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English Pages 73 Year 1956
A GENERIC REVIEW OF THE AMISEGINAE, GROUP OF PHASMATID EGG PARASITES, AND NOTES ON THE ADELPHINAE (HYMENOPTERA,
BETHYLOIDEA,
BY KARL Research
Entomology
United
States
A
CHRYSID1DAE)
V. KR0MBEIN
Branch,
Agricultural
Department
Research
Service,
of Agriculture
one of the of genera reviewed here constitutes and known of groups very Hymenoptera. rarely poorly The component of them highly specialized genera, many forms, some of them having have not been placed together previously, been assigned to a variety of different, or even monotypic, fam The
complex collected
ilies. Members ferred
of the complex groups
such diverse
have been described as the Chalcidoidea,
in, or trans
to, Bethylidae, of the Tiphiidae, and even Cleptidae, Myrmosinae Chrysididae, a no determinable in separate family with affinities, the Alieni dae (or Alieniscidae). interest in the group was aroused several years ago when My E. S. Ross asked me, in connection with my studies on the wasps a new and the Solomon of New Guinea to examine Islands, " " alienid from New Guinea. Study of this species and of sev eral other more or less closely related genera in the collections Museum of the U. S. National convinced me of the advisability of the group. This paper, then, pre of a generic reclassification sents a revised characterization of the subfamily Amiseginae, a and descrip key to the known genera, revised generic diagnoses, tions of several new genera and species. Brief discussions are on the taxonomic also presented of members sub of the history and rela family, the known host relationships, zoogeography, Some notes are presented also on a tionships with other groups. the Adelphinae, since it may very closely related subfamily, that established this should be group eventually merged with Amiseginae. (147) TRANS,
amer.
ent.
soc,
lxxxii.
be the
148
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
to the follow It is a pleasure to acknowledge my indebtedness as who have in this detailed assisted op ing specialists study names: their Dr. former the Director of posite George Arnold, National of Southern Rhodesia, Museum for the loan of the arnoldi Benoit; Dr. William L. Brown, unique type of Alieniscus of the Museum of at Harvard Jr., Comparative College Zoology for the loan of the unique specimen of a new genus and species of Adelphinae described below ;Dr. Kenneth W. Cooper, head of the Department of Biology at the University of Rochester for the donation in Costa
him
cional
of material
Rica; de Agronomia, of his Duckeia
of Amisega and Adelphe collected by da Costa Lima of the Escola Na for the donation of a pair of para Brasil,
Dr.
A.
of Cornell Uni cyanea; Dr. H. E. Evans loan of several specimens of Adelphe; Dr. Delfa of the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale at Genoa for Guiglia the type of Promesitius available making flavicollis Kieffer; Mr. E. F. Riek of the Commonwealth and Industrial Re Scientific search Organization at Canberra, Australia, for the donation of of some of the Australian paratypes species described him, by types
versity
for the
and
for making available a specimen for study and description of a new genus and species of Amiseginae which he had bor rowed from the Paris Museum; Dr. E. S. Ross of the California of Sciences at San for first stimulating my Academy Francisco, interest in this group by the loan of the new genus and species from New
Guinea described of North below; Dr. H. K. Townes State College at Raleigh for the loan of material col lected by him and his family in North Carolina and the Philip of the British Museum pines; and Dr. I. H. H. Yarrow (Natural for at considerable of time, History) searching out, expenditure and loaning to me the African material studied by J. A. Reid, and for many valuable notes on the Cameron and Kieffer types in that Museum. Carolina
Historical
Review
In considering the taxonomic it will history of this subfamily be more helpful to treat the three component series of genera rather than to attempt to relate the history in strictly separately, order. chronological
KARL
V.
KROMBEIN
149
The of the relatively taxonomic winged primitive, history American Cameron Series has been rather untroubled. Amisega was considered by that author (1888) to belong to the Cleptinae in the Chrysididae. review (1889), in his monumental Mocsary of the Chrysididae, erected the subfamily for this Amiseginae as and it the first followed single genus placed by the subfamily Ashmead followed classification (1902) Cleptinae. Mocsary's so that the Amiseginae but reversed the order of subfamilies stood last (seventh), and added to it a new genus from North Costa Lima (1936) described Duckeia America, Mesitiopterus. and placed it near A?nisega. The assignment of the brachypterous and entirely wingless Old World genera has resulted in several considerably divergent I suppose that this has been due to several factors, viewpoints. of thoracic structure occasioned including the modifications by and aptery, the fact that the typically subaptery telescoped terminal abdominal are rarely exserted, and the non segments of the primitive winged American availability genera to most of the workers who described the Old World genera. The earliest described of the Australasian Series is genus for Walker, 1866, (preoccupied by Newman), Torre proposed the substitute name, Myrmecomi female which genus was based on a brachypterous Walker a to be male chalcidoid. Promesi erroneously supposed a of was described synonym tins, Myrmecomimesis, by Kieffer of the family Proctotrupidae. (1905) in the Bethylinae Later Kieffer to the tribe Mesitiini of the (1914) assigned Promesitius This tribal arrangement, bethylid based subfamily Bethylinae. on the acute posterolateral in the four angles of the propodeum component genera, grouped together a heterogeneous assemblage which are now recognized as belonging to the Rhopalosomatidae, and Bethylidae. Reid on p. 409) Chrysididae (1941, footnote that a Promesitius in suggested sub belonged highly aberrant with several other undescribed family of Chrysididae African On an earlier page genera. in discussing Pro (p. 407) Reid, the significant makes statement mesitius, "The (italics mine), head is like that of a Chrysidid, in particular and of Amisega,
Myrmecopsis which Dalla mesis. This
TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
150 quite
REVIEW
unlike
Cresmophaga
that and
Myrmecomimesis,
OF
AMISEGINAE
. . ." Riek of a Bethylid; herein Ootheres, placed as Cleptidae. and Exova
(1955) described as synonyms of The Philippine
al Kieffer, Cladobethylus 1922, was assigned to the Bethylinae, an was it member its that anomalous author though recognized of that group. Rohweria The Philippine Fouts, 1925, was de a true scribed in the Bethylidae it ran to Mesitius, because in Kieffer's bethylid, The genus which African
(1914). key has caused the most
is Alienus
within
the
1919 (preoccupied by Hand the substitute name, Oben proposed In describing Alienus from a single apterous individ bergerella. ual of indeterminate of its affin sex, Bridwell was so uncertain ities that he erected a new family for it, the Alienidae, which he lirsch),
Series for which
confusion
Bridwell,
Strand
believed fitted best in the Proctotrupoidea. He mentioned why it could not be associated with the Ceraphronidae, Bethylidae, and other families of the Embolemidae, Dryinidae, Pompilidae, but apparently, at least in print, did not consider the Scolioidea, of assignment in the Chrysidoidea. Brues and possibility a Melander made brilliant in their guess (1932) Conspectus to the Chrysidoidea (p. 25) in which they assigned the Alienidae the with and along Cleptidae Chrysididae. However, they are the innocent cause of one of the resulting erroneous assignments for this family. from Bridwell's Working original description out the Alienidae in two places. Their couplet alone, they keyed 15 (pp. 474-475), which the Terebrantia from the separates on is based a sec the of and Aculeata, mainly type ovipositor, but not character is whether the trochanters ondary, exclusive, are two-segmented. Since the type of ovipositor was unknown in the Alienidae, and Bridwell had characterized it (erroneously) as having two-segmented Brues and Melander trochanters, pru it out in both the Terebrantia and Aculeata. In dently keyed the first group it keyed a out among number of families of and in the latter it keyed out with various wing Chalcidoidea, less Proctotrupoidea and Aculeata. This was quite a sensible provision except that in the index the only reference to Alienidae is to the page where it keys out in the Chalcidoidea. Inevita the assignment to bly, another worker was bound to overlook
KARL
V. KROMBEIN
151
to notice that the family in the Conspectus, the Chrysidoidea was seemingly and to ask the to Chalcidoidea, firmly assigned This action was himself just where it fitted in that superfamily. the group as the taken by Essig (1942, p. 650) who assigned last family totrupoidea. not possible
the Proc in the Chalcidoidea preceding immediately was of Alienus the correct assignment Actually,
of the undescribed specimens brachypterous in my hands, for Brid Guinea were placed due to breakage dur of Alienus aenigmaticus, to Washington, from Hawaii other specimens consisted of only a thorax glued to a point, plus a detached head or might not belong with the thorax. and abdomen which might of the almost wingless and Critical species comparison study
until species from New well's unique type ing shipment with
thorax of Alienus Guinea with the wingless aenigma and convinced me that the head and its abdomen, ticus, putative two belong in the same subfamily though in discrete genera, and from New
head and abdomen are actually also that the detached parts of was the still realization that More BridwelFs important type. the differences between these two genera and the winged Ameri were of a very can representatives to the Amiseginae assigned and related to the Alienus was apparently
loss of wings in the former two overlooked genera. (1941) in by Reid on of work the thorax and his masterful apterous brachypterous but study of his work convinced me that the new Hymenoptera, of highly aberrant Chrysididae proposed subfamily tentatively consists of genera belonging (p. 409, footnote) actually by Reid This to the same group as Alienus. conclusion was borne out minor
nature
studied by Reid was made available to me. later, when material The recently described African genus, Alieniscus Benoit, 1951, was assigned by that author to a separate family of the Acu leata along with Obenbergerella without further discussion of the as was his privi affinities of the family. Benoit also proposed, in or lege, that the family should be known as the Alieniscidae consonance the original of the family name. after examining it and (1951), placed Alieniscus, in the tiphiid subfamily Myrmosinae, as a new Obenbergerella tribe to which he applied the name Obenbergerellini. der
to preserve
Ghesqui?re
TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
152
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
Distribution
of the Amiseginae is of a very curious dis the evidence and is very striking in favor of its type, a The had southern group is represented by sev having origin. areas? eral genera and a few species in each of three main east America north from de and of the Rio Janeiro tropical an extension northward into the Austral and Transi Andes, with The
distribution
continuous
tion Zones
a narrow
from strip of South Africa New and from Australia, Rhodesia, The American and India. Borneo, Burma Philippines, Guinea, Series has three genera and nine described forms, the Australian Series comprises eight valid genera and twenty-four species, and the Cape
of North
America, to Southern
region
The Series includes three genera and four species. are and small with insects habits, retiring Amiseginae relatively it seems probable that a few undescribed genera and a number of undescribed species still remain to be collected. In connection with this distribution it is to be noted that the areas the each form from genera major separate series of rather the African
the American genera are distin Thus, in eyes bare, except Mesitiopterus, guished by having fully a small postscutellum, the propodeal dorsum developed wings, on without dentate posterolateral angles, no suture anteriorly an tarsal with erect inner and claws the tooth. disk, mesopleural closely
related
forms.
the
Series the eyes are hairy, tegulae are present are brachypterous, females except Atopogyne the fore to and the reduced hind wings apparently wings being tiny pads is very large, the posterolateral absent, the postscutellum angles are dentate, an oblique suture is present an of the propodeum disk, and the tarsal claws have an teriorly on the mesopleural In the Australasian
but
the
inner tooth. The African genera have hairy eyes except er are and lack tegulae, the post Obenberg ella, entirely wingless covers almost the entire apical part of the thoracic scutellum an oblique suture is pres is not dentate, dorsum, the propodeum erect
on the mesopleural ent anteriorly disk, and the tarsal claws are forms are unquestionably The American the most prim simple. the most highly derivative. itive, and the South African some of which serve as hosts during the egg The Phasmatidae, for certain, somewhat though stage
if not all, of the Amiseginae, exhibit a similar broader distribution. latest work G?nther's
KARL
V.
on the systematic (1953) these insects contains maps
153
KROMBEIN
and zoogeography arrangement the distribution of most charting
of of oc
also show that the phasmatids These maps the subfamilies. cur predominantly in the Southern Hemisphere. Their distribu for a few tion is somewhat broader than that of the Amiseginae, occur the in southern around Mediterranean Japan, species Basin, the Malagasy sub-region, New Zealand and the Solomons, col It is possible, of course, that more thorough and in Chile. the fauna may demonstrate lecting of the microhymenopterous in at least some of these areas. presence of Amiseginae Host
Relationships
some prob The few published rearing records indicate with are parasitic on the of the Amiseginae ability that all members the available egg stage of Phasmatidae. However, rearing rec are so scanty, and the classifi ords and specimens of Amiseginae cation of the walking sticks is so chaotic, that it is not possible at this time to determine the extent to which the distribution is with that of various correlated groups amisegines sticks. walking The type series of Duckeia cyanea Costa Lima emerged various
of of
in from the eggs of the pseudophasmatine, October ohrt Prisopus manni laid in a row on a plant in the Horto Bot?nico, (Licht.), Rio de Janeiro. Costa Lima included a photograph of the row of 17 eggs, each containing one emergence hole of the parasitic Dr. Costa Lima advised me wasp. {in litt.) that in each case the parasite the of the egg. The emerged through operculum was series of parasitized found in and no further eggs August, data
rearing
were
given.
Milliron (1950) reported rearing Mesitiopterous from eggs of the common heteronemiine walking
kahlii stick
Ashm. of North
The parasitized America, Diapheromera femorata eggs Say. were collected, presumably on the ground, at Brainerd, Minne from sota, in the summer of 1947 and the adult wasps emerged June 11 to 20, 1948. Milliron noted that the wasps emerged of the host egg without through the operculum rupturing the egg shell. There is an unpublished rearing record from this same host
inWisconsin.
sitized TRANS.
eggs brought AMER. ENT.
Adult
wasps emerged in January into the laboratory the preceding
SOC, LXXXII.
from para October.
154
OF
REVIEW
AMISEGINAE
of Myrme (1955) reported that in Australia specimens M. coeruleus (Riek), M. rubri nigripedicel (Kieff.), M. M. and (Riek) semiglabra (Riek) bispiuosa (Riek), femur and wilkiusoni Mach, had been reared from eggs of Podacauthus Riek
comimesis
also from eggs of Didymuria bispiuosa and M. semiglabra sticks of these Both violescens (Leach). walking podacanthine on on the the broadcast feed and eggs foliage of Eucalyptus of M.
ground.
