Aleiodes trevelyanae Quicke & Shaw, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222930601121288 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8D5087CC-1C6C-9E45-7912-FC5E0D49FF64 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aleiodes trevelyanae Quicke & Shaw |
status |
sp. nov. |
Aleiodes trevelyanae Quicke & Shaw View in CoL , sp. n.
( Figures 20–25 View Figures 20–25 )
Material examined
Holotype: Female, Uganda, Kibale Forest National Park, Kanyawara , August 2002, reared from suspended mummy ( NMS)
Paratype: One female, same locality as holotype, reared August 2002
Description
Length of body 4.1 mm, of fore wing 3.5mm. Antenna with 40 segments.
Otherwise as for Aleiodes barnardae sp. n. except colour. Head, mesosoma and legs largely pale yellow except antenna and dorsal half of scape and pedicellus, stemmaticum, pair of longitudinal submedial stripes on propodeum (holotype) or propodeum largely medially (paratype, Figure 23 View Figures 20–25 ) brown-black; middle part of propodeum yellow-white (holotype); mid tibia and tarsus grey-brown, hind tibia except dorsally on basal third, hind tarsus brown-black, fore and mid coxae and trochanters white-yellow; metasoma white to yellow-white with sublateral dark brown marks on tergites 1–3 and broadly medially on tergite 4. Wing venation largely black-brown, paler on distal veins, pterostigma yellowwhite on basal 0.25 remainder brown-black ( Figures 20 and 24 View Figures 20–25 ). Width of clypeus:width of face51.0:2.3.
Molecular features
Both sequenced individuals possessed a unique substitution in the D3 region of the 28S gene. The CO1 gene fragment sequenced was identical for both individuals and displays 15 unique substitutions, four of which are shown in Figure 4 View Figure 4 . Both length variable parts of the ITS2 sequences had indels of unique length and sequence.
Etymology
Named after Dr Rosie Trevelyan, the ‘chief mzungu female’ of the Tropical Biology Association.
NMS |
National Museum of Scotland - Natural Sciences |
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.