The Cretaceous Scelionid Genus Proteroscelio Brues (Hymenoptera: Platygastroidea)
Author
Johnson, Norman F.
Author
Musetti, Luciana
Author
Masner, Lubomír
text
American Museum Novitates
2008
2008-04-09
3603
1
1
8
http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1206%2F0003-0082(2008)3603%5B1%3ATCSGPB%5D2.0.CO%3B2
journal article
10.1206/0003-0082(2008)3603[1:TCSGPB]2.0.CO;2
0003-0082
5389182
Proteroscelio antennalis
Brues
, in
Carpenter et al., 1937:
40. Original description.
DIAGNOSIS: Length:
1.7 mm
. Distinguish- ed from
P. gravatus
,
n. sp.
, by the elongate funicular segments, the laterally compressed, serrate clavomeres, and the flat face.
MATERIAL EXAMINED:
Holotype
female: ‘‘
TYPE
,
Proteroscelio antennalis
‘Brues’, No. 56’’ (on underside). ‘‘
Proteroscelio antennalis
Brues
, 56, Type.’’ ‘‘56.’’ Single block of amber attached to a microscope slide. Deposited in
ROMC
.
COMMENTS: The left antenna is deformed, laterally compressed, and, as a result, quite different in shape from the right. The apical 10 segments of both antennae are expanded to form a clava. The metasoma is somewhat inflated and, therefore, the laterotergites are opened and not tightly flexed against the sterna.
PROTEROSCELIO GRAVATUS
NEW SPECIES
Figures 3–4
DESCRIPTION: The characters cited in the generic description may be supplemented as follows. Length
1.1 mm
. Head with lower portion of frons, just above antennal insertions, strongly reflexed; A3–A6 short, strongly transverse, distinctly narrower than A2 or A7; A7–A13 cylindrical, evenly expanded; T3 longest metasomatic tergite, slightly longer than T2.
Figs. 1–2.
Proteroscelio antennalis
Brues
, holotype female.
1,
Ventrolateral habitus.
2,
Head and mesosoma, ventrolateral view. Figs. 3–4.
Proteroscelio gravatus
,
n. sp.
3
, Dorsolateral habitus.
4
, Ventrolateral habitus. Scale bars in millimeters.
DIAGNOSIS: Distinguished from
P. antennalis
by the very short funicular segments.
MATERIAL EXAMINED:
Holotype
female: ‘‘
Ambre
de HAMMANA/MDEIRIJ,
LIBAN
,
Aptien
inférieur,
Collection Dany
AZAR
,
Echantillon
no 23.’’
Single
block of amber mounted beneath a cover slip on a microscope slide.
Deposited
in
MNHN
.
ETYMOLOGY: The epithet
gravatus
is from the Latin meaning ‘‘weighed down’’, referring to the massive antennal clava.
COMMENTS: The Aptian age, indicated on the specimen label, is defined in
Grimaldi and Engel (2005)
as extending from 112–122 mya. In the same text, the age of Lebanese amber is said to be between 120–135 mya.
Nel and
Azar (2005) cite the age of
Cretaxenomerus
, collected at the same Hammana locality, to be from 125–135 mya.