It
seems
rather unlikely morpha buprestoides (Stoll), serve as hosts of Amiseginae, to have fossorial legs. Relationships
of
the
like Aniso walking sticks, in the soil could which oviposit since none of the latter are known
that
Amiseginae
to
other
Chrysididae
as delimited and defined by Mocsary the Chrysididae, one in to two main be (1889, 1890), there appear divisions, convex which the abdomen is beneath and the integument of the is concave thin, the other in which the abdomen body relatively Within
beneath
and the integument of the body very much thickened. are correlated with the host re characters morphological of the two divisions, of the first division members lationships in the eggs of walking sticks or on sawfly pre being parasitic of the second division their cocoons, and members pupae within of other wasps and bees. being almost cleptoparasites entirely The thickened and capability of rolling into a ball integument the concave abdominal by flexing the head and thorax against as protection venter serve members of the second division from These
by adults of the host wasp or bee. first division is composed of three subfamilies, the Clepti and Adelphinae. The members of the first sub nae, Amiseginae on the prepupal family, so far as known, are parasitic stage of attack The
sawflies
in their cocoons. 1802, Heterocoelia
The
described
genera
include
Cleptes Latreille, Dahlbom, 1854, Cleptidea Mocsary, 1911. It is probable that the last 1904, and Godfrinia Kieffer, or only subgenerically two are either congeneric distinct. The are a more
and primitive group than the generalized or and from them as may be separated Amiseginae Adelphinae, follows: head much wider than high; eyes comparatively much Cleptinae
KARL
V.
KROMBEIN
155
in both sexes robust and bulging; mandibles space shorter, not longitudi apical teeth; malar nally grooved ; sculpture of lower part of front not differentiated from that on upper part; upper part of front with median thorax relatively the width about two-thirds groove; broader, the length; abdomen the first two segments longer, relatively
smaller and with several
not
subequal in length to the third and fourth; anterior terga flexed under laterally, but not divided into distinct laterotergites by a a and first sternum without median keel. groove ; The remaining of the first division, subfamilies the Amiseginae are very closely and Adelphinae, and future material related, demonstrate that they should be merged into a single sub The chief differences of importance between them are: family. the lateral surface of pronotum in Adelphinae has a marginal is lacking in Amiseginae groove above, which ; the posterolateral lobes touch the tegulae in the former but are separated pronotal from the tegulae in the latter group ; the mid coxae are narrowly
may
in Adelphinae, in Amiseginae separated ; in the fe contiguous of Adelphinae males the tarsal segments beneath have moder in the Amiseginae ately dense, suberect bristles, while they have two rows of tiny spines ; in the males of Adelphe, the only adel are known, the mandible is a relatively phine in which males foliaceous structure with one or two small acute huge, flattened, teeth at tip, while in the Amisegiifcae the mandible is much less more it is broader on one and flattened developed though robust, or two sides as contrasted with the of slender, subulate mandible females. Amiseginae Subfamily
Sexual
Characterization
is very slight in the genera which are dimorphism fully in both sexes, exhibited winged and only in shape of mandibles, characters of retracted abdominal characters of (and segments hind tarsi of Duckeia). In most of the genera in which the fe males are brachypterous or wingless, are fully winged the males and there is strong sexual dimorphism. trans,
amer.
ent.
soc,
LXXXII.
156
of
review
amiseginae
narrow
in frontal view usually (figs. 1-2, 5-12) less pyriform in outline, the eyes moderately to well labrum space moderately developed; cealed beneath clypeus, apical margin rounded; Head
or
more
broader
robust,
and
palpi
long
a half
from
elongate, as the
segment the second;
lower
or
half
cave
in Cladobethylus (flat a narrow median without from
(fig.
4) to
to
a
two
4-segmented; insertion rather as
third
or less more slender, an acute in male tip, sides (fig. 4a) ; labial antennae geniculate,
as
long
scape or as
raised; strongly rest of antenna,
opposite
and
shallowly Thorax (figs.
con and shallowly of front broadly and of front flat upper Colocar), part to moderately ocelli groove; separated, slightly rather the posterior narrowly separated pair two-thirds and
in Rohweria, except inner eye margins;
behind
strongly bulging, con largely rudimentary, a median without clypeus
two or three in and first except segments pedicel flagellar as to seven-eighths also and from one-third elongate pedicel in Iudothrix; the first flagellar the first flagellar except segment as long as and from one and a third to five times also elongate
Indothrix; long as
small
female
more
elongate,
malar
tapering gradually on one or flattened
maxillary palpi rim of antennal
3-segmented, inner 13-segmented;
very
in
mandibles carina; cross and section
longitudinal circular in
and
to
very poorly developed, temples head in females; fourth of eye on posterior third.
upper concave
obtusely beneath
angulate broadly
as long as broad rather narrow, about twice or more ; 13-24) as lobes to tegulae in almost large, extending posterolaterally as viewed lobes these and brachypterous divergent forms, winged more or less quadrate and surface of pronotum the dorsal above;
pronotum fully from
a marginal
lacking
furrow
on
disk
and
anteriorly
prepectus
laterally;
present. as figured or apterous; venation brachypterous Fully winged, transverse anal in fully winged forms without hind wing lobe; of the basal medial vein of forewing beyond origin meeting erect setae rather very sparse; long slender, (figs. 26, 27) Legs a small erect at base without above the hind pair contiguous,
34), vein
trochanters narrow be
basal
one-segmented; often portion
apparently
tibia
vestigial;
two-segmented; tarsus fore
hind
femur
paler
in color tibial
hind causing the smaller 1-2-2,
spurs
without
comb;
tarsi
two
with
beneath. spines Abdomen usually relatively broad, short, (figs. 28-31), four visible with the venter convex, segments flattened, fifth
and
sixth
somewhat
in males)
exserted
of four-fifths about very constituting large, or more distinct visible laterotergites terga with under
in
forms
with
rounded well-developed in female ments very in other
Chrysididae.
strongly median elongate,
flattened keel each
on
near
narrowed
abruptly thus
; first and entire
the
which
abdomens; basal half;
telescoped
(figs. 32 median vein. coxae
lamella; this base,
trochanter
to
one
on
hind
rows
of
tiny
rather strongly the (occasionally second segments
two first length; are abruptly flexed a sternum with first
retracted apical within the preceding
seg as
KARL
to
Key well
1. Wings ?
developed to small reduced
Wings
as
carina occipital or dentate podeum
SERIES
its length in middle 0.2-0.4 carina dorsum of absent; both AMERICAN sexes;
apparently
0.75-1.6
developed,
present
and
dorsally
angulate
as
times
long as scutel dorsum of pro
laterally;
AUSTRALASIAN
posterolaterally;
.5
as long as eye height; a with quite long, 0.6 times temple ; frontal rugose flange posteriorly concavity ; posterior coarsely of propodeum a deep with abruptly pronotum declivous; on posterior Brazil.Duckeia Costa Lima groove half;
median Malar
space not temple and closely
short, frontal
relatively
0.11-0.17
as
times
into
interocular
distance
flanged;
posterior furrows Parapsidal width
and
; pronotum
Parapsidal ocular
at
relatively
ocellus
rounding
as
times
long
notaulices times
front absent; half the head
ocellus as
long
as
eye
height; or finely gradually
scutum;
broader,
width; Nearctic
Mesitiopterus not postscutellum
area of triangular lateral darkened areas; curved inward and abruptly
from
the head
as scutum
;
Cameron
.Amisega
median
sculpture cell ginal
punctate
front present; narrower, 0.36-0.42 times the
0.92-0.97
shorter,
anterior 1.25
longer,
both
anterior
relatively
Region furrows present,
distance
5. Enclosed
notaulices at
as
long
concavity delicately dorsal surface of propodeum lin?ate; surface not grooved .4 ; pronotum
Neotropical
streak
almost
the
inter
pronotum Region Ashmead in
differing closing stub of
mar
from radial upward of propodeum a long, acute with spur; posterolaterally Borneo new genus and Burma.Atopogyne, unknown; area of postscutellum Enclosed median in shape, variable the sculpture different from that of lateral darkened streak almost areas; closing cell outward and from stub of marginal curving evenly upward radial dorsum of propodeum a with vein; posterolaterally only dorsum
vein; males
?
6.
?
sclerite,
tegulae,
space
strong surface
?
transverse
more
much
lum;
4.
than
.3
Postscutellum
?
or
larger
as scutellum; long occipital rounded posterolaterally;
propodeum
3. Malar
.2
no
pads
.10 a narrow
SERIES ?
Amiseginae
functional
absent
entirely 2. Postscutellum times
of
Genera and
157
KR0MBEIN
V.
blunt .6 small, angulation First and second terga with larger punctures separated by interspaces not much than the diameter of a puncture; coxa above hind larger a without carina outer females basally along margin; known; Australia Dalla Torre .Myrmecomimesis and
First never
quently margin trans,
amer.
second less
than
much except ent.
terga three
with times
hind greater; in Indothrix;
soc,
LXXXII.
finer, the coxa
the punctures, of a puncture,
sparser diameter above
Oriental
carinate forms
.7
basally
interspaces and fre along
outer
158
review
rather
7. Mesopleuron oblique ments ?
furrow; least 3.5
at
of
uniformly antennae very as
times
antennae
much
flagellar coxa carinate
8. Hind
elongate, as wide.8
shorter are
seg
flagellar
a moderately separating rest than delicately sculptured in Cladobethylus inter where except as long as wide.9 3.0 times furrow
oblique is more
segments above
an
without
upper part intermediate
sculptured,
long
an above with Mesopleuron area which small triangular of disk; mediate
amiseginae
at
outer base pronotum along margin; a short median with the pos convex, groove strongly posteriorly, terior declivous and intermediate margin quite abruptly thick; near base; not tuberculate beneath segments apical margin flagellar or very sternum of second and broadly incurved; straight slightly females
?
new
unknown
coxa
Hind
; Philippines.Colocar, at base; above carinate
not
pronotum not margin
genus convex,
moderately
intermedi groove, posterior thickened; a small subbasal beneath with pos tubercle; segments a relatively sternum with median of second deep, new genus unknown ; India.Indothrix, ; females emargination as long 3.0 times 9. Antenna intermediate segments elongate, flagellar median
without ate
flagellar terior margin
as wide; head the height than very greater elongate, abdominal lower front with strongly sides; converging hairs ; body with only weak metallic only a few scattered females .Cladobethylus Philippines unknown; ?
the
width, sterna
with
reflections
;
Kieffer
as at most 1.5 times intermediate segments shorter, flagellar a bit than height; head the width greater shorter, long as wide; blue sterna metallic rather densely haired abdominal ; ; body strongly Fouts females .Rohweria Philippines unknown;
Antenna
10.
Scutum
lateral
without
malar
space
a
with
and wing visible; pads present, claws wTith an erect tarsal groove; hind dorsum of thoracic dentate; angles a bit second fourth than through longer tegulae
lobes;
longitudinal
inner tooth; posterolateral as long as or basitarsus
SERIES .11
segments; AUSTRALASIAN ?
with
Scutum of
lateral
are
these
lobes
which
malar
present;
conceal
tegulae
not
grooved;
space
dorsum of thoracic posterolateral angles and than second long as or a bit longer 1.2 times
Pronotum and on
posterior well
known ?
as
long
and
AFRICAN
and
of lengths without
scutellum scutum, a median groove
dorsal surface of absent; parapsidal into the oblique rounding gradually developed, males the head head width 0.9 times height;
half;
0.6-0.8
parapsidal
rounded; third segments;
combined convex, furrows
strongly
surface; Guinea ; New
Pronotum lum
as
postscutellum,
podeum terior
if vestiges wings tarsal claws simple; as hind basitarsus
.13
SERIES 11.
and
times
as
postscutellum, furrows strongly
long with
.Exopapua, combined lengths a median groove
as
developed;
dorsal
new of on
surface
scutum,
pro pos un
genus scutel
posterior half; of propodeum
KARL
in middle, the posterior to dorsal surface;
short, especially and perpendicular
abruptly width 1.1
declivous times
the
with four acute of propodeum above the outer teeth, as long as scape segment; long, as long as first flagellar con and first three pedicel segments; pronotum strongly flagellar fused metapleuron lateral surface of propodeum and vex; smooth;
Posterior
surface
very
pair
males ?
surface head
.12
height 12.
159
KROMBEIN
V.
unknown
Posterior acute
teeth
are
which
as pedicel and long notum rather weakly of propodeum 13. Thoracic
than
two
convex; or wholly
with
coarse,
with
above
shorter first
partly
dorsum
tudinal
Riek
; Australia.Exova of propodeum
surface
first
only
flagellar
segments flagellar fused metapleuron
a
lateral
segment; combined; and lateral
pair
of
scape
as
pro surface
or rugulose; males punctate known; Australia .Myrmecomimesis Dalla Torre confluent in longi punctures arranged
not extending to apex a definite dorsal surface dorsum, femora and beneath above with erect tibiae along midline; long, scattered confluent upper coarse, setae; part of head with punctures; males Zululand and Southern Rhodesia unknown; of
rows;
apical
of postscutellum margin the propodeum with
with
small
thoracic
Alieniscus ?
Thoracic
dorsum
of postscutellum the propodeum and
beneath with 14.
?-
in middle without tibiae
above
small
Frontal
Benoit
or finely punctures, apex lin?ate; with of thoracic apex coinciding dorsum, a dorsal surface femora along midline; erect without of head upper setae; part scattered
punctures.14
separated with concavity
transverse dorsum rugae ; thoracic strong fewer, and antennal short finely closely longitudinally lin?ate; flagellum fusiform twice that of postscutellum ;median length ; known pronotal sexes ; Pondoland from both new genus .Reidia, Frontal with more arched thoracic dor numerous, concavity carinae; sum with fine and scattered fine antennal shagreening punctures; flagellum filiform; as postscutellum;
median males
pronotal unknown;
about length Town
1.3
times
Obenbergerella
The This opterus
series
includes
and Duckeia,
American
at present all known
as
long
Cape
Strand
Series three
genera, Amisega, Mesiti in both sexes. It is the most in the subfamily and rather easily separa
primitive assemblage ble from the more specialized
and African Australasian Series of the Old World fauna. are common to The following characters all three genera except as noted, the character peculiar to this series alone being set in italics: malar space with longitudinal TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
160
OF
REVIEW
AMISEGINAE
ex in Mesitiopterus; eyes bare or with carina of dorsum prono setae; occipital absent; tremely in Duckeia; tum without median groove except longitudinal in size; parapsidal furrows present, tegulae and wings normal the scutum not ex in Mesitiopterus, notaulices except present is weak
which
groove
short
disk not margined by a panded laterally ;mesopleural anteriorly of very narrow; groove; postscutellum angles posterolateral with a median thoracic dorsum rounded; propodeum longitudi nal carina, the dorsal surface of propodeum rounding gradually or abruptly into posterior the latter surface, oblique or perpen dicular to dorsal hind basitarsus
surface as long through fourth segments with laterotergites set off
; tarsal claws with an erect inner tooth ; as or a bit longer than the second first three abdominal combined; terga delicate grooves. by
AMISEGA (Figures Amisega
Cameron,
1888.
