Utrillabracon electropteron Alvarez-Parra & Engel, 2022

Alvarez-Parra, Sergio, Penalver, Enrique, Delclos, Xavier & Engel, Michael S., 2022, A braconid wasp (Hymenoptera, Braconidae) from the Lower Cretaceous amber of San Just, eastern Iberian Peninsula, ZooKeys 1103, pp. 65-78 : 65

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1103.83650

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:079C1F77-A3AA-4158-AE53-5F510C8FA0BE

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/59B73E2C-0514-4DA4-8A87-ABF61D6EF2A8

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:59B73E2C-0514-4DA4-8A87-ABF61D6EF2A8

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Utrillabracon electropteron Alvarez-Parra & Engel
status

sp. nov.

Utrillabracon electropteron Alvarez-Parra & Engel sp. nov.

Fig. 2 View Figure 2

Material.

Holotype, MAP-7819 (SJE2012 49-04), sex unknown, from San Just amber. The holotype is largely preserved as the forewings and hind wings. Some parts of the head, an antenna, and a leg are next to the wings. Undetermined cuticular fragments are visible near the wings. Deposited in the Museo Aragones de Paleontologia ( Fundación Conjunto Paleontológico de Teruel-Dinópolis) in Teruel, Spain. Syninclusions include three other hymenopterans (probable serphitid, platygastrid, and stigmaphronid wasps). The holotype is prepared isolated in an epoxy prism of 20 × 15 mm.

Locality and horizon.

San Just amber-bearing outcrop, Utrillas, Teruel, Spain; Maestrazgo Basin, Escucha Formation, upper Albian ( Peñalver et al. 2007).

Diagnosis.

As for the genus (vide supra).

Description.

Head deformed and incomplete as preserved (Fig. 2A, B View Figure 2 ); antenna partially preserved with 11 flagellomeres covered by setae, multiporous plate sensilla not visible; only distal two maxillary palpomeres preserved, covered by fine setae. Forewings and venation rather complete (Fig. 2C View Figure 2 ), forewing base not preserved, more than 1.31 mm long and 0.53 mm in its maximum width, margin bearing setae; C + Sc + R fused anterobasally, extending along wing margin to pterostigma; pterostigma 4 × longer than wide (0.33 mm vs 0.08 mm); elongate marginal cell, 3 × longer than wide (0.57 mm vs 0.19 mm), reaching wing apex; 1Rs relatively long and curved; Rs + M slightly sinuous; first submarginal cell 2 × longer than wide (0.31 mm vs 0.15 mm), pentagonal; 2Rs slightly sinuous; r-rs oblique, arising medially from pterostigma, 0.08 mm long; 3Rs extending nearly straight until wing margin, 0.55 mm long; r-rs several times longer than abscissa of M between 2Rs and m-cu; 1M curved, 2 × longer than 1Rs (0.14 mm vs 0.07 mm); 2M straight, 0.38 mm long; almost straight 3M, disappearing before wing margin; rs-m nebulous, 0.13 mm long; elongate, pentagonal second submarginal cell, 3 × longer than wide (0.38 mm vs 0.13 mm); trapezoidal third submarginal cell, 0.31 mm long; first discal cell almost 2 × longer than wide (0.21 mm vs 0.12 mm); m-cu distinctly postfurcal (absence of a vein 2Rs + M), 0.12 mm long; lacking 2m-cu; elongate second discal cell, 0.63 mm long; cu-a (nervulus) slightly postfurcal (therefore presence of an exceptionally short 1Cua), 0.06 mm long, perpendicular to 1Cu and A; 1Cu nearly straight, 0.14 mm long; 2Cu strongly curved basally separating 2Cua (0.05 mm long) and 2Cub, latter curved and directed towards wing margin (but without meeting margin); first subdiscal cell 2 × longer than wide (0.13 mm vs 0.07 mm); elongate and narrow second subdiscal cell; A tubular and nearly straight; 1a and 2a not visible. Hind wings and venation rather complete (Fig. 2D View Figure 2 ), hind wing base not preserved, more than 0.94 mm long and 0.23 mm at its maximum width, margin bearing setae; Sc + R fused anterobasally; R1 distally widened with several hamuli beyond its apex; Sc + R not aligned with Rs; 1M short, 0.05 long; rs-m oblique, 0.07 mm long; Rs and M ending as nebulous veins before margin; 1Cu + cu-a inclivitous, 0.03 mm long; short 2Cu, not contacting wing margin. Two fragments of legs visible: a partial femur and a tarsus; four distal tarsomeres preserved covered by fine setae (Fig. 2E, F View Figure 2 ), tarsomere III 0.06 mm long, tarsomere IV 0.04 mm long, tarsomere V 0.08 mm long; pretarsus with paired claws, preapical tooth absent, arolium wide.

Etymology.

The specific epithet is a combination of the Greek ἤλεκτρον ( élektron), meaning, “amber”, and πτηνόν ( ptéron), meaning, "winged creature", and referring to the fact that the holotype is mainly preserved by the wings in amber.