A new species of Grotea Cresson (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Labeninae) from Colombia
Author
Herrera-Florez, Andres Fabian
text
ZooKeys
2014
389
27
33
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.389.6066
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.389.6066
1313-2970-389-27
C397378F9FE9496C80C523AC6D83C195
C397378F9FE9496C80C523AC6D83C195
Grotea villosissima
Herrera-Florez
sp. n.
Figures 1-10
Material examined.
Holotype
: female, "COLOMBIA:
Boyaca
: Arcabuco. Santuario de Fauna y Flora de Iguaque, Camino de la Laguna,
5°70'N
,
73°46'W
, 3400-3600m,
emergio
de celda en nido de
Chilicola (Oroediscelis)
sp. n. (
Apoidea
,
Colletidae
). Ese nido estaba en ramas secas de
Espeletia argentea
, 23 Agosto 2003, leg.V.
Gonzalez
(UNCM)".
Diagnosis.
This new species can be recognized from other described species of
Grotea
by the following combination of characters: gena close to the junction of occipital and hypostomal carinae with inwards genal projections (Fig. 8); propodeum with anterior transverse carina centrally weak and indented (Fig. 9); metasoma with tergite I slender but slightly shorter than mesosoma and rather straight (Figs 1, 3, 6); ovipositor shorter than the fore wing (Fig. 6).
Figures 1-5. Photographs of
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. 1 Head, mesosoma and first tergite, lateral view 2 Head, mesosoma, dorsal view 3 Part of mesosoma and metasoma, lateral view 4 Head and part of mesosoma, ventral view 5 Hind wing.
Figures 6-10. Line drawings of
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. 6 Habitus 7 Head, posterodorsal view 8 Head (showing detail of genal projection), posteroventral view 9 Propodeum, dorsal view 10 Wings.
Description.
Female. Fore wing 7.4 mm long.
Head in dorsal view with gena behind eyes rounded (Fig. 7); posterior ocellus separated from eye by 1.7
x
its own maximum diameter (Fig. 7); genal projection
present
, laterally indistinct, ventroposteriorly evident; projection narrowing apically, horizontally oriented to inside of oral cavity; genal projections almost touching each other (Fig. 8); antenna with 35 flagellomeres (Fig. 6); flagellomere I 1.0
x
as long as flagellomeres II and III combined. Epomia absent.
Mesosoma. Mesoscutum smooth with isolated inconspicuous punctures; scutellum in profile weakly convex; hind wing with Cu1 strongly pigmented, not reaching margin (Figs 5, 10); propodeum (Fig. 9) 2.1-2.2
x
as long as broad; anterior transverse carina complete, centrally weak and indented, thus not forming a smooth arc from side to side (area basalis posteriorly enclosed); pleural carina complete; posterior transverse carina complete, although laterally weak; lateral longitudinal carina complete (area spiracularis enclosed); lateromedian longitudinal carina reaching anterior transverse carina, then absent; area lateralis not enclosed internally, rectangular, about 2.3
x
as long as broad, with posterolateral corner at right angle removed from lobe surrounding coxal insertion. Area superomedia not differentiated, basally and distally weak, laterally open.
Metasoma. Tergite I (Figs 1, 3, 6) straight (not bowed upwards) and slender, shorter than mesosoma (mesosoma 1.5
x
as long as tergite I); tergite I at least 4 times as long as broad posteriorly; visible part of ovipositor 2.7-2.9
x
as long as hind tibia (Fig. 6).
Color. (Figs 1-5).
A predominantly black species with head with yellow circumocular area and clypeus. Pronotum with two longitudinal yellow spots, along ventral and dorsal margins, and a submedial red spot towards posterior margin. Mesopleuron mostly red with two large black areas, one at epicnemium and other towards posterior margin, and a yellow spot close to tegula. Mesoscutum with yellow longitudinal spots distally. Scutellum mostly brownish anteriorly. Propodeum with brownish area basalis, area superomedia with yellow central spot, yellow areae petiolaris, posteroexterna and spiracularis, dull yellow area lateralis. Metasoma with extensively yellow marked tergites. Dull yellow ovipositor sheath. Fore and mid legs with extensively yellow-marked coxae and femora. Hind leg with extensively red marked coxa and femur. Fore wing hyaline.
Pubescense. Gena, vertex, mesosoma and metasoma with dense, whitish setae, setae longer on propleuron, pronotum, mesopleuron and metapleuron.
Etymology.
The name of this new
Grotea
species refers to its uncommon pubescence.
Discussion.
The 12 described species of the
Grotea anguina
species-group have backwards-directed genal projections whilst
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. has inwards-projecting genal projections (Fig. 8).
The three described species of the
Grotea chiloe
species-group have an upwards bowed first tergite, whilst
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. has a straight first tergite (Figs 1, 3, 6).
The two described species of the
Grotea gayi
species-group lack genal projections, have a strong epomia and have a fully closed area superomedia.
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. has genal projections (Fig. 8), lacks epomia and has an incomplete area superomedia (Fig. 9).
Grotea
superba
, the only described species of the
Grotea superba
species-group, is similar to
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. in having a straight first tergite (Figs 1, 3, 6). However,
Grotea superba
has sharp downwards-projecting genal projections, 43 flagellomeres, 9.0-12.5 mm fore wing length, hind wing with a strongly pigmented Cu1 reaching the margin of the wing, and ovipositor always longer than the fore wing.
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. has inwards-projecting genal projections, 35 flagellomeres, 7.4 mm fore wing length, hind wing with Cu1 not reaching margin of the wing (Fig. 5, 10) and ovipositor shorter than the fore wing (Fig. 6). Finally, there are also clear differences in the color pattern between these two species (e.g. black flagellum with a white ring between flagellomeres 24 to 42 in
Grotea superba
and a black flagellum (Figs 1, 3) in
Grotea villosissima
sp. n.). All the differences between
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. and the described species of
Grotea
make the inclusion of this new species into any of the species-groups proposed by
Wahl (1993)
uncertain.
Grotea villosissima
sp. n. is the first species of
Grotea
recorded from Colombia, where at least 5 more species of this genus occur (
Gonzalez and Giraldo 2009
).