Biol.
Cameron 1, 13, 31,
Centr.-Amer.,
32) 1: 457.
Hym.,
1888. Monotypic Amisega cuprifrous Cameron, Genotype: and by designation of Ashmead, 1902. This appears to be the most primitive of the known Amisegi nae. It is readily differentiated from all genera by the following of characters: in both sexes; combination well developed wings of both notaulices and parapsidal presence furrows; very short rounded posterolateral dor postscutellum; angles of propodeal of sum; absence of a furrow along the oblique anterior margin the mesopleural disk ; and tarsal claws with an erect inner tooth. as to the host relationships, is known the Nothing though kahlii Ashm. has been reared from closely related Mesitiopterus stick Diapheromera eggs of the walking femorata Say. and
Female times
as wide
mandibles broad
sulcus
robust, with
from
as
Male.?Head as
thoracic the
outer
rather
one-sixth
figured (fig. 1), delicately at posterolateral prothoracic surface and flattened inferior
width
dense to
long one-ninth
malar setae; as long as
space
punctured,
1.2
male angles; a surface with de
moderately
eye
eyes height; bare; a median a narrow median without concavity groove carina, present on lower half, the sculpture some elsewhere either smooth with entirely or very scattered inner eye margins punctures closely, transversely lin?ate; veloped, frontal
converging
very
slightly
toward
vertex,
the
interocular
distance
at
lower
KARL
ends
of
1.1
about
eyes
times
interocular
the
161
KROMBEIN
V.
at
distance
level
of
anterior
rather
at anterior ocellus its width from 0.36 to 0.45 narrow, as the head at that antennal about width scape point; elongate, as pedicel and first two segments long flagellar combined; flagellum circular in cross section, the segments elongate fusiform, decreasing gradu as broad as long; vertex in length until the sixth where ally they are about front
ocellus; times
rounded convex, evenly feebly Thorax (fig. 13) finely sculptured; in that the from Atopogyne chiefly
into
very
front. as figured
venation costa
of
forewing
(fig. 32), differing is not produced be is the marginal cell
and the darkened streak yond stigma closing nearly as long curved from stub of radial vein; 0.92-0.97 times pronotum evenly as scutum; as long as scutum; from to a half scutellum two-thirds post as long as scutellum; a fourth to a sixth scutellum of very short, length from propodeum from two-thirds
to
base to
transverse
almost
as
long
groove declivity just before posterior as scutellum; with pos metapleuron shallow and the endophragmal groove
terior margin indicated by a broad, surface dorsal of propodeum into the oblique pos pit; rounding gradually terior both surfaces bisected carina which is margined surface, by a strong on each side by a row of foveolae, area and then a laterad of this a smooth foveolate
impression
the
margin
lateral
foveolate
erect
without usually abdomen.
half, and
top
setae;
hind
toward
femur
as
Abdomen
figured (fig. 31), delicately line at base of second tergum
dorso ventral of
inward
abdomen of
shallowly
abdominal
dorsal surface foveate; near its apex. some with scattered soft,
impression beneath
Femora
width
curving also
at
declivity concave.
that
point; a without
first
erect
transverse, hairs; almost
extending
sides
straight
and
declivity
1. aeneiceps Ducke, Included forms: 1903; 9 from the Guiana coast to Tef?? in Amazonas, var. azurescens Ducke, 2. aeneiceps 1903;
arcuate,
tibiae
sculptured, strongly two-thirds about
with tergum transverse groove,
and
attachment,
a
with
to
above apex
of
flattened, as
long as on basal broadly
S ;Amazonia Brazil 9 S ; no lo
calities the typical specified, presumably occurring with form 3. cooperi, new species; 9 S ;Turrialba, Costa Rica =? 4. cuprijrons Cameron, Panama ; Bugaba, 1888; "9" 5. mocsaryi from the 1902; 9 S ; all Amazonia Ducke, Atlantic Ocean to Peru 6. mocsaryi var. cyaniceps Ducke, 1911; 9 S ; no local ities Species var.
specified, presumably occurring with studied : 9 aeneiceps, 9 $ cooperi
cyaniceps.
TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
the typical form. and 9 mocsaryi
162
REVIEW
cooperi*,
Amisega
The
new
species
OF
AMISEGINAE
Figs.
1, 13, 31,
32.
female
of this species is readily distinguished by the fol the combination of characters: fasciate cop lowing forewing; and pery dorsum of head and thorax, dark blue on propodeum rest of head, and dark green mesopleuron and ; densely minutely thoracic dorsum; and very frontal punctate sparsely punctate are In male the and dark the blue with head thorax concavity. on lower part of mesopleuron, the fore green reflections as in female since the wing is fasciate though not so markedly infumated areas are much sparser, the lighter and the vestiture some
dorsum is somewhat of head and thoracic sparser punctation of larger punctures, and the frontal concavity and composed is very sparsely punctate. from a single specimen, sup A. cuprifrous Cameron, described a from is apparently the female, Panama, Bugaba, posedly a Dr. Yarrow writes that the type is actually closest relative. is less infumated than the male, that the base of the forewing and that and the head apex but with no definite pale band, the propodeum dark blue and thorax have coppery reflections, The type of cuprifrous is also substantially green. larger than mm. as mm. 9 to 5.4-6.0 cooperi, compared long rather marked sexual dimorphism, the species exhibits but has somewhat lacks any coppery coloration, and larger on dorsum of head and thorax, a more weakly sparser punctures infumated and a forewing with sparser and suberect pubescence, sexes on sev face. The association of is based broader slightly the entire series was taken at Turrialba, eral factors: Costa This
male
on young banana leaves just before storms from June 14 Rica, to 24, 1949; the frontal concavity, and abdominal propodeum are are similar sexes each the two sculptured; tergites similarly in size; and both sexes have a pair of narrow ferruginous stripes on mesosternum which do not occur in the other known members The possibility of the genus. exists, of course, that the associated here with cooperi may actually be the opposite
female sex of
cuprifrous. * It named
is most for its
that this fitting Kenneth collector, of Rochester, University Biology, U. S. National Museum by the of wasps. collection
beautiful should be spectacularly species Head W. of the Department of Cooper, has enriched who the collections of the of most donation of his personal generous
KARL
V.
163
KROMBEIN
49 f 22 (i.e., June 22, Costa Rica; S ; Turrialba, Type. on leaf at jungle edge just 1949) (K. W. Cooper; young banana Museum, prior to storm) [U. S. National Type No. 63229]. fore wing 4.3 mm. including tegula Shining, the abdomen almost inner eye margins blue, black; lateral of pronotum surface narrowly, except upper posteriorly, mesopleuron and upper third of metapleuron with metallic green fourth, reflections; and legs black, antennae antennal scape and coxae with metallic reflections, 5.4 mm.,
Male.?Length dark
metallic
mostly
the mid mid
and
tarsi
stripes.
hind
light Erect
femora
brown; vestiture
a basal,
with
mesosternum of
light brown a pair with
and
head
and fore and annulus, of narrow ferruginous dorsum long, moderately
thoracic
on that sides of thorax, black; less infumated in female, than Forewing fascia across wing at stigma, the vestiture dense,
abdomen legs and a moderately with
ocelli
than
sparser than
sparser
clear
wide,
suberect, dark, clear. wing
and veins dark brown; hind stigma with punctures relatively larger and a bit as in female; interocular distance at anterior
female, Head
brown.
light
ocellus
0.45
in
in female; times the
similar to that of female, relative of segments ; antenna lengths as 31:9:17:12:10:8:7:7:6:6:6:6:7, the first scape flagellar segment 0.65 times as long as interocular distance at anterior ocellus. on thorax Punctures than in female, sparser relatively larger, particularly width
head
from
on
those
pronotum; in female.
as Legs Abdomen second
tergum median
narrow
propodeum
in general denser strip
sculptured
that
of
female.
like that of female, but punctured punctures and most of tergum for a covering except and moderately broad posterior margin.
9 ; same data
Allotype.
to
similarly
as type
but 49 f 14-1
on very
(i.e., June
14,
1949) [USNM]. 4.6 mm. Head forewing tegula including rest of head and propodeum dark coppery; dark antennae and some with green; blue; mesopleuron legs black, green some abdomen with blue-black castaneous at base of first reflections; deep a pair mesosternum with of narrow Head tergum; ferruginous stripes. 6.0
mm., dorsum
Female.?Length and above thoracic
above
with
similarly
short,
colored, femora
beneath, rect, cinereous wide
ately setae
hair. fascia are
which
the
clear
and
veins
tered, Head
TRANS.
Forewing across wing dark brown
veins of fascia; in clear section
suberect
groove
brown sparse, erect, light hair; head subrecumbent hair; beneath, and abdominal sterna with beneath,
shining; extending
thorax thorax a bit
above on
with
sides
and sube
longer,
a clear, moder but with infumated strongly at stigma; with dense decumbent forewing on the areas infumated and on cretaceous
forewing testaceous;
dark
brown hind
in
wing
infumated pale,
areas,
with
sparser,
stigma scat
setae. frontal a
AMER. ENT.
fourth
concavity mostly to of distance
SOC, LXXXII.
smooth, anterior
with ocellus,
a
short elsewhere
median with
164
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
small punctures laterad of and above ; punctures larger concavity scattered, on vertex and smaller than those ; punctures contiguous, subcontiguous before smaller low tri toward ocelli in a large occiput; ocelli, becoming the posterior angle, pair the postocellar line 1.5 and about ocelli, at anterior ocellus
posterior distance
narrowly as long
five
times
the
times
the
of segments lengths first flagellar segment ocellus.
from
the
Dorsum of
of thorax
thorax
of
sculpture
dense
inner
interocular
distance; ; antenna
width
moderately 37:11:19:13:11:10:8:8:7:
as the
interocular
distance
at
and propodeum as figured thorax
punctation, and side of
dorsum
eye margins, and anterior
between
ocellocular head scape times
0.8 from
subopaque
shining;
from
separated as distance
0.38
relative
long, 6:6:6:8, anterior side
very times
(fig. 13). Femora
beneath
with
scattered,
erect
long,
tibiae
hairs;
erect
without
vestiture. Abdomen teriorly, a small midline; exposed sternum small,
which
a with tergum in middle than
first shining; is narrower
band
of
small
on side of similar patch punctures a band third with of close minute tergum fourth with close minute tergum portion; with rather
rather dense
dense
large, punctures
third punctures; and a few interspersed
pos with tergum to almost extending at base of punctures punctures
second
laterally; in middle
and
second punctures; sterna with fourth larger
ones.
1 9 ; same data as allotype. 1 $ ; same data as Paratypes. 49 but f 16 (i.e., June 16, 1949). 1 ?" ; same data as type type but 49 f 24 (i.e., June 24, 1949). All specimens were taken on leaves just prior to storms, and presumably were young banana to some ex?date on the leaves found only at that time. attracted Dr. Cooper also collected a series of one female and three males of a species of Adelphe between June 23 and July 10, 1949, un der precisely the same conditions. A female paratype has been in the Academy of Natural of Philadelphia. Sciences placed are very similar to the type and allotype The paratypes in most The June 16 female is 5.4 mm. and the respects. long, is 5.0 mm. single male paratype long. The June 14 female has fewer punctures
on first and
second
MESITIOPTERUS
abdominal
terga.
Ashmead
(Figure 4) Mesitiopterus
Genotype: designation
Ashmead,
1902.
Mesitiopterus (two included
Canad.
kahlii species).
Ent.
34:
Ashmead,
231.
1902.
By
original
KARL
165
V. KROMBEIN
is a closely related derivative Mesitiopterus Apparently and it may be separated from that genus by the Amisega, characters listed below. and
Female with
cavity width
at
as
long Legs
transverse
anterior erect
scattered, of pedicel Thorax
as
male.?Head close
ocellus
in Amisega
a bit
scape
segments. as follows:
as in Amisega except furrows scutum; parapsidal as in Amisega. and abdomen
Included
follows:
present:
than
shorter
very
kahlii
Ashmead
Fig.
1.25
Agr.
52:
Soc. Wash. 2:
Monogr.
47
(biology)
times
as
$ ;New York, West Carolina, reared from eggs of
1902; North
9
near
San
4.
1902. Canad. 34: 231 Ent. Ashmead, in U. S. National type Kansas; Museum).?Bodenstein, Amer. Ent. in genotype Soc. 65: 128 (cited list).?Milliron, Ent.
lengths
absent.
kahlii
Mesitiopterus
its short,
combined
Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Virginia, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Kansas; Diapheromera femorata Say. 2. townsendi S ; Jicoltepec 1902; Ashmead, Vera Mexico. Rafael, Cruz, Species studied: the two listed above. Mesitiopterus
con
frontal broader,
about
pronotum notaulices
1. kahlii Ashmead,
species:
as
front carinae; comparatively half the head with eyes width;
antennal setae; two flagellar first
and
except
of few
.?Bodenstein,
1951.
U.
($
; Lawrence, Trans. 1939. 1950.
S. Dept.
Proc. Agr.,
726.
are two known from rearing records for this species of and Wiscon eggs Diapheromera femorata Say in Minnesota sin. The species has also been collected from New York to North Carolina and in Kansas. It is quite possible that it has a much wider range than is known now, for the genus of walking stick whose eggs it parasitizes is known from practically all the There
United
States
and
south
into Mexico. variation in the material before me, es pecially with regard to coloration of the legs and antennal scape, and sculpture of the thorax. However, are not these differences correlated with any distributional and apparently the pattern, in these characters. In the females the an species is variable tennal scape and legs are testaceous hind except for infuscated There
tarsi, trans,
is considerable
and occasionally amer.
ent.
soc,
some LXXXII.
infuscation
on scapes,
hind
femora
166
REVIEW
The males
and tibiae.
