First record of the genus Basalys Westwood, 1833 (Hymenoptera: Diapriidae) from China, with descriptions of two new species
Author
Hou, Zi
Author
Xu, Zaifu
text
Zoological Systematics
2016
41
3
337
341
journal article
10.11865/zs.201639
2095-6827
5364763
1EBAD0E9-DD7F-4596-9039-783133FF8272
Genus
Basalys
Westwood, 1833
Basalys
Westwood, 1833: 343
;
Ashmead, 1893: 407
;
Masner, 1964: 85
;
Kozlov, 1978: 594
;
Nixon, 1980: 10
;
Huggert, 1982: 189
; Masner & Gracía, 2002: 70;
Rajmohana, 2006: 28
.
Type
species:
Basalys
fumipennis
Westwood, by monotypy.
Diagnosis. Female antenna 11- or 12-segmented, with abrupt 3- or 4-segmented club. Male antenna 14-segmented. Pronotum usually with thick woolly collar. Notauli absent. Mesoscutellum with distinct basal fovea. Propodeum with area between median keel and plica almost glabrous. Fore wing always with distinct basal vein. Syntergite with anterior margin straight and complete, without notch or furrow (Masner & Gracía, 2002;
Rajmohana, 2006
).
Biology. Some of these tiny wasps were reared from Diptera puparia (
Wright
et al
., 1947
;
Notton, 1991
). Several were collected in ant nests (Masner & Gracía, 2002;
Loiácono
et al
., 2013
).
Distribution. Worldwilde.
Key to Chinese species of the genus
Basalys
(based on female).
1. Head 1.08 times as long as wide in dorsal view, 1.65 times as long as high in lateral view; head behind eyes slightly wider than mesosoma; eye 1.67 times as long as malar space; petiole with some longitudinal keels on dorsal surface ...........
B. sinensis
sp. nov.
Head 0.86 times as long as wide in dorsal view, 0.92 times as long as high in lateral view; head behind eyes much wider than mesosoma; eye 2.27 times as long as malar space; petiole without longitudinal keels on dorsal surface ....................
B. leleji
sp. nov.