Electronoyesella antiqua Simutnik, gen. et sp. nov. (Chalcidoidea, Encyrtidae) from Rovno amber
Author
Simutnik, Serguei A.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2538-6216
I. I. Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kiev 01601, Ukraine
simutnik@gmail.com
Author
Perkovsky, Evgeny E.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7959-4379
I. I. Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kiev 01601, Ukraine
Author
Vasilenko, Dmitry V.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4827-7290
A. A. Borissiak Paleontological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 117647, Russia & Cherepovets State University, Cherepovets, Vologda Region 162600, Russia
text
Journal of Hymenoptera Research
2022
2022-12-20
94
105
120
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.94.94773
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/jhr.94.94773
1314-2607-94-105
D9DDB53D4A3E430DB3B78FDDBBE0260D
30D640DD696E59B1B5A1CA0F8CB8A225
Electronoyesella antiqua Simutnik
sp. nov.
Figs 1
, 2
, 3
, 4
, 5
, 6
, 7C
Material.
Holotype
, SIZK K-27005,
1 ♀
,
Klesov
,
Sarny District
,
Rovno Region
,
Ukraine
;
Rovno
amber; late
Eocene
(deposited in SIZK).
The
inclusion is in a reddish-yellow and clear, parallelepiped piece of amber (ca. 7
x
6.5
x
4 mm
).
It
is well preserved, but its left side is obscured by a large air bubble (Figs
1B
,
2
).
Figure 1.
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov.,
holotype
female
A
body, lateral view
B
body, anterodorsolateral view.
Figure 2.
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov.,
holotype
female
A
body, ventral (arrows indicate the metatibial pegs in inset)
B
body, posterodorsal.
Syninclusions.
Nematocera
, spider web.
Etymology.
The specific epithet means ancient in Latin.
Description.
Female.
Habitus as in Figs
1
,
2
. Body length 1.3 mm.
Coloration.
Head, thorax, gaster dorsally, tegula, and all femora black; antenna uniformly dark brown; gaster ventrally dark brown; venation brown; mesotibial spur and tarsi pale yellow; surface of frontovertex, thorax, legs shiny due to presence of a thin layer of air, without metallic shine.
Sculpture.
Head, pronotum and mesoscutum rough reticulate, but surface of head only sparsely punctate - frontovertex with 4 vertical rows of large but shallow piliferous punctures (Fig.
3A
), outer row separated from eye margin by a distance equal to or more than diameter of this punctures; scape, pedicel, scutellum, tegula, mesopleuron, coxae, legs, and gaster also relatively similarly but more smoothly reticulate; sculpture of face as in Fig.
4
- horizontal row of three large, deep cells located under each torulus, lateral to clypeus, also intricately sculptured.
Figure 3.
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov., holotype female
A
head, antennae, part of mesosoma, anterodorsolateral view
B
head, antennae, part of mesosoma, anterodorsal view (arrow indicates the notaular depression).
Figure 4.
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov., holotype female, antennae, head anteroventral.
Head.
Lenticular, slightly wider than thorax in dorsal view; occipital margin sharp, but not carinate (Fig.
2B
); frontovertex curved to posterior ocelli; broadly rounded in frontal view, not vaulted above eyes; eyes bare, without visible setae, with inner orbits parallel over much of height but ventrally divergent (Figs
3B
,
4
); frontovertex as long as broad, minimum distance between eyes about 0.4
x
head width; ocelli forming a right angled triangle, posterior ones closer to eye than occipital margin; OOL about equal to posterior ocellar diameter; OOL:POL:LOL:OCL about 3:11:8:4; eye reaching occipital margin (Figs
1A
,
3
); antennal scrobes as in Figs
3
,
4
, v- or u-shaped and meeting dorsally, not extended to anterior ocellus, in dorsal view anterior ocellus about equidistant from occipital margin and from upper margin of scrobal depression; interantennal prominence presents (Fig.
4
); antennal toruli located about at level of lower eye margin, separated from mouth margin by distance equal to their own width (Fig.
4
); distance between toruli equal to distance between torulus and eye, about 1.5
x
width of torulus, about 0.5
x
length of malar space; malar space with complete malar sulcus (Fig.
4
), about 2
x
shorter than height of eye; clypeus strongly emarginate, with short lateral margins; mandible 3-dentate, with middle tooth longest (Fig.
4
).
Antenna
.
Geniculate, 11-segmented, without differentiated anelli, with 6 funicular segments and 3-segmented clava; radicle short, about 2
x
as long as broad (Fig.