OF
AMISEGINAE
are colored
and Kansas
from Minnesota
the other males have the append similarly so in the Wisconsin ages more specimens, infuscated, variably dif and uniformly darker in the eastern males. The sculptural ferences appear to be correlated with size, the larger specimens on mesopleuron the and having punctate being more closely to the
but
females,
and scutum more and dorsum of pronotum rows. transverse This condition is espe in arranged definitely in the North female which is Carolina larger cially apparent It is (2.8-3.3 mm. (4.6 mm. long) than the other females long). on vertex
punctures
had another host that this North Carolina specimen possible than Diapheromera. little is known of the behavior of adults of this species. Very me H. K. Townes advises that his North Carolina specimen was over on leaves the ground in a collected while it was crawling cutover area through the woods along a power line. Specimens New
examined
:9
1 $
; Youngstown;
York:
Pennsylvania:
1 $
Maryland:
1
$
18
$ $,
; Lehigh ; Plummer's
from
$ $
August
Co.; Is.;
the
(F. W.
8-9-34
8,
following
localities
Fletcher) 1937 (S. C.
[USNM]. Schell)
1909
(J. C.
12,
September
:
[USNM"]. Crawford)
[USNM]. 2
Virginia:
Bridwell)
9
9 $,
; Short
$ ?
Hill,
Hillsboro;
August
26,
1944
(J. C.
[USNM].
North
1 $
Carolina:
;Hamrick;
17, 1950
August
(H., M.,
& D.
Townes)
[HKT]. West
1
Virginia:
$;
1956 (K. V. Krombein)
River
Lost
State
Park,
Hardy
Co.;
28,
August
[KVK].
?wasps
1 $,2 Indian Oconto $ $ ;Menominee Reservation, Co.; October of Diapheromera Say collected jemorata 29, 1953 1954 in laboratory & A. T. (H. J. McAloney January emerged
Drooz)
[USNM].
Wisconsin: reared
from
Minnesota jemorata
Say
eggs
: 5 $ $, 3 $ S the collected
; Brainerd summer
; reared of
from
1947?wasps
1948 (A. C. Hodson) [USNM]. 1 $ ; Lawrence; July 7, 1896 (H. Kahl) Kansas: Mesitiopterus
townsendi
Mesitiopterus
townsendi
near Jicoltepec tional Museum).
This species is distinguished
San
eggs
of Diapheromera June 11-20,
emerged
[USNM?the
type].
Ashmead Ashmead, Vera
Rafael,
1902. Cruz,
Canad. Mexico;
Ent. type
34: in U.
231
($ S. Na
is still known only from the unique male type. It the from kahlii head and thorax by having
;
KARL
167
KROMBEIN
V.
as contrasted to a reflections rather weak bronzy strong bronzy reflections, and by having the scutellar rather than well separated. confluent transversely
with green with
black
punctures
Gosta Lima
DUCKEIA
(Figures 2, 14) Duckeia
Costa
1936.
Lima,
Libre
Jubilaire
E.
L. Bouvier,
p.
174.
1936. Monotypic Duckeia cyanea Costa Lima, Genotype: and by original designation. Duckeia is rather remotely related to Amisega which probably Duckeia has traveled the archetypal represents amisegine. a more distance toward the genera of the Aus quite specialized tralasian and African Series as shown by the development of a a malar thus the head space relatively larger pyriform giving outline in frontal view, of a coarsely rugose frontal concavity, of a relatively an and of declivous larger postscutellum, abruptly surface of the propodeum. Its affinities with the New posterior World series of genera instead of with one or the other of the are Old World series shown by the absence of dentate postero lateral angles of the propodeal dorsum, absence of setae on the eyes, presence of an inner tooth on tarsal claw, and absence of a of the mesopleural disk. groove along the anterior margin Duckeia in its host relationship. has also digressed It para sitizes the eggs of a walking stick which are deposited in a row on
the other genera for which we have rearing foliage, whereas are parasitic records and Myrmecomimesis) in {Mesitiopterus the walking stick eggs which are broadcast and at random singly on the ground. and
Female as wide
as
low,
at
width
than
greater
slightly a with
as figured
male.?Head
thoracic rounded
its height transverse
(fig.
posterolateral from apex ridge;
2),
coarsely
punctate,
prothoracic
angles,
of clypeus mandibles of
1.1 times its width
to
occiput; clypeus female normal for
of male truncate at apices; malar robust, flattened, obliquely as long as eye height; about 0.6 times con frontal developed, coarse transverse a median without the deep, with carinae, carina, a narrow fourth with shallow median inner groove; eyes bare; eye rather toward the interocular distance converging strongly vertex,
subfamily, well
space
cavity lower
margins at lower
ends
front ocellus; at head width
TRANS.
of
eyes
rather that
1.4 times narrow,
point;
AMER. ENT.
the
interocular
its width
antennal
SOC, LXXXII.
scape
at
at
distance anterior
elongate,
ocellus slightly
level 0.45 concave
of
anterior times
the
beneath,
168
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
as long as pedicel and first three combined; flagellum segments flagellar front flattened to eleventh broad the fourth beneath; segments fusiform, abruptly
declivous
convex;
temples
Thorax
vertex in front of anterior very ocellus; just writh a strong flange posteriorly. in profile rather strongly 14) coarsely punctate,
(fig. as in Amisega;
venation
scutum,
pronotum,
present dorsally, propodeum tween scutum and pronotum
by
separated
scutum
arched; and
postscutellum
that
sutures,
be
on pos pronotum impressed; two rounded ; prominences separating flat on scutellum long as pronotum;
very
deeply
a deep median with groove as 1.3 times convex, strongly half as long as scutum; postscutellum surface the dorsal short, propodeum half
terior
scutellum, well-defined
slightly
as long as scutel flat, 0.4 times a transverse to posterior carina indicated with than scutellum ; metapleuron margin posterior a shallow of pro surface dorsal and the endophragmal groove pit; by both the almost into surface, posterior podeum perpendicular rounding on each carina which is margined surfaces bisected by a strong median
disk,
lum; bit shorter
side
a
by
row
inward
curving from each surfaces
a strong
as
raised
above
tibiae
to
almost
extending and
flattened
foveate
impression
surfaces
and
separated the lateral
from
with
of apex beneath.
some
soft,
abdomen;
erect
scattered hind
tarsus
hairs; of male
a weak transverse of declivity with a narrow concave and with shallowly sternum second and transversely narrowly
inward, and
declivity broadly on basal groove half; base
carina
a two
the dorsum rather flat, but venter strongly sculptured, line at base three-fourths of second tergum nearly with sides at that point; first tergum width straight
the
at
this the
carina.
long as abdominal half and directed basal
groove, median
of
attachment, curved weak
rather
and
expanded strongly Abdomen coarsely dorsoventral convex, on
a
by
beneath
femur
hind
elongate foveae, abdominal toward
other
by
Femora
laterad
of
top
in middle.
1. cyanea Costa Lima, 1936; 9 species: from eggs of Prisopus reared Janeiro, Brazil; (Licht.). 9 S . Species studied: the genotype, Included
The
Australasian
? ;Rio de ohrtmanni
Series
This complex of genera includes Myrmecomimesis and Exova New from Australia, of Cladobe Exopapua Guinea, Rohweria, the and from from Colocar Atopogyne Philippines, thylus Indothrix from India. Myrmecomi and Borneo and Burma, from both sexes, Exova, Exopapua and Atopo is known are known and Rohweria, Cladobe only from females, are known and Colocar Indothrix thylus, only from males.
mesis gyne
KARL
V.
KROMBEIN
169
in common exclusive characters These genera have the following to the series the of the exceptions characters peculiar noted, set with in italics: malar eyes groove; space longitudinal being with scattered erect setulae which are longer and denser in male ; dorsum of pro and laterally; carina present dorsally occipital with a median groove except in Exopapua longitudinal in of all genera and and Indothrix; normal size, males tegulae other known females of Atopogyne females with fully winged, no than to reduced small longer pads tegulae; scutum not wings or evanescent expanded absent, parapsidal laterally, notaulices notum
disk margined furrows present except in Exopapua; mesopleural of Rohweria anteriorly by a groove in all females, but in males of hind part of very large, covering much only; postscutellum thoracic dorsum; posterolateral angles of thoracic dorsum den tate or angulate; surface of propodeum de posterior abruptly to thoracic dorsum except in Exopa and perpendicular as tarsal claws with an erect inner tooth; hind basitarsus or as a the bit than second fourth segments long longer through in Colocar) set off by deli combined ; laterotergites (unknown cate grooves on first three terga in females of Myrmecomimesis and Exova, and on first four terga in females of Exopapua and clivous
pua;
and in all known males. Atopogyne The Australasian Series is widely from the Ameri separated can Series by the amazing of the development postscutellum, and the reduction of wings to small pads in most of the females. In all known males and the female of the fully winged Atopo the is separated from the dorsum of the gyne, postscutellum a well-defined and the has propodeum suture, by apical margin a pair of close, recumbent, at the middle small blunt teeth. These of them, are present also in the teeth, or modifications offer the only clue as to brachypterous females, and frequently the extent of the postscutellum in those forms, since the post are fused and separated scutellum and propodeum at most by This in condition only a shallow furrow, not by a suture. females is well illustrated in figures 16 and 17 of brachypterous and Exova. Myrmecomimesis The discovery of females of some of the other Oriental genera is awaited eagerly. If these are fully winged as is the female of Atopogyne, TRANS.
it would
AMER. ENT.
seem desirable
SOC, LXXXII.
to separate
this assemblage
170
REVIEW
into an Oriental Australasian which would
OF
to
Series
AMISEGINAE
include
all genera Exova
except Myrmecomimesis, constitute the derivative
included and
Australian
as
here
Exopapua Series.
Dalla Torre
MYRMECOMIMESIS
(Figures 5, 16, 21) Myrmecopsis
Walker, occupied
Genotype:
Trans.
1866.
Ent.
Soc.
2:
London
(3)
1866.
Monotypic
441.
Pre
1850.
by Newman,
Myrmecopsis nigricans Walker, 1904. of Ashmead,
and
by
designation
Dalla Myrmecomimesis Torre, Promesitius 1905. Ann. Kieffer, Promesitius
Genotype:
designation Ootheres
Riek,
Riek,
Genotype: tion
16: 87. Ztg. 29: 123. new
Jour.
Kieffer, Zool.
coeruleus
3:
1905.
synonymy.
Monotypic
new
121.
1907.
Kieffer,
name.
New
and
by
synonymy. By
desig
original
included
(five
Cresmophaga
Ent.
Wien.
Sei. Bruxelles
ftavicollis 1955.
of Riek, 1955. Austral. Promesitius
Genotype: nation
1897. Soc.
species). Austral. Jour.
1955.
bispiuosa
Cresmophaga (five included
Zool. Riek,
3:
new
125.
1955.
By
synonymy.
original
designa
species).
furnished notes on certain types in the British some of the new make it possible to establish above. He states that although Walker synonymy proposed considered the type of Myrmecopsis to be a male cleo nigricans a female of a species prob it is actually nymid (Chalcidoidea), the type of Promesitius coeruleus Kieffer. ably identical with falls as a definite Ootheres Therefore, synonym. I am also placing Cresmophaga Riek in synonymy based on a Dr. Yarrow
Museum
has
which
study of four species placed in Ootheres by Riek and three spe cies assigned to Cresmophaga including the genotype, plus notes on the types of Promesitius made by Dr. Yarrow punctaticeps Kieffer and P. bimaculatus Kieffer, species not studied by Riek. Riek distinguishes the two genera by the following (re couplet : from Riek) arranged FEMALES:
"abdominal
scrobes
entirely
above (and setose) punctate closely ; head coarse and to punctures confluent, tending a distinct zone foveate between laterally post
tergites
punctate,
be
longitudinally and scutellum
propodeum."
on
segment
dense of
abdomen
the
2nd
lined;
appearing
MALES: as on
finely
the
setose."
3rd,
"punctures setae dense, .Ootheres
of
abdomen
the whole
as
surface
KARL
FEMALES:
"abdominal
(and
; head
setae)
sometimes and
mostly propodeum as dense not abdomen so
short the
I have Riek,
that
the
punctures."
C.
171
KROMBEIN
with scattered fine tergites glabrous, above with scattered scrobes glabrous, but
close,
V.
basal
discrete;
lateral
glabrous, on the 2nd abdominal
punctures punctures,
between postscutellum region " : wide." MALES of punctures as on the 3rd, setae very segment
segments
appear
glabrous
between
_.Cremophaga
before me bispinosa
of Cresmophaga semiglabra paratype males Riek of Cresmophaga), C. (the genotype Ootheres and 0. Riek nigrithorax nigripedicel
rubrifemur Riek, In all these species the interspaces Riek. are smooth and the abdominal tergites
on punctures The relative shining. is somewhat, but cer between
and vestiture of the punctation density in not less the first three species. These char tainly markedly, me acters by themselves to to be of than less appear generic im can other unless criteria be found. portance substantiating In the female sex I have the type of Promesitius probable Kieffer of P. coeruleus (the genotype flavicollis Promesitius), Kieffer of and of Ootheres (the genotype Ootheres), paratypes 0. iridescens Riek, nigripedicel Riek, bispinosa Cresmophaga Riek
of Cresmophaga) and C. semiglabra Riek. (the genotype third and fourth species, which were placed in second, and the first species have short, dense decumbent ves Ootheres, titure on the first two terga in addition to long scattered hairs,
The
whereas the last two species have only the long scattered hairs. are equally shining in all six species. The impunctate interspaces There is one additional of the vestiture which character ap and the species Riek in pears to separate flavicollis placed from the species assigned to Cresmophaga. Ootheres This is the of long erect setae on the tibiae in both sexes of all presence and their absence species in the first category, the available species of Cresmophaga. The punctation on the dorsum of the head, the transversely males of these longitudinal shallower, coeruleus still, and TRANS.
in both
sexes
of
the parts above is as follows in the fe rugose frontal concavity, six species: confluent in coarse, deep and mostly lines in flavicollis; a the punctures little coarse,
of them in longitudinal confluent lines in many and iridescens; the punctures coarse, but shallower to subcontiguous but not arranged in lines contiguous
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
172
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
in uigripedicel; the punctures coarse, but still shallower, many or subcontiguous but not in lines and with of them contiguous some moderately areas in bispiuosa; the punc large impunctate in semiglabra. tures small, shallow and quite scattered between As regards the zone of demarcation post laterally area of propodeum, the condition is as fol a very narrow, curved groove separat a wider in flavicollis; surfaces foveate ing two coarsely pitted zone in coeruleus, and uigripedicel; and a wider iridesceus scutellum
and dorsal
lows in these
six females:
smooth strip Dr. Yarrow Kieffer available
in bispiuosa and semiglabra. has furnished notes on the types and P. punctaticeps Kieffer, species
of P. which
bimaculatus were not
to Riek. In punctaticeps the vestiture of the abdomen is unlike any of the species discussed above in that long erect hairs are lacking but short decumbent setae are present, the ves as titure of tibiae is in bispiuosa and semiglabra, and zone of
demarcation
between
and propodeum is almost teeth. In bi posterolateral maculatus the vestiture of the abdomen is as in bispiuosa and as but the tibiae have scattered, erect setae in semiglabra, long zone and iridesceus and the of flavicollis, coeruleus, uigripedicel, demarcation between postscutellum and propodeum is shallower than in coeruleus a long and punctate, each puncture bearing black bristle. When all these data are considered, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that only one genus is involved. P. bimaculatus ap flat with
striation
postscutellum directed toward
between Cresmophaga and Ootheres, but pears to be annectant differs from any species in those groups by having the posterior surface of propodeum rather than rugose. P. punctati punctate but again differs from ceps seems to be closest to Cresmophaga, a different any species in either genus by having dominal vestiture and in having the first abdominal close longitudinal striations. The use of different
type
of ab
tergum with combinations
of sculpture and vestiture would of at require the recognition least four genera for this group of species, genera which would be of equivalent value to the other generic entities scarcely in this subfamily. information also cor recognized Biological roborates the opinion that only one genus is involved, for to date
KARL
several reared
V.
