Occipitotus Singh & van Achterberg, 2022
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5133.1.2 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:26382912-0102-4906-8DAB-4A4395F2AD70 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6520880 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1A7987B6-D45A-B526-FF7A-B5A362878E1B |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Occipitotus Singh & van Achterberg |
status |
gen. nov. |
Occipitotus Singh & van Achterberg gen. nov.
( Figures 2–6 View FIGURES 2 View FIGURES 3 View FIGURES 4 View FIGURES 5 View FIGURES 6 )
Type species: Occipitotus langpramensis Singh & van Achterberg sp. nov.
Etymology. The generic name Occipitotus is masculine and refers to the complete occipital carina on the head; “occipit” stands for occipital carina and “totus” (Latin for “complete”).
Diagnosis. Antenna with 22–30 flagellomeres (25–30 in female; 22–28 in male), longer than fore wing ( Figs 2B View FIGURES 2 , 4B View FIGURES 4 ), scapus small, subglobose, shorter ventrally than dorsally; occipital carina complete ( Figs 3A View FIGURES 3 , 4C View FIGURES 4 ), ventrally straight or slightly curved reaching base of mandible (rarely reduced near base of mandible) and raised into a flange; remaining widely separated from hypostomal carina ( Figs 6A–E View FIGURES 6 ); hypoclypeal depression deep and small ( Fig. 2E View FIGURES 2 ); clypeus slightly convex or flat, not protruding beyond the level of the face ( Fig. 2A View FIGURES 2 ); malar suture obsolescent; pronope large and deep ( Figs 3F View FIGURES 3 , 4C View FIGURES 4 ); mesoscutum glabrous and shiny; notauli finely crenulate, terminating into rugose area posteriorly ( Figs 3B View FIGURES 3 , 4D View FIGURES 4 ); vein r of fore wing distinctly oblique and arising from basal 0.4–0.5 of pterostigma; first subdiscal cell of fore wing elongate ( Figs 5B, 5D View FIGURES 5 ); fore wing vein 1-M of male widened, as wide as or slightly wider than length of cu-a ( Fig. 5D View FIGURES 5 ); propodeum coarsely rugose-reticulate, with weak median carina anteriorly ( Fig. 4D View FIGURES 4 ) or entire; dorsal carinae of metasomal tergite I not united medially and tergite coarsely rugosereticulate with (feeble) ( Fig. 3C View FIGURES 3 ) or without ( Fig. 3G View FIGURES 3 ) median carina; metasomal tergite II longitudinally striate (nearly) complete ( Figs 3C View FIGURES 3 , 4A View FIGURES 4 ) or anterior half striate ( Fig. 5A View FIGURES 5 ); tergite II slightly longer than tergite III, feebly striate antero-laterally ( Fig. 4A View FIGURES 4 ) or smooth and shiny ( Fig. 5A View FIGURES 5 ); tergites IV–VI smooth and sparsely setose ( Figs 3C View FIGURES 3 , 4A View FIGURES 4 ); length of ovipositor sheath 0.5–0.7 times as long as first tergite ( Figs 2B View FIGURES 2 , 4A View FIGURES 4 ).
Biology. Host unknown, but collected from horsetails, Equisetum sp. ( Equisetaceae ; Fig. 7B View FIGURES 7 ) along with an unidentified species of Coleoptera ( Chrysomelidae ; Fig. 7A View FIGURES 7 ); considering the biology of other species of the members of this subfamily Exothecinae , it is likely to be an ectoparasitoid of coleopterous larvae on Equisetum sp.
Distribution. Oriental.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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