2B
); antennal scape ~4
x
as long as broad; pedicel conical, little longer than first two funicular segments combined, longer than any segment of funicle; F1 subquadrate, slightly longer than broad, F2 and F3 distinctly longer than broad, F4-F6 subquadrate, F3-F6 slightly flattened; width of flagellomeres slightly increases toward apex; F5 and F6 noticeably wider than F2-F4 (Fig.
4
); all segments of funicle, at least F2-F6, and two basal segments of clava with mps; clava a little shorter than F3-F6 combined, with small oblique truncation at apical segment only (Figs
3
,
4
), wider than F6; flagellum and clava clothed in very short setae.
Mesosoma
.
Pronotum short, not conspicuously narrower than mesoscutum, almost vertical (in lateral view), with posterior edge only slightly emarginate (Fig.
3B
); mesoscutum as broad as long or nearly to (in dorsal view); mesothoracic spiracle open, not concealed beneath pronotum (Fig.
1A
); notauli present as depressions at extreme antero-lateral margin of mesoscutum (Figs
3A, B
: arrow); meeting of axillae not visible; scutellum flat, apically pointed, with several long, vertical setae at own apex (Fig.
2B
); mesopleuron enlarged posteriorly; metapleuron triangular, narrow, without visible setation (Fig.
1A
); propodeum bare, with relatively large lateral parts, touching hind coxa (Fig.
1A
).
Wings
.
Fully developed, hyaline. Forewing 2.5
x
as long as broad; linea calva not interrupted but closed on posterior margin, without filum spinosum, with well-developed line of long setae alongside basal margin of dorsal surface (Figs
5A, B
); parastigma thickened, hyaline break (unpigmented area) present; marginal vein 5
x
as long as broad; stigmal vein as long as marginal, with long narrow uncus consisting row of 4 uncal sensilla (Fig.
5B
); postmarginal vein 1.5
x
as long as marginal vein, enlarged seta marking apex of postmarginal vein of forewing absent (as long as others on this vein); setae of marginal fringe short. Hindwing relatively wide; membrane of costal cell along submarginal vein with line of long setae (Fig.
5C
: ls1); spur vein originating from submarginal vein visible as differentiated hyaline process, alongside this a row of 5 thickened setae (Fig.
5C
: spv, ls2); apex of marginal vein with 3 hamuli; marginal fringe ~ 0.2
x
as long as wing width.
Figure 5.
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov., holotype female
A
wings
B
forewing venation
C
hind wing venation (ls1, 2 - lines of setae, spv - spur vein, pst - parastigma). Scale bars: 0.2 mm (
A
); 0.1 mm (
B, C
).
Legs
.
Mid tibial spur about as long as basal mid tarsal segment or slightly shorter, both relatively long; mesotibia with row of pegs along anteroapical edge (Figs
1B
,
2A
); ventral surface of mesobasitarsus and each next tarsomere with differentiated setation along anteroventral edge (Fig.
2A
); apex of metatibia with one peg originating from round, deep pit and row of spine-like setae (Fig.
2A
: arrows); tarsi 5-segmented.
Metasoma
.
As long as head and mesosoma together; cerci situated in apical third of metasoma, with long vertical setae (or bristles) (Figs
1A, B
,
6B
); syntergum (Mt8 + Mt9) v-shaped, no longer than 1/3 of metasoma; posterior margins of Mt2-Mt5 straight, parallel; Mt6 and Mt7 slightly produced, M-shaped, U-like between cerci; apex of hypopygium with developed mucro, reaching apex of syntergum (Fig.
6B
); lateral margin of hypopygium bare, without row of setae; ovipositor stylet thick; ovipositor sheaths (gonostyli or third valvulae) visible in dorsal view (Fig.
6A, B
: osh (v3)), as long as mesobasitarsus, connect at some angle with second valvifers (inner plates of the ovipositor, Fig.
6B
: vr2), apparently, movably fused; outer plates of ovipositor not visible but (as J. S. Noyes, pers. comm. 2022, suggested) appear very slender, appear to have filamentous connection to paratergite (Fig.
6B
: fc, ptrg?) running forwards to outside of cercal plate, similar to that of
Ericydnus
(Fig.
7
).
Figure 6.
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov., holotype female
A
metasoma, part of mesosoma, posterodorsal (cers - cercal seta, hyp - hypopygium, osh - ovipositor sheaths, ost - ovipositor stylet, ptrg? - paratergite?, spr - spiracle, syn - syntergum, vr2 - second valvifer)
B
metasoma, part of mesosoma, posterolateral (cer - cercus, fc - filamentous connection, muc - mucro, opo? - possible, outer plate of the ovipositor, spv - hyaline spur vein; osh(v3) - ovipositor sheaths).