173
KROMBEIN
of Ootheres and Cresmophaga of the same host, Podacanthus
members from eggs
have been wilkinsoni
Macleay.
are congeneric that flavicollis conclusion and nigricans is on study of a specimen, loaned by the Genoa Museum is a topotype of flavicollis if through Dr. Delia Guiglia, which not the actual type of that species. This al agrees specimen most which is tran exactly with Kieffer's original description The
based
scribed "
below.
Femelle. le
depuis d?clive
en
T?te bord
aussi
avant
le tiers
?galant t?rieure
des
que
jusqu'au la bouche.
jusqu'?
touchant
ph?riques,
longue
post?rieur presque
le bord
large, milieu
droite
Yeux
tr?s
des
post?rieur, des tempes
en
arri?re,
yeux,
horizontale
puis
obliquement h?mis presque
grands, finement pubescents.
yeux, s?par?es avec une pro?minence
par
un
sillon; nuls. Ocelles
Joues
pos partie Antennes
des tempes obtuse. 13 articles; le milieu des yeux, scape cylindrique, atteignant ?galant un peu plus la moiti? du flagellum; second article long que gros; flagellum son tiers apical, son premier dans article l?g?rement ?paissi presque ?gal aux quatre suivants le deuxi?me aussi les suivants r?unis, long que gros,
de
sauf et peu distinctement le dernier, Thorax aussi s?par?s. sur le dessus; la t?te, ? peu pr?s plan que pronotum subquadrangu ? peine Mesonotum la que laire, plus large pas long. n'atteignant moiti? de la longueur du pronotum, mais aussi sillons que large lui; en avant, lobe m?dian deux fois aussi parapsidaux convergents large que transversaux, large
les lat?raux; se voit l'?cailette. Ailes pr?s de son bord post?rieur repr? sent?es de P?caillete. Scutellum par un lobe de la grandeur nul. Metano tum subquadrangulaire, aussi le pronotum et aussi le long que large que non au milieu, distinctement r?tr?ci termin? mesonotum, sup?rieurement de
chaque
basai
par
dent par une c?t?, une transversale ligne
perpendiculairement. tr?s faiblement poils aux
?largis dress?s et
obtuse
et
forte,
travers?
apr?s
peu marqu?e; post?rieure partie Pattes ? f?murs tous l?g?rement renfl?s; de la base au sommet en dehors, et munis,
son
tiers
d?clive les
tibias
de
longs article des tarses premier align?s; post?rieurs ?gal encore le quatri?me deux fois aussi r?unis; long que avec une au milieu. crochets dent Abdomen ? convexe, ovalaire, aussi avec le thorax, tr?s long que quatre segments visibles; p?tiole
noirs, trois suivants
large; peine
court; premier distinctement ? peine
segment plus
long
campanule, occupant le premier; le
que
le premier le second tiers; troisi?me le quatri?me court;
visible."
The
between Kieffer's and this only discrepancies description are in that the latter are the ocelli the specimen present, parap sidal furrows converge posteriorly, and the scutellum is present. TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
174
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
are present and distinct in the specimen but not con have overlooked could Kieffer not think do them, spicuous?I " " " ocelles is a slip of the pen for and perhaps his ocelles nuls furrows as of the parapsidal characterization The pr?sents." " " a lapsus en is almost avant likewise certainly convergents " are en furrows for normally arri?re," because these convergents or parallel in Hymenoptera. There is a convergent posteriorly
The
ocelli
and fused postscutellum the scutellum between though it is not as deep nor as evident as that sepa In this case I think Kieffer scutum and scutellum. is substanti true contention condition. the misinterpreted My to the metanotum reference ated by Kieffer's being as long as distinct
suture
propodeum, rating the
is decidedly The fused postscutellum-propodeum the pronotum. in is included but if the scutellum shorter than the pronotum, the measurement, this part of the thorax is as long as the pro that Kieffer In this connection in de notum. it is significant " as to metanotum refers he it travers? the what calls scribing peu marqu?e." apr?s son tiers basal par une ligne transversal This
transverse
lar suture
if my
line can be nothing but the scutellar-postscutel There is an additional is correct. interpretation
he the generic description descriptions?in lapsus in Kieffer's a but in the states that the specimen is female, specific descrip tion he says that it is a male. that this specimen could agree in so It is almost inconceivable in Kieffer's of the and many peculiar details mentioned striking a not be and and of the specific descriptions, specimen generic That Kieffer's de species on which he based these descriptions. are is in not reliable manifest Richard's scriptions always totally of the Dryinidae work on the classification (Trans. Roy. Ent. 104: 51-70, On page 51 Richards Soc. London 1953). states, " some of his Recent study of the types of species on which to ac genera were based shows that it is hazardous [Kieffer's] on at their face and 59 in his dis page value," cept diagnoses " Kieffer the of he It says, niger Dryinus cussing type specimen was difficult to recognize this species from Kieffer's description since he states that the pronotum hardly as long as the mesoscutum,
than the head is far from true."
is shorter which
and
KARL
V.
175
KROMBEIN
on working with Kieffer's attendant demonstrated by some of his later on this and other species of Promesitius. comments In 1907 he added three new species to Promesitius based on material col Some
of the difficulties are strikingly publications
lected by Turner at Mackay, Queensland, coeruleus, namely and bimaculatus. is stated to Of these, coeruleus punctaticeps have both ocelli and a scutellum, and bimaculatus is said to have a scutellum. Kieffer does not mention whether ocelli and are lacking or present or whether scutellum in punctaticeps, In an accompanying bimaculatus has or has not ocelli. key one of the characters used to separate and bimaculatus flavicollis " from the other two species is die Teile des Thorax undeutlich " as contrasted to ". . . deutlich durch N?hte getrennt getrennt." In the description of bimaculatus he confirms that the sclerites are not separated by sutures, but states that they are separated transverse by more or less distinct impressions. Oddly enough, one character used to separate from bimaculatus is flavicollis that
the abdominal terga of the former are stated to be finely as scattered punctures in shagreened compared to smooth with whereas the of flavicollis has bimaculatus, original description the first two abdominal and terga as shining and finely punctate the last two as polished and smooth. In a later version of this is said to have the terga finely and deli (1914) flavicollis and bimaculatus to have them smooth with cately punctate Even more oddly, neither key utilizes the separated punctures. absence or presence of a scutellum to separate the two species. Dr. Yarrow advises me that the types of bimaculatus, coeru leus and punctaticeps all have ocelli and a scutellum, and fur ther that there is no difference in thoracic segmentation between
key
and the other
bimaculatus
two.
black and red, or black and orange, head Female.?Black, thorax with metallic the abdomen occasionally reflections, as figured head about 1.1 times the height (fig. 5), the width of
of
clypeus
moderately greatest space
well
concavity level of
TRANS.
to
and
dorsum
so; rarely from apex
from and to varying densely rugulosely punctate so, the frontal sparsely concavity rugose ; transversely times 1.15 the malar pro thoracic greatest width; as long as eye height; to 0.36 0.25 times frontal developed, with median or interocular distance at ridge weak lacking; occiput,
and finely width head
anterior
ocellus
AMER. ENT.
0.43-0.47
SOC, LXXXII.
times
the width
of
head
at
that
point;
176
OF
REVIEW
AMISEGINAE
as long as rather short
two flagellar and first the middle segments fusiform, in to tenth the fourth subcircular segments cross section, a flattened area beneath, vertex flat. each with sensory con so and Thorax 16) usually very coarsely punctured, closely (fig. on or with at in rows least the pronotum, smaller, dorsally fluently an even in profile the dorsum punctures; forming moderately separated antennal
scape
segments somewhat
combined; broader
very
and
lum,
flagellar more
transversely Femora
or
combined a pair
with
in
poorly which
propodeum tooth posterolateral
the segment, less arcuate
setae
with pronotum sclerites; and scutel of scutum length and of scutum, scutellum length in middle, at apex of close teeth
rounded;
in middle
keel;
surface posterior in bimaculatus.
to
addition
to apex of abdomen. dorsoventral strongly flattened, as long as abdominal width three-fourths or without with and punctate, finely
trans usually
extremely hind
scattered,
vestiture; at
line at
than
strong,
propodeum
decumbent
normal
extending not Abdomen
tergum
of
with
sometimes
the
a
with
usually
but
dorsally shorter
developed is much
apex
but punctate rugulose, beneath and above tibiae
erect
long, femur
the
postscutellum
margin acute strong,
a
with
times
0.62-0.74
postscutellum; the posterior
verse,
pedicel
between the furrows by interrupted 1.2 times the combined about length
curve, median
first
elongate,
flagellum than long,
that
base
point
of
second
; the dorsum decumbent
rather dense, erect in punctaticeps; hairs scattered except longer, a trans without to base, with sides rounded first tergum top of declivity a small verse shallow and base with groove, concavity. in iridesceus with metallic the thorax reflections, Male.?Usually black, as in female; of head much in nigrithorax and abdomen blue; sculpture closely short
width
of
terior
and
setae,
head
with
about
times
the
times
the
1.2 0.54
about
ocellus
height; width
interocular of
head;
an
at
distance antennal
flagellum
and first flagellar to pedicel in length the scape elongate, subequal than broad somewhat the intermediate longer segments segment, flagellar area beneath. a flattened without and circular in cross section, as in Amisega venation and Thorax closely punctate; (fig. 21) coarsely
more
from outward streaks the lower of two fuscous extending lacking one outward fuscous streak vein and with radial extending only corner with of discoidal moderately dense, short, forewing cell;
but
stub
of
from
setae; just 0.50
postscutellum before middle; times
as
long
with median as
length combined lengths without disk above
scutellum; mesopleural better dorsally developed propodeum ularly
in
than
only;
angulate
of
female, posterior
scutum, an oblique
scutellum furrow;
and
post
propodeum
of upper angle posterolateral surface of propodeum irreg
rugulose. in female.
as Legs Abdomen in
obtusely
erect
out incurved rounded laterally, margin to that of scutum, of pronotum equal
posterior
female,
much shaped most of them
as
punctures larger and denser female; the width each other from by separated in
than of
a
KARL
puncture longer,
or less; terga with erect setae. scattered
V.
rather
177
KROMBEIN
dense
decumbent
setae,
lacking
the
1. bimaculatus Included 1907, new com (Kieffer), species: in Promesitius) bination ; 9 ;Mackay, (described Queens land.
in (described (Riek), 1955, new combination and Hassan's Caves 9 S Jenolan ; Walls, Cresmophaga); wilkin New South Wales ; reared from eggs of Podacanthus soni Macleay and Didymuria violescens (Leach). new 3. flavicollis combination (described (Kieffer), 1905, 2. bispinosa
in Promesitius)
;
9 ; Somerset,
Cape
York
Peninsula,
Queensland. 4. nigricans
1907 1866; [= coeruleus Kieffer, and iridescens 1955 (described (de Riek, " " scribed in Ootheres) Australia ] ; 9 $ ; Northern (type of nigricans) and Chinchilla, ;Mackay, Brisbane, Gogango Jenolan Caves, New South Wales; reared from Queensland; wilkinsoni Macleay. eggs of Podacanthus 5. nigripedicel (described 1955, new combination (Riek), (Walker), in Promesitius)
in Ootheres); 9 ? ; Hassan's New South Wales; Walls, reared from eggs of Podacanthus wilkinsoni Macleay. 6. nigrithorax (described 1955, new combination (Riek), in Ootheres); 9 S ; Pittwater, South Wales; New Tugun and Goondiwindi, Queensland. 7. punctaticeps combination (de (Kieffer), 1907, new scribed in Promesitius) ; 9 ;Mackay, Queensland. 8. rubrifemur (Riek), 1955, new combination (described in Cresmophaga) and Hassan's ; $ ; Jenolan Caves Walls, New South Wales wilkin ; reared from eggs of Podacanthus soni Macleay. 9. rugosinota (Riek), 1955, new combination (described in Cresmophaga) 10. semiglabra
; 9 ;Gogango, Queensland. (Riek), 1955, new combination (described in Cresmophaga) $ ; Jenolan Caves and Hassan's ; 9 reared from eggs of Podacanthus Walls, New South Wales; wilkinsoni and violescens Macleay Didymuria (Leach). 11. striata in (Riek), 1955, new combination (described Cresmophaga) TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
; 9 ;Gogango, SOC, LXXXII.
Queensland.
