtained from galls on
Q. dentata
and
Q. serrata
Murray
(
Quercus
section
) (
Abe 1997
;
Wang
et al.
2012
).
Remarks
. According to the original description (
Belizin 1973: 37
),
C. kovalevi
has no vertical carinae on the lower face and presents a weakly rough mesopleuron (‘shagreen skin-like’), which can be interpreted as a coriaceous-like sculpture. These traits, and especially the mesopleural sculpture (always partially or completely smooth in the rest of species), are unusual within
Ceroptres
. Furthermore, Belizin does not specify if this species has the second and third metasomal terga fused or separated, which are always separated in
Ceroptres
. So, we could assume that
C. kovalevi
is not actually a
Ceroptres
. However, after studying pictures of the
type
material of
C. kovalevi
sent by Sergey Belokobylskij (ZIN) and thanks to the notes on the species he provided us, we conclude it belongs to
Ceroptres
, since it presents separated second and third metasomal terga (
Fig. 6i
); also, because it has two conspicuous and complete vertical carinae on the lower face (
Fig. 4a
), and the mesopleuron completely smooth, in contrast with the original description (
Fig. 6h
).
Abe (1997)
separates
C. masudai
from
C. kovalevi
by the presence of vertical carinae on the lower face; however, both species have conspicuous and complete vertical carinae. The rest of morphological traits are identical between these two species and they have overlapping distribution areas; hence, we propose
C. masudai
Abe, 1997
as
syn. nov.
of
C. kovalevi
Belizin, 1973
.
The description of
C. masudai
provided by
Abe (1997)
is complete enough to characterize and differentiate the species from the rest of
Ceroptres
; however, after studying some additional material of
C. masudai
from
China
and the pictures of the
type
material of
C. kovalevi
, we add here some morphological traits that were not commented on by its descriptor (see the above brief redescription of
C. kovalevi
).