Figure 7.
A, B
Ericydnus
sp., female
A
metasoma, dorsal (opo - outer plates of ovipositor, ptrg - paratergite)
B
apex of metasoma, lateral (spr - spiracle on the lateral lobe of the Mt7, v3 - ovipositor sheaths)
C
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov., holotype female, apex of metasoma, lateral (fc - filamentous connection). Scale bars: 0.2 mm.
Male.
Unknown.
Genus composition.
Type species only.
Remark.
Electronoyesella antiqua
gen. et sp. nov. from Rovno amber is the 23th non-ant hymenopteran genus (from 57, 40.4%) and 50th non-ant hymenopteran species (from 73, 68.5%), unknown from Baltic amber (Olmi 2022a, b).
Discussion.
Late Eocene and extant encyrtid faunas differ (
Simutnik 2021
). For example, fossil
Encyrtidae
with reduced or shortened wings are unknown. The presence of the filum spinosum (FS), one of the main features of the subfamily
Encyrtinae
, have been found in about one third (22) of the 64 examined Eocene encyrtid specimens (males and females). In extant
Encyrtidae
, the number of species of
Encyrtinae
(with
FS
) is approximately three times more than the number of
Tetracneminae
species (without
FS
). The venation of the forewings and the structure of the linea calva in the fossil described here, as well as in other known Eocene
Encyrtidae
without
FS
, most closely resemble those of
Savzdargia
Trjapitzin, 1979;
Moraviella
Hoffer, 1954;
Monodiscodes
Hoffer, 1954; possibly some species of
Ericydnus
; and some other extant
Tetracneminae
. At the same time, distinct paratergites (the presence of which is one of the main features of the
Tetracneminae
:
Trjapitzin 1968
) have not been previously found in fossil females. Therefore, there is not enough morphological evidence to classify them as members of the
Tetracneminae
(
Simutnik and Perkovsky 2018
;
Simutnik et al. 2022a
).
Electronoyesella
has a sclerotized, ribbon-like, separated part of Mt8 along the lateral edge of the syntergum (Figs
6B
,
7C
: ptrg?). This structure closely resembles the paratergites of extant
Tetracneminae
(Fig.
7A, B
: ptrg).
One of the most intriguing things in the evolution of encyrtids is what happens to the connection of tergite IX of the abdomen (Mt8) and the outer plates of the ovipositor (
OPO
) (J. S. Noyes, pers. comm. 2022). The
OPO
are completely separated from the syntergum behind the cercal plate in
Encyrtinae
. In
Tetracneminae
they are connected by the paratergite. Both features almost certainly result from advancement of cerci (
Noyes 2004
).
Cerci of the earliest known middle Eocene
Encyrtidae
from Sakhalinian amber are close to each other, located at the very top of the gaster, similar to the ground plan state for
Chalcidoidea
. Then, tentatively in late Eocene, they began to shift towards the base of the gaster and the distance between them began to increase (figs 12-14 in
Simutnik 2021
). This process was most likely the result of adaptation to parasitization of the host, probably by
Coccinea
(for example,
Archaeocercoides puchkovi
Simutnik, 2022 from Rovno amber was fossilized near an undescribed crawler, see fig. 1C, D in
Simutnik et al. 2022a
). As the cerci advanced forward, Mt8 (or syntergum Mt8+Mt9) and then the previous terga began to separate into a dorsal part and lateral lobes (Fig.
7
).
The process of cercus advancement in both
Encyrtinae
and
Tetracneminae
occurred independently and in parallel, and it began precisely in the late Eocene, since the cerci still remain in the apical or subapical position in most encyrtids from European ambers. Cerci extremely advanced to the base of the metasoma, as in many extant taxa, have not been found in known Eocene
Encyrtidae
.
The elongate sclerotized strip (paratergite) in
Tetracneminae
apparently separated from the lateral margin of the syntergum when the latter became long enough and the cercal plates advanced significantly towards the base of the gaster. The true paratergite must directly maintain a connection to tergite IX (Mt8). This connection is traceable in many species of extant
Ericydnus
around the side and anterior of the cercal plate (Fig.
7A, B
) but not in any other genera where the connection, at most is at best tenuous (J. S. Noyes, pers. comm. 2022). What is possibly the paratergite of
Electronoyesella
running anteriorly to the outside of the cercal plate is very similar to the paratergite of
Ericydnus
and may provide morphological evidence for the existence of the subfamily
Tetracneminae
in the late Eocene.