178
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
of $ examined: 9- coeruleus, (or type) topotype $ of and $ $ $ $ iridesceus, bispiuosa, paratypes flavicollis, and $ $ 9$ semiglabra. rubrifemur nigrithorax, uigripedicel, Species
Myrmecomimesis Myrmecopsis
nigricans
; Northern
($
Trans.
1866.
Walker,
Australia;
type
Ent.
in British
Promesitius Mackay, Tierreich
Ootheres
London
Soc.
Wien.
1897.
(Kieffer),
iridesceus
and
Riek,
Chinchilla, new Australia),
1955.
Riek,
and New 1955.
Queensland; synonymy.
Austral.
Jour.
Ent.
51:
Ztschr.
in British type Museum).?Kieffer, Queensland; 41: Trans. Ent. Soc. 1941. Roy. 291.?Reid, NEW SYNONYMY. 45.
S ; Queensland
2:
(3)
441
Museum).
nigricans
fig. coeruleus
3 ( $,
16.
5,
Figs.
Dalla (Walker), Torre, 1898. 5: 272. Cat. Hym. Torre, coeruleus Berlin 1907. Ent. Kieffer,
Myrmecomimesis 16: 87.?Dalla
405, Ootheres
(Walker)
nigricans
290 1914.
London 3:
Zool.
Ztg. ( 9- ; Das 91:
122, fig.
South Wales).
Austral.
Jour. in
type
Zool.
3:
Div.
Ent.
123 ( $, Mus.,
S
; Gogango Canberra,
Dr. Yarrow has compared the types of nigricans and coeruleus and finds only minor in them as follows: differences between are more the in the and femora coeruleus nigricans red, legs tarsi are somewhat infuscated ; in the former species the flagellum is paler especially the three basal segments and the scape darker; head and thorax black blue rather than dark blue as in coeruleus ; sides of propodeum and posterolateral spines black in nigricans, red in coeruleus; and these spines narrow and sharp for their It is probable greater length rather than stout as in coeruleus. to are infraspecific, and it seems preferable that these differences there is since treat coeruleus as a synonym agree particularly and of the coloration, ment in all other characters sculpture vestiture.
I have paratype. loaned me
before me two topotypes are very similar They
one of them a of iridesceus, of coeruleus to a topotype in having differing principally
by the British Museum, on the thoracic dorsum, and in having some greenish reflections teeth somewhat more narrow and the posterolateral propodeal are and I consider acute. Otherwise similar, extremely they that
iridesceus
is also a synonym
of nigricans.
KARL
Myrmecomimesis Promesitius ($; Das
punctaticeps punctaticeps
Mackay, Tierreich
Ootheres
(Kieffer),
179
KROMBEIN
(Kieffer) 1907.
Kieffer,
Queensland; 41: 291.
punctaticeps
V.
Berlin
in British
type
1955.
Riek,
Ent.
Ztschr.
51:
Austral.
Jour.
Zool.
291 1914.
Museum).?Kieffer, 3:
123.
The following notes, made on the type, are by Dr. Yarrow to or corrective of Kieffer's supplemental original description: head punctate above especially between posterior ocelli, the inter finer and more spaces smooth and shining, the punctures sepa rated than in nigricans and bimaculatus; ocelli very far apart, set in pits, the posterior eye margins; pair almost touching scutellum
and propodeum present ;grooves between postscutellum shallower than in nigricans, almost flat, with striation directed toward posterolateral teeth ;metapleuron and sides of propodeum femora and tibiae without erect striate; entirely long, scattered setae ;no other part of body with long erect setae ; abdomen with short decumbent scattered, hair; first tergum with fine longi as in Kieffer's tudinal striation the second of (not descriptions 1907 and 1914, nor the third as in Kieffer's key of 1914). bimaculatus
Myrmecomimesis Promesitius (9; Das
bimaculatus Mackay, Tierreich
Kieffer,
Queensland; 41: 290.?Riek,
(Kieffer) 1907.
Berlin
in British type 1955. Austral.
Ent.
Ztschr.
Museum).?Kieffer, 3: Jour. Zool.
51:
291 1914.
121.
The following on the type, are notes, made by Dr. Yarrow to or corrective of Kieffer's supplemental original description: femora and tibiae with long, stout, scat head, thorax, abdomen, tered black bristles; ocelli in a small triangle as in nigricans, than in punctati posterior pair more removed from eye margins ceps; top of head with coarse, contiguous punctures; pronotal dorsum with ridging between large regular punctures only at extreme the punctures front, posteriorly separated by smooth half the width of a puncture; groove between post interspaces scutellum and propodeum each puncture with a long punctate, black bristle; lamella at top of posterior surface of propodeum well posterior to postscutellar narrow, scarcely projecting, face between post spines so that in profile there is an oblique and posterior scutellum surface of propodeum about as long as surface of third tarsal segment; posterior propodeum punctate
very
TRANS.
AMER.
ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
180
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
and with
long black hairs directed upward between posterolateral remote punctures several abdomen very teeth; shining, with own times their diameter apart. flavicollis
Myrmecomimesis Promesitius ($
flavicollis ; Somerset,
Museum).?Kieffer, Das Tierreich
Kieffer, York
Cape
1907. 41:
(Kieffer) Ann.
1905.
Peninsula, Berlin Ent.
290.?Riek,
1955.
Sei.
Bruxelles
Queensland 51: Ztschr.
; type
Soc.
Austral.
Jour.
29:
123
in Genoa
292.?Kieffer, 3: 121. Zool.
1914.
I am
this species from the specimen discussed redescribing in the generic discussion, which almost is the certainly The labels. This type of this species. specimen bears several first is a printed one?Australia, Somerset, L. M. d'Albertis with in by hand. The second is a small square date, 1-75, written The third is a 97 written label with the numeral by hand. The de fourth is a hand Civico Genova. label?Museo printed name label bearing the determination lettered generic only
above
advises that this is in Professor Masi's Guiglia this to my response inquiry as to whether handwriting. been Kieffer's had loaned be not (it type actually specimen might advised me to me as a specimen of Promesitius ?), Dr. Guiglia that Kieffer that she had seen the number 97 in a list of material
Promesitius?Dr.
In
and that this specimen from the Genoa Museum, had described is in reasonably The was the good specimen type. certainly a venter down. The the with card to but is glued condition, one seven of for the antennae are missing segments apical except on card. the are which glued separately flagellum of abdomen 5 mm. pro thorax light red, dorsum Black, Female.?Length femora abdominal reflections. weak dorsum, with thorax, Head, bronzy and black the abdomen and tibiae with setae, erect, long stout, scattered, setae. decumbent shorter with dense, legs in addition of from the median 1.1 times width with apex Head length greatest 16 with about frontal antennae to occiput; concavity lacking; clypeus on upper of concavity three-fourths transverse close separated rugulae and top of head with areas laterad of concavity ridge; by a weak median coarse
confluent
longitudinal from eye
rows
those punctures, in a low ; ocelli
on broad
vertex
1.5 times by about distance transfacial broad, moderately of last seven relative flagellar length width; a bit broader than these long except segments margins
arranged
more
or
less
in
separated posterior pair triangle, face of an ocellus; the diameter half at anterior ocellus the head as 7:6:5:5:5:5:8, segments one. for apical
KARL
Dorsum
of
on
times
the
combined
lum
and
the
of
lengths
propodeum dorsum propodeal and
dorsal
surfaces
than postscutellar confluent punctures teeth podeal stout; rugulae. First short
two
the
bearing
six
foveae;
large
erect
mesopleuron lateral surface
postscutel median third
postscutellum; narrow
groove;
lamella
separating wider
no poorly developed, with of propodeum
propodeum surface posterior long,
; pronotum median length and 0.73 times
black
setae; confluent
with
coarse
of
propodeum
with
coarse
pro fused punctures; close longitudinal
posterolateral
the dense small terga with punctures bearing less than the diameter setae, separated by much with as scattered twice about punctures interspersed
abdominal
and
puncture,
a narrow
of
bearing
and
decumbent
wide,
teeth;
and
scutellum
scutum,
rows
longitudinal the two-thirds, and scutellum,
posterior of scutum
separated by with about
posterior
metapleuron
on
lengths
umbilicate
confluent
coarse,
in
arranged
groove
combined
with
propodeum
pronotum
a median
1.2
of
and
thorax
those
punctures, also with
181
KROMBEIN
V.
long
impunctate
erect
setae;
apical
margins.
second
and
EXOVA
third
terga
with
the a
of
large
moderately
Riek
(Figure 17) Exova
1955.
Riek,
Austral
Jour.
Zool.
3:
129.
Exova 1955. Monotypic and by tetraspina Riek, Genotype: original designation. known only from the female sex, is closely related to Exova, the other Australian it is un genus, Myrmecomimesis, though distinct. In Exova the antennal questionably generically scape is proportionally the propodeum longer than inMyrmecomimesis, has four spines of which the posterolateral pair is much longer than in other genera, and the pronotum is proportionally longer convex than in the other genera and is much more strongly (a trend which reaches a climax in Exopapua from New Guinea).
concavity as long
large,
scape
which width.
TRANS.
eyes
rugulose; frontal
height;
combined;
* Both type head
moderately
eye
as
elongate, flagellum
have been was loaned
AMER. ENT.
red, that
to
similar
very
transversely
antennal ments
and
black
Female.?Body apparently* with mostly
without
metallic
of Myrmecomimesis
subcontiguous malar space
punctures well
developed, median ridge
with concavity and long as pedicel
short
mostly me for
SOC, LXXXII.
fusiform,
head reflections; in proportions,
first
the middle
three
except 0.33
frontal times
as
evanescent; seg flagellar broader
segments
in the destroyed by museum pests so I am unable to measure study,
para the
182
REVIEW
than
Thorax
to
fourth
the long, a flattened
with
AMISEGINAE
subcircular in cross and section segments as in Myrmecomimesis. vertex beneath; as follows: in Myrmecomimesis but differing
tenth area
sensory 17) much
(fig. with
OF
as
rather
of ; disk scattered, punctures moderately large two-thirds of scutellum, and postscutellum and scutum, posterior coarsely more or less in irregular confluently punctate, prothoracic lines; length the combined of scutum, 0.78 times scutellum and postscutellum; length
pronotum
postscutellum the posterior dorsum and
by
very
long above
to
addition
the
obtuse
teeth at apex in middle, from propodeal separated teeth of propodeum strong surface of segment; posterior
and
not
posterolateral as first flagellar in middle with
normal
to apex almost of tending Abdomen with scattered, vestiture. M ale
separated, rounded
long as posterolateral and tibiae above with
beneath
in
groove;
smooth, a third as
Femora
of
broadly as
elongate,
propodeum are which setae
a pair
with margin a foveate
a pair tooth. some
decumbent
of
short
very
scattered, vestiture;
hind
without
dense
acute
teeth
long, erect ex femur
abdomen. long
erect
setae,
but
decumbent
.?Unknown.
Included species: bourine, Queensland. Species examined:
1. tetraspina
(Figures
6,
Exopapua nupela, Genotype: by present designation. This monotypic genus, known not at all closely related to the series of genera. lasian-Oriental the other known females by the as compared to of the prothorax scutellum,
Tam
the genotype. EXOPAPUA,
parapsidal
9- ; Mt.
1955;
Riek,
new
genus
18, 26,
28)
new
species.
Monotypic
and
only from the female sex, seems other members of the Austra It is set apart at once from
greater development relatively the scutum, scutellum and post the long, gently curved propodeal profile, absence of flattened and abdomen. very strongly furrows,
as com as figured Female.?Head delicately (fig. 6), rather sculptured to most the height from apex of clypeus of Myrmecomimesis, species pared head width to occiput 1.11 times 1.2 times about the width; the greatest as malar well one-fourth space width; greatest prothoracic developed, as eye
long median times as
long
height
; frontal
longitudinal of the width as
pedicel
concavity
ridge; head and
first
transversely
interocular at
that three
distance
point; flagellar
a weak and with rugulose at anterior ocellus 0.38
antennal segments
scape
very
combined,
elongate, flagellum
KARL
fusiform, broader tenth
through
areas
sensory
beneath;
cross
in
subcircular segments than long, the fourth vertex flat.
the
short
very
183
KROMBEIN
V.
fifth
the
section, tenth with
through
flattened
as compared most and with 18) finely punctate sparsely an even not the dorsum of Myrmecomimesis, in profile forming species curve below median well scutum is depressed because pronotum; length and of pronotum 1.2 times of scutum, the scutellum combined lengths a strong, well with surface of propodeum ; dorsal postscutellum developed, Thorax
acute
(fig.
perpendicular. Femora and fourth apical Abdomen
on
tooth
posterolateral surface
posterior
of tibiae
of
without
tergum
extreme
the
groove,
erect
long
rounding surface
latter
the
hind
setae;
into
the
instead
of
gradually oblique femur
to
extending
abdomen. of dorsoventral line at base strongly flattened, as long as abdominal width first at that point; a transverse to base, without top of declivity
(fig. 28) very two-thirds tergum with sides rounded
second
and
side
each
propodeum,
base
a very
with
shallow
small,
concavity.
Male.?Unknown.
1. nupela, new species; Finschhaven, Included Man species: dated Territory of New Guinea, and Maffin Bay, Dutch New Guinea.
the genotype.
examined:
Species Exopapua
new
nupela*,
Figs.
species
6,
9 Maffin ; Bay f, Dutch New Guinea; Type. of Sciences]. Ross) [California Academy 4.0 mm.
Female.?Length weak bronzy
reflections
scape mandible, of first abdominal Body short
and
legs with setae silvery
base,
tergum, Head
and
genus; frontal
punctures
quite
shining, concavity in a large
head
apices
tegula,
and
strong, of
coxae,
thorax
with
two
and sparse
large
or
lacking
as figured
equilateral
6)
(fig.
moderately and becoming
large more triangle,
triangular elsewhere.
areas
trochanters, and antennae
on
extremely
metallic
bright
28.
(E. S.
1944
July
rest of legs light reddish; tergite no erect the vestiture setae, consisting are moderately on which dense legs,
scutellum
scutum,
ocelli
at
the Black, scutellum
except
18, 26,
and
green; base
brownish.
of
decumbent, on dense quite second abdominal
as described for proportions of laterad contiguous shallow, on upper front and vertex; separated the posterior almost pair touching
and
with
and
eye margins. *
Pidgin
English
for
new
one.
