Contributions to the taxonomy, identification, and biogeography of the Palaearctic species of Cymodusa Holmgren (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae: Campopleginae)
Author
Vas, Zoltán
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-07-07
5162
3
268
276
journal article
93649
10.11646/zootaxa.5162.3.4
f73d4736-8f42-46d7-af0e-f9b335bde56b
1175-5326
6810172
05B0B0BC-6BC6-44F6-B35A-9BFB46F551E2
Cymodusa australis
(Smits van Burgst)
Casinaria australis
Smits van Burgst, 1913
Pseudocymodusa ancilla
Seyrig, 1927
syn. nov.
Taxonomical remarks.
Pseudocymodusa ancilla
was included in
Cymodusa
by
Aubert (1959
,
1963
); later it was synonymised with
Cymodusa australis
by the same author (
Aubert 1969
).
Dbar (1985)
agreed with Aubert’s treatment in his revision, he also considered
Cymodusa ancilla
a junior subjective synonym of
Cymodusa australis
. However,
Horstmann (1992)
removed it from synonymy, without any argument to support its valid specific status. Several years later
Horstmann (2013)
pointed out some minor differences to distinguish
Cymodusa ancilla
from
Cymodusa australis
; however, this comparison was only applicable for males. Based on the present examination of large samples (100+ specimens), the extremely minor differences given by
Horstmann (2013)
were not consistent either for males or for females. The main character to separate the females of these species was considered the absent median section of the anterior transverse carina in
Cymodusa ancilla
. However, the careful examination of the
holotype
female specimen of
Cymodusa ancilla
revealed that
Seyrig (1927)
wrongly stated that the median section of the anterior transverse carina is absent and area basalis and area superomedia are not separated in the
holotype
specimen. The median section of the anterior transverse carina is clearly present in the
holotype
, only slightly lower than the adjacent longitudinal carinae, therefore area basalis and area superomedia are distinctly separated. [It is worth to note that
Seyrig (1927)
also failed to recognise the otherwise present pilosity of the eyes, as pointed out by
Aubert (1959)
.] Since it turned out that the median section of anterior transverse carina is present in the
holotype
of
Cymodusa ancilla
, similarly to
Cymodusa australis
, and no other reliable and consistent morphological difference were found to distinguish these species,
Cymodusa ancilla
is considered again a junior subjective synonym of
Cymodusa australis
.
Diagnosis.
Cymodusa australis
exhibits considerable intraspecific variability in size and colouration of legs (however, on a morphological basis it was not possible to delimit reliably distinguishable subgroups due to the overlapping character states). Females of the species can be distinguished from the other Palaearctic species of the “australis” species group (sensu
Dbar (1985))
by the following. Ovipositor sheath 0.8–0.9× as long as hind tibia. Propodeal carination as in
Figs 7–8
; note that costulae are often obsolescent distally but proximally always discernible, area superomedia is never conspicuously elongate, and area petiolaris is always wide. Nervellus intercepted by the spectral discoidella. Tegula yellowish, metasoma black, second and often third tergites with posterior margins reddish, hind femur orange to dark brownish, hind tibia orange to brownish, basally with a paler spot (which is variably distinct but always discernible), subbasally and apically more or less darkened. The identification of males is often difficult, only the typical males can be identified reliably, since the males of some, more or less similar species are unknown, and males lack several important specific characters of females such as convergence of eyes and ovipositor length. Body length ca.
4.5–7.5 mm
.