Mahinda Krombein

Kimsey, Lynn S., Mita, Toshiharu & Pham, Hong Thai, 2016, New species of the genus Mahinda Krombein, 1983 (Hymenoptera, Chrysididae, Amiseginae), ZooKeys 551, pp. 145-154 : 146-147

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.551.6168

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:82929974-594E-41EC-9BF8-AEFD68CC7610

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DDB1160D-8DF6-8E31-B795-901F387A64B6

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Mahinda Krombein
status

 

Taxon classification Animalia Hymenoptera Chrysididae

Genus Mahinda Krombein View in CoL

Mahinda Krombein, 1983:28. Type: Mahinda saltator Krombein, 1983:29. Monobasic and original designation

Diagnosis.

Female Mahinda are brachypterous with the wings reduced to small pads, unlike female Atoposega , which are fully winged. They have the lateral propodeal angles sharp and conical, or spine-like and resemble females of Atoposega and Exopapua . They differ from female Exopapua in having a strongly convex pronotum, short metanotum, lack an omaulus and have a gradually sloping propodeum. Mahinda females differ from those of Atoposega in the hindcoxa with one or no dorsal longitudinal carinae (two in Atoposega ), mesopleuron with a narrow, parallel-sided ventromedial longitudinal groove (anteriorly carinate and U-shaped in Atoposega ). In addition Mahinda females have two sharp submedial angles above the posterior propodeal declivity, which do not occur in Atoposega . Male Mahinda have the wings are fully developed and the lateral propodeal angles are not spine-like, but short and conical. Other diagnostic features include the lack of an occipital carina, no omaulus or scrobal sulcus on the mesopleuron, and a long slender stigma + R1. Both sexes have a well-developed malar sulcus.

Description.

Head: without occipital carina; eyes covered with short setulae (males) or setulae minute (females); vertical malar sulcus present; propleuron with angulate lateral ridge; scapal basin densely cross-ridged; male flagellum elongate, filiform and cylindrical; female flagellum short and fusiform, flattened on one surface. Mesosoma: pronotum subequal in length to scutum, with short posteromedial groove and pit before lateral lobe; scutum with faint parapsides and well-developed notauli; mesopleuron with (females) or without omaulus (males), without scrobal sulcus, ventromedially flattened with groove and associated U-shaped, carina edged pit (males), convex with simple sulcus or line (females); male fully winged, forewing Rs extended by dark streak in abrupt angle, medial vein arising before cu-a, R1 not clearly indicated, stigma greatly elongate and slender; female strongly brachypterous, forewing pad with several visible veins; metanotum subequal in length to scutellum along midline, with punctate medial enclosure; propodeum with long acute lateral angles in females or short, obtuse angles in males, and abruptly declivous posterior surface; hindcoxa with one (male) or without dorsobasal carina (female); tarsal claw with large medial and small subbasal teeth. Metasoma: integument dull, and densely shagreened, or highly polished and impunctate, vestiture short and decumbent. Sternum I produced into large basal keel.

Distribution

(Fig. 2). Mahinda occurs in Sri Lanka, Vietnam and on the islands of Borneo and Sulawesi. Specimens are rare in collections.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Chrysididae