E. All war-time collections S, LSS'W t2?00' over in a narrow not coastal 25 feet strip is that recollection the specimens of Exopapua TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
at this station sea above level. were on taken
were Dr. foliage.
made Ross'
184
AMISEGINAE
as described for genus; (fig. 18) and with proportions figured and with small and inter smooth scattered punctures shining dull scutum and with dense dull minute scutellum punctures; as
Thorax pronotum spaces; and
OF
REVIEW
dense
small and with punctures; postscutellum shining and with shallow very mesopleuron shining large, the close punctures; and metapleuron smooth and very propodeum shiny, area above a few close, abdominal insertion with arched carinules. as figured Abdomen scattered small punc (fig. 28) ; first four terga with with
scattered
tures; areas;
small
punctures;
second second
also with tergum sternum with
a pair large,
of
large,
shallow,
triangular, moderately
closely
punctate
close,
elongate
punctures. Male.?Unknown.
9. ; same data as type, but September 1944 $ Mandated of New ; Finschhafen, [USNM]. Territory Dr. Ross advises me that Guinea; May 2, 1944 (E. S. Ross). the latter specimen will be deposited in the British Museum. The paratypes in all details with the type. agree very closely The one from Maffin Bay the Finschhafen is 5.1 mm. and long, 1
Paratypes.
1
specimen
is 4.0 mm. new
ATOPOGYNE,
genus
(Figures 24, 34) Atopogyne Genotype: lineata, new species. By present desig nation (two included species). I am erecting this genus for two species of winged females from Borneo and Burma, which I supposed at first represented the op sex the It of Rohweria. differs from Rohweria posite Philippine in having instead of light red and black chiefly integument instead of metallic the scutellum than blue, postscutellum longer area of the postscutellum the reverse, the enclosed triangular to lateral areas instead of differently so, a sculptured similarly on of acute each side dorsum spur propodeal posteriorly long, blunt tooth, tibiae without instead of a weak, long scattered cell curved streak almost closing marginal setae, and darkened upward from the stub of radial vein toward the costal from the stub of the instead of curving evenly outward margin are perhaps of only specific Some of these differences radial vein. or sex-limited such value such as the integumental coloration, armature and of as the different of pro sculpture postscutellum abruptly
podeum. American
However, Amisega
reference
to two
and Mesitiopterus
species of the fully-winged demonstrates that in those
KARL
V.
185
KROMBEIN
in the scutellar-postscutel genera the two sexes are not different lar length ratio, tibial vestiture and venation. Consequently, it seems reasonable to assume that these differences between are actually female Atopogyne and male Rohweria of generic value.
is unique among females of the Australasian Series Atopogyne of genera because is it is fully winged. it rather Superficially similar in appearance to the fully winged females of the Ameri can Series. affinities the brachypterous the with However, enormous de females are shown in the relatively Australasian a the of the of presence groove along velopment postscutellum, of the mesopleural disk, and promi dorsum. of the angles propodeal
the oblique anterior margin nently toothed posterolateral frontal
except
is
which
concavity
not
apex
convex,
slightly
as
and
rugose;
transversely
the margin
thickened, as long
coarsely
height,
malar
rounded;
one-third
eye
and with rugose and first long as pedicel than somewhat broader the middle short segments fusiform, cross and in section with subcircular to tenth fourth segments at anterior areas distance interocular ocellus sensory beneath;
versely
head
times
the
plane,
many
part of Thorax
front
dorsum
lineations; as
34)
(fig.
abruptly decumbent
the
triangular
area
with
broadly
streak
0.83-0.86
lengths as times are
as surface
an
close
even for
present closing
vein; 1.2 length
rugose dorsal
nearly
radial
of
pronotal combined
irregularly rounded;
flat
with
interspaces forming
in forewing
costa
stub
from
latter
front
of
part
the punctate, closely in profile of thorax
setae; median the times
scutellum;
upper
the long, flattened 0.37-0.40
and
in
same
lower the longitudinally lin?ate, closely, to upper and perpendicular part. and mesopleuron scutellum scutum, pronotum,
but in Amisega, and darkened
upward
0.55-0.63
margin
and
stigma,
beyond
and
vertex width; of the interspaces declivous abruptly
(fig. 24) and rather
coarsely
closely
clypeus space well
trans frontal concavity height; as a low median antennal scape elongate, ridge; combined two or three flagellar ; flagellum segments
about
developed,
the
times
1.1
width
with
Female.?Head punctate
times
scutum, as scutellum, long the
distance
cell
turning short dense, the length of scutum, and post scutellum
marginal with forewing
of
longitudinal venation
curve; a short
lateral
of propodeum of propodeum
the
median
the posterior areas, a on each side with
above margined carinae. and laterally by straight carina, such with femora erect Tibiae without hairs; occasionally hair, long abdomen. to of hind femur apex extending as in Rohweria, in part of terga but one or more much Abdomen longi or carinate. tudinally arcuately spur; posterior strong posterolateral or sinuate in middle by an arched
Male
TRANS.
.?Unknown.
AMER.
ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
surface
186
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
Included species: 1. lineata, new species; 2. rieki, new species; $ ; Burma. those listed above. Species examined: new
lineata,
Atopogync
Figs.
species
Borneo.
9- ; Sandakan,
34.
24,
This species is closely related to A. rieki from Borneo, and the are noted in the discussion of that species. chief differences Borneo $ (Baker Coll.) ; Sandakan, [U. S. National Type. No. Museum, 63231]. Type 5.0 mm.,
Female.?Length black abdomen except most hind femur of
of
cell
a
larger
pale;
entirely elsewhere.
and first pedicel Head beneath.
except abdomen
with
of forewing the rest spot at apex of wing, on setae dark forewing dense,
dull frontal except distance interocular
Head except frontal
concavity, at anterior
and
on
proportions 0.40 ocellus
light streak
red
red,
rest
light
erect, light brown in marginal
and hind forewing infuscated areas, as
described the
times
on
short,
decumbent, a small spot of
and
Head
legs and
flagellar segment and thorax with sparse, as are
shorter, infuscated
4.6 mm.
tegula thorax
of propodeum,
surfaces
posterior
scape,
hair, half
Basal and
and
dorsal
black; black
flagellum brown
light setae.
including forewing metallic reflections;
without
wing pale
for head
genus width;
a dozen are stronger transverse about with ridges which concavity the posterior in rieki; ocelli small and in a small, triangle, equilateral antennal twice their diameter; from eye margins by almost pair separated as long as pedicel combined. and first three flagellar scape segments as figured the dorsum Thorax dull except (fig. 24) shining, propodeum than
median
times
0.55
length
pronotal
the
combined
scutel scutum, long as scutellum; and lateral metapleuron
lengths as times
of
0.83 lum and postscutellum postscutellum; fused like pronotum; sculptured mesopleuron a few longitudinal and several fine with of propodeum surface rugae below with five surface of propodeum carinae ridges above; radiating posterior an outer pair along from the rather broad lateral apex, one median, upward median and outer from the and the other equidistant ridges, pair margins areas the
Abdomen where the
shining,
with
outwardly
first
irregular,
oblique
scattered,
long
erect
ridges,
hairs;
some fine punctures on with a small with anterolateral tergum a few interspersed lin?ate with small
hind
fine and
tergum
two-thirds,
the
else sides, area finely
tergum
second
longitudinally closely, elsewhere with sides third
with
beneath.
impunctate;
punctate; on basal
ridges
smooth.
and
beneath smooth
intermediate
and
areas
central
Femora femora
and
outer
between two
rest
scattered
sternum
with
impunctate;
punctures,
the
fine, moderately fourth tergum
rest
of
close with
punctures, disk im punctures close,
fine
;
KARL
with
with
anterolaterally ones. minute
scattered
187
KROMBEIN
sternum
second
punctures; elsewhere
V.
larger,
close
punctures,
M ale.?Unknown. new
rieki*,
Atopogyne
species
A. rieki from Burma and A. lineata from Borneo are the only two known species of the anomalous genus Atopogyne. Although of the two are obviously they differ in a number congeneric, from and rieki may be readily distinguished characters, smaller size; non-fasciate forewing; by the following: scutellum and post 0.63 times as long as scutum, pronotum scutellum rather than 0.55 times ; hind femur beneath combined specific lineata
and irregularly rugulose minutely car?nate on lateral longitudinally second tergum almost completely behind instead of with meeting carinae
of smooth ; first tergum fourth instead of smooth; and carinae covered with arcuate only a few straight, weaker
instead
anterolaterally.
National 9 ; Birmanie [Type in Museum Paris (from Ernest Andr? collection)].
Type. Naturelle,
d'Histoire
3.4 mm. 4.4 mm., Head, tegula including forewing Female.?Length areas carinate and abdomen and posterior dorsal black; surfaces, propodeal dark with on first two abdominal very green reflections; weak, terga but elsewhere thorax coxae, trochanters, dark, red; legs mostly light dark antennae at base, at base, and tibiae femora light red; narrowly on and first flagellar scape segment. basally occa dorsum of latter with bare (denuded?), membrane brown setae. very Wing light short, subrecumbent, sional, setae on forewing not decumbent, light brown. fasciate, dense, light brown, as described for genus frontal Head dull concavity, proportions except somewhat
brown,
and
Head
thorax
interocular
except frontal
concavity ocelli lineata;
lighter
mostly
distance
at
about
with
anterior 16
ocellus
tranverse
somewhat
in a comparatively arranged the posterior separated lineata, pair of an ocellus less than the diameter
of head
somewhat
in than
in
the
lin?ate
and
first
more
interspaces two
flagellar
than separated more prominent; segments
0.37 ridges
in
times which
the
head
are weaker
width; than
larger triangle equilateral from inner eye margins by ; punctation
lineata, antennal
and, scape
of dorsal
surface
with consequently, as long as pedicel
combined.
* It is a to name this species for E. F. Riek, of the Common pleasure wealth and Industrial Scientific Research Organization, Canberra, Australia, of his study in recognition of the Australian Mr. Riek found the species. in the Andr? which the type of this species collection constitutes specimen to borrow in the Paris Museum, and was it and place it generous enough in my and description. for study hands TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
188
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
and propodeum the com 0.63 times dull; median pronotal length 0.86 of scutum, scutellum and postscutellum; length postscutellum as long as scutellum; times and meso of dorsum of thorax punctation to that of similar and side of fused metapleuron very pleuron lineata; with of pro surface propodeum uniform, close, oblique rugulae; posterior Thorax
bined
with five podeum and intermediate
ridges
ate
ridges
and
rugose; than
lateral
posterolateral in lineata.
Femora
the side
central but areas between lineata, intermedi and those between
dorsum of propodeum so; obliquely irregularly a bit of propodeum slender and more longer erect
scattered,
hairs;
hind
femur
beneath
minutely
and
rugulose. first shining; fourth with
lateral
with
in
rugose,
transversely spine
without
irregularly Abdomen
as
ridges
radiating
a small, of which
finely are
with
tergum fine,
punctate,
median
close,
half
and impunctate, smooth second tergum carinae; on each base in middle, which weaker become pos
longitudinal area at triangular
carinae longitudinal to meet behind the basal punctate inwardly along midline and third fourth dense first three triangle; terga with fine, punctures; on upper and third with fine dense second laterotergites punctures half; sterna with are denser somewhat which in lineata. than larger punctures and
teriorly
Male
close,
arch
.?Unknown.
ROHWERIA
Fonts
(Figure 8) Rohweria
Fouts,
1925.
Phil.
Jour.
Sei.
26:
515.
Rohweria metallica 1925. Monotypic and Genotype: Fouts, by original designation. blue integument of the head and most of The strong metallic thorax separates males of this genus at once from other males of are weakly the Australasian Series. The males of Cladobethylus are much more elongate, but in that genus the antennae metallic, slender. the head very elongate, and the form more Super are to in similar rather males of Rohweria appearence ficially, but those genera lack and Indothrix, of Myrmecomimesis males the carina at base of hind coxa above and the oblique groove across the upper third of mesopleuron. irom the height, 1.1 to 1.2 times usually (fig. 8) with width which is transversely frontal concavity except punctate coarsely truncate at or smooth; and obliquely mandibles flattened broad,
Male.?Head rather rugose apex; well with
clypeus developed, or without
with about
and malar thickened space sulcate; frontal concavity long as eye height; as long as the antennal scape elongate,
margin apical as one-third
a median
ridge;
KARL
V.
189
KROMBEIN
all seg first stout, segment; plus flagellum pedicel flagellar at anterior than broad; distance ocellus 0.45-0.55 interocular longer vertex times the head width; and upper part of front flat and in one plane, front. into the perpendicular evenly rounding short
very ments
Thorax
34)
but
outward
and
coarsely dorsum
the
profile
closely an
darkened
forming streak
from
of
stub
nearly radial vein, about ending
of wing,
the
costa
forewing
with
moderately 1.0 to 1.25
from length the combined lum
1.1-1.7
tate
and
terior blunt,
or more even
sparse,
curve;
and finely venation
punctate, sparsely as in Atopogyne
in (fig.
cell is curved evenly closing marginal not base and venation crowded toward two-thirds suberect
to apex of distance of wing; median setae; longer pronotal and 0.43-0.55 of scutum, times
the length and postscutellum; scutellum scutum, postscutel area punc the median long as scutellum, triangular or rugose from the smooth lateral the pos areas, times
of
lengths as times
differentiated
rounded and in middle in a pair of margin terminating broadly an oblique at upper decumbent with groove mesopleuron teeth; a weak on each side with dorsal surface of propodeum blunt tooth;
third; surface of posterior carina and laterally Femora
beneath
propodeum by and
straight
margined carinae.
above
in middle
by
an
arched
and tibiae with externally, externally scattered, femur to about three-fourths of distance extending coxa above of abdomen; hind at base car?nate outer margin. apex along Abdomen dorsoventral line at base of second strongly flattened, tergum 0.6 as long as abdominal at that point; about scat width terga with fine, long
erect
hairs;
hind
tered
or suberect first punctures setae; bearing short, subappressed a transverse sides to base, rounded without top of declivity a very declivous surface with broad shallow, moderately concavity. Female .?Unknown.
with
tergum groove,
1. azurea, new species; $ ; Iligan and Butuan, species: Mindanao, Philippines. 2. metallica 1925; $ ; Sibuyan Fouts, Island, Philippines. 3. minor, new species; $ Mt. ; Makiling, Luzon, Philippines. those listed above. Species examined:
Included
Rohweria
metallica
Fouts
Rohweria
metallica
Fouts,
Sibuyan
Island,
1925.
