Revision of the New World genera Adelius Haliday and Paradelius de Saeger (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Cheloninae: Adeliini)
Author
Shimbori, Eduardo M.
Author
Bortoni, Marco A.
Author
Shaw, Scott R.
Author
Souza-Gessner, Carolina Da S.
Author
Cerântola, Paula De C. M.
Author
Penteado-Dias, Angélica M.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-03-26
4571
2
151
200
journal article
28003
10.11646/zootaxa.4571.2.1
2ecdbe19-cc16-45c9-894d-18a4d10d4bf6
1175-5326
2608186
EEF7A7F9-CDB3-4664-95FC-17AE60463A60
Tribe
Adeliini
Viereck 1918
, revised rank
Adeliinae
Viereck 1918
: 69
.
Type
:
Adelius
Haliday 1833
Diagnosis
. Small to minute species, ranging from
0.9–2.7 mm
. Antenna of known species with 18 flagellomeres. Occipital carina well developed, complete. Epicnemial carina absent. T1 immovably fused with T2+3; T1–3 not forming a curved, well sclerotized carapace covering all metasoma. Dorsal carina on T1 absent. Spiracle of T6 and T7 absent. Fore wing vein r absent or present; vein r-m absent; vein RS not reaching wing margin. Middle coxa with deep transverse groove.
Included genera
. (New World):
Adelius
Haliday
,
Paradelius
de Saeger
;
Sculptomyriola
Belokobylskij
(Eastern Palearctic);
Sinadelius
He & Chen (
China
)
.
Distribution
. The
Adeliini
occur worldwide, although rarely collected (probably due to their minute size and short flight period). The species from Central and South America treated here are the first recorded for the Neotropical Region.
Biology
. Solitary, presumably egg-larval endoparasitoids on leaf-mining and bark-mining
Nepticulidae
, possibly exclusively on that host family. There are unconfirmed host records for other
Lepidoptera
leaf-mining families (i.e.
Gracillariidae
,
Coleophoridae
and
Tortricidae
, but see
Shaw & Huddleston, 1991
).
Comments
. As discussed by
Whitfield & Mason (1994)
and
Dowton & Austin (1998)
, most, or possibly all, of the synapomorphies of
Cheloninae
are shared with
Adeliini
. The strongly sclerotized and curved T1–T3 forming a carapace-like metasoma is considered the only apomorphy of
Cheloninae
, but
Dowton & Austin (1998)
suggest this as a plesiomorphic character in the clade, lost by the most derived group corresponding to adeliines. The absence of the fore wing vein r is considered an autapomorphic character for
Adeliini
. Some species however, have the vein r present, although short.
Adeliini
can be distinguished from other
Cheloninae
by the absence of the fore wing vein r-m, the metasomal terga 1–3 not forming a strongly sclerotized carapace, by their minute size, and by parasitism of
Nepticulidae
(other chelonines mostly parasitize tortricoid or pyraloid larvae but never nepticulids). Even though
Adeliinae
has been commonly treated as a subfamily, the phylogenetic evidence suggests that this lineage would be better classified as a tribe of
Cheloninae
.