Philippines;
Phil. type
Jour. in U.
Sei.
26:
S. National
516,
figs.
1, 2
($
;
Museum).
This is closely related to R. azurea, n. sp., from Mindanao, but is specifically distinct in having the metapleuron, lateral areas of and entire propodeum black instead of blue, in postscutellum the interior the of cell infumated having only margin marginal instead of the whole groove basad cell, in having a non-foveate of postscutellar instead of a foveate one, and in having triangle TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
190
REVIEW
shallow
OF
AMISEGINAE
on postscutellar punctures triangle ones. separated The single available of metallica shows that topotypic male there is variation in some details of the punctation. In this on the of and two-thirds specimen punctures posterior pronotum
coarse, instead
contiguous
of small
entire mesonotum somewhat broader denser punctation so marked. The
are subcontiguous, are the interspaces whereas in the type. This tendency toward somewhat on the scutellum also, though not is apparent median in the is stronger groove pronotal
topotype. Rohweria
5.1 mm.,
Male.?Length and thorax head
ous; with
8.
Fig.
species
S ;Butuan, Mindanao Type No. 63232].
Type. Museum,
green
new
azurea,
metallic
forewing neck
including and sides
blue,
abdomen
reflections; and tegula faint bluish
(Baker
dark
very
the legs testaceous, reflections. Head
of
5.1 mm. Shining; tegula some bright thorax with
almost stramine scape blue, black; hind and femora those pair browner and thorax rather with dense, short,
in a
arranged
low
areas
laterad
punctures triangle, anterior
of
concavity are not
which
line
ocellocular
and
top confluent a bit
is sparser
which
abdomen with hair similar erect, hair; light brown cell infumated. suberect. pale except marginal Wings with about ten Frontal concavity low, transverse ridge; longitudinal shallow contiguous
[U. S. National
Coll.)
and
and a median ridges of head with coarse, in lines; ocelli large,
less
than
a
of
diameter
and ocelli the about by ocellus, posterior separated at anterior ocellus 0.49 times interocular distance of an ocellus; a short median the head width; ocelli posterior ridge between extending a short distance onto vertex; antennae back relative of seg stout, lengths
posterior diameter
as 30:8:22:12:11:11:11:11:11:10:10:10:14, with scape beginning as broad as long. two-thirds intermediate about segments flagellar 1.2 times and 0.52 times of scutum, Median pronotal length length
ments
and postscutellum; of scutum, scutellum lengths are contiguous on anterior which shallow coarse, punctures a well-defined narrow on posterior two-thirds, contiguous combined
on
posterior scutellum with
a bit groove
closer; basad
scutellum this
ridge
pronotum coarse,
two-thirds, punctation postscutellum of equilateral
1.2
margin to that
deeper,
area below
broadly on hind
long as the area, is a U-shaped as
times
triangular area triangular
of ; laterad and the triangular and mesopleuron
somewhat
apical similar
with
radiating
oblique
subcontiguous
groove punctures;
ridge, weaker at
the
with pronotum third and sub median
arcuate; part of
scutellum, latter area
the
groove
scutum
and
but pronotum a foveate with
the
like punctured area between
ridges; upper
mesopleuron
sides third
of
with above
KARL
small
with
oblique
groove
teriorly; tudinal
metapleuron
a smooth area except ridges on median arcuate keel posteriorly a dozen about laterad rugae, straight and between rugae irregular running
an
terior
surface
the more smooth of
or
less
tergum second
surface;
but
midline,
a
a bit punctures the diameter of
in middle; area third, of
area
this
it and
with at
keel
circular
short
ridges. with scattered
larger, many a puncture.
except
small small
with tergum narrow median
strip them
of
pos
close
longi with
dorsum this
an
lateral
keel
ridge
margin;
pos
abdominal
insertion; dorsum
and propodeal area top ; triangular for a series of smaller
punctures punctures smooth;
with
oblique
at
wrinkles
smooth
denser
with
propodeal basad of
foveae just above large area between foveae these
roughly the bounding
along First
somewhat
propodeum
few
for a few very area circular
except
this
a
with
are
which punctures lateral surface of
and
191
KROMBEIN
V.
laterad foveae
on posterior horizontal closer toward becoming sternum second the with
separated
by
not
much
more
than
Female.?Unknown.
as type. 2 $ ? ; Iligan, Mindanao has been placed The [all USNM]. paratopotype a in and the of Museum, Academy paratype Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. The paratopotype is quite similar to the type in most details of the punctation and color, but the pronotal shows punctation mm. a tendency toward longitudinal 5.4 and is the ridging length Paratypes. (Baker Coll.) in the British
1 S ; same data
two paratypes from Iligan are 5.3 and 6.4 mm. long and as with follows: mesonotal from the type differ punctation are and legs transverse toward compara ridging, tendency tively darker.
The
Rohweria
minor,
new
species
two species in a number of is distinct from the preceding smooth frontal concavity, such as the small ocelli, characters hind margin much more delicate obtusely punctation, angulate This
the different antennal of pronotum, Luzon Mt. $ ; Makiling, Type. No. 63233]. Museum, Type
proportions, (Baker Coll.)
and others. [U. S. National
2.8 mm. 3.6 mm., Shining; including tegula forewing metallic and postscutellar scutellum triangle mesonotum, pronotum, at base, elsewhere brown reddish rest of thorax black very ; abdomen and mandible almost scape, except legs tip, teg?la, black; blue,
Male.?Length head, blue, dark
stramineous.
TRANS.
Head
AMER. ENT.
and
thorax
with
SOC, LXXXII.
short,
erect,
moderately
dense,
pale
192
REVIEW
abdomen
hair;
segments. Frontal
pale,
concavity
with
small
ing
denser
in a
arranged
low
ocellocular triangle, and posterior ocelli
beginning segments Medial
almost
at
distance
are they subcontiguous line a bit more than by separated anterior ocellus
twice
relative ridge on vertex; lengths as 20:5:10:7:6:6:6:5:5:5:5:4:8, scape as long. as broad
no median with
punctures; where
occiput
anterior ocellus, an ocellus; interocular width;
marginal
smooth;
separated toward
AMISEGINAE
suberect brownish hair on posterior longer, cell very infumated. slightly areas laterad of and just above concavity small punctures becom top of head with
somewhat
with
Wings
OF
times
antennal the
small, of an
diameter
the
0.55 of
; ocelli diameter
the
of head
segments intermediate
as long to length of scutum, and 0.43 times length equal pronotal of scutum, and postscutellum; scutellum combined pronotum lengths a narrow the obtusely median from with groove pos extending angulate the surface with small punctures to anterior almost terior margin declivity, as
half mesonotum about of a puncture; the width by mostly separated as as scutellum 1.7 times and similarly punctured; long postscutellum not scutellum ; equilateral postscutellar punctate, triangle delicately a U-shaped at base, series of shallow laterally grooved margined by areas and between laterad of these foveolae them and the pair foveolae; of median groove a few
decumbent with
coarser,
teeth shallow
at
apex
smooth
subcontiguous
; mesopleuron above
pits,
below
oblique with groove they are denser; above margined the
small scattered where punctures except posteriorly and lateral surface of propodeum metapleuron smooth, an arcuate and dorsum with carina by a carina; propodeal posteriorly a very on median few weak of this keel with posteriorly third, area basad laterad of this area at side; to the bounding carina smooth pos rugae, terior surface almost smooth for five weak except entirely ridges radiating on each one the broad the pair from side of the median apex, a more or less circular area which with the arcuate carina above forming a few weak is a little arcuate below foveolae roughened carina; margin
upward
outer ridges along edges. with minute almost absent punctures, on a and second and becoming third,
ing the intermediate above Abdomen very
scattered
terga; posterior Female.?Unknown.
sterna
with
somewhat
larger,
moderately
on
first
little
tergum, on denser
dense
punctures.
Kieffer
CLADOBETHYLUS (Figure 7) Cladobethylus
Kieffer,
1922.
Phil.
Jour.
Sei.
20:
67.
1922. By original Cladobethylus cruciger Kieffer, included originally). (three species and one variety of this genus is based on a male interpretation specimen My at the U. S. in the Baker collection from Surigao, Mindanao, which agrees fairly well with Kieffer's National Museum, descrip Genotype: designation
KARL
V.
KROMBEIN
193
tion of the genotype, C. cruciger, from Butuan, Mindanao and Mt. Makiling, Luzon. It is unfortunate that we lack material of this genus determined for I believe that it is a com by Kieffer, are in There the Baker collection of genus. posite specimens labels in Kieffer's Bethylidae bearing determination handwriting of some of the other species described in this 1922 paper, but ap of Cladobethylus parently Kieffer never returned any specimens to Baker. The specimen before me agrees with Kieffer's generic descrip tion except in a few details. Kieffer says the eyes are bare, but in this specimen the eyes bear short setae?these setae are easily or Kieffer have missed them. Kieffer may denuded, says the is rounded behind?if he means scutellum the posterior margin, it is straight in this specimen, but if he means that the sclerite is convex this specimen agrees. He speaks of the second abdom inal tergum as falling away in front?either he uses second here or a condition in the true morphological he is describing sense, which
is totally unlike that in the true morphological segment, then his description
in this
If he is using specimen. sense, i. e., for the apparent first of the abdomen [" third scarcely ones shorter "] almost longer than second, the three following in this specimen. exactly depicts the condition I have another male agrees quite well with specimen which It is the first described Kieffer. species, C. myrmecophilus to a new genus, Colocar, on distinct and is assigned generically a following The third species placed in this page. originally is based on a female. I have no genus, C. coeruleus Kieffer, so cannot reach any female Amiseginae from the Philippines, as to the generic assignment of coeruleus. conclusion It may be correctly pos assigned here, or it may belong elsewhere, second
I retain the time being in Rohweria. For coeruleus sibly in Cladobethylus. at once by the elongate head in This genus is distinguished It has the height which is distinctly greater than the width. clothed with antennae long erect setae and Indothrix, Colocar but differs from an oblique groove across the in having both of those genera the apical margin of clypeus upper fourth of the mesopleuron, the
which
elongate extremely also characterize
TRANS.
AMER.
ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
194
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
the long, relatively thickened, broad, costa not produced beyond stigma. Male.?Head
7) with
(fig. smaller
separated, of lower
width the
punctures,
front
convergent; strongly the truncate apical margin elongate, malar 1.25 times the median length;
diameter low
of
median
shorter only erect
ridge;
to
(ninth
in
equal times
for
body three-fourths
as
scape half
again
eleventh
long long as
missing the fifth
length,
quite
with
height,
width
and
the
somewhat
of
the
sides
clypeus truncation
half
the greatest broad and smooth, relatively a bit rather elongate, probably
and
pedicel as body, as pedicel
and
stigma,
rugose, weakly as in Rohweria;
thick,
space a with
scape,
as
the
concavity mandible
concavity antennae filiform,
than
hair; latter
the
frontal
eye;
times
0.79 frontal
lanceolate
very
first
covered
long,
segments
eight flagellar with moderately
dense,
are long
and first flagellar segment combined, to eighth the second long as second segment; in my sub specimen) flagellar segments single to eighth basal 3.0 without tubercle and about
as long as wide; at anterior half interocular distance ocellus the the vertex and upper of head from above part width; quadrate, lower part in the same front flat and of front declivous plane, abruptly a low, median to upper vertex and with part; polished perpendicular to fore ocellus. anteriorly ridge extending
head
Thorax
much
1.6 times
the
as
as follows: median except pronotal length to combined of scutum scutum, subequal lengths times of scutum, scutellum the combined lengths as in Rohweria venation and wing vestiture but stigma in Rohweria
of length and 0.62
and
scutellum,
and
postscutellum;
and costa 2.5 times width the the greatest very lanceolate, length long, not not disk produced anteriorly, mesopleural grooved beyond stigma; some of those most at upper fourth of discal punctures large and shallow, above united which is a patch of fine, into a shallow, groove, oblique close the
punctures apical
a
elsewhere Legs First third
1.6 times postscutellum on each side inward of
posteriorly; curved
at teeth subappressed in middle surface which
acute, dorsal with
margin
few
strong
mostly to similar two
and
ridges
apex
in middle;
is
longitudinally outward
radiating
species:
Mindanao, Surigao Philippines.
sparse
1. coeruleus
of
pair
with
propodeum
rugose; posterior abdominal from
scutellum, close-set, a short surface insertion,
very
punctures, long, erect
Kieffer,
vestiture
denuded;
setae.
9 ; Butuan,
1922;
Philippines. and 2. cruciger Kieffer, 1922; $ ;Butuan on Mindanao, and Mt. Luzon, Makiling, 3.
Mt.
as
long
transversely rugulose. those of Rohweria.
very terga with small, fourth terga with scattered,
Included
as the
Banahao,
cruciger Tayabas,
var. Luzon,
antennalis
Kieffer,
Philippines.
1922;
KARL
V.
new
COLOCAR,
195
KROMBEIN
genus
(Figure 22) new species. Genotype: alticola, By present desig nation included (two species). Colocar Indothrix the genera resembles among superficially are known. convex in which males the pro However, strongly notum with its abruptly thickened declivous, posterior margin are known is very reminiscent of Exova and Exopapua which lie real affinities that its only from females, and it is possible on with such genera. The presence of long setae the rather and and similar head ratios cause Colocar elongate flagellum Colocar
Indothrix notably pronotal absence
to appear superficially similar, but the former differs in the snlooth frontal concavity, presence of a delicate groove and of a carina above at base of hind coxa, and of apical margin of a rather deep median emargination
sternum. abdominal the second in of (Kieffer), myrmecophilus interpretation My and cluded species, is based on two male specimens from Basilan in S. the U. Baker in the collection Mindanao, Zamboanga, which agree quite well with Kieffer's National Museum specific Kieffer of the male type from Butuan, Mindanao. description have the states that the eyes are bare, whereas my specimens setae. His thoracic meas eyes writh very short, inconspicuous of
second
and scutellum two-thirds urements (scutum as long as pronotum from mine. The specific differ somewhat as long as scutum) was because applied apparently name, a probable misnomer, to the ventral surface of a small ant was "... firmly attached " of Kieffer's abdomen type. Male.?Head short, large, scattered ately mandible is smooth;
and
the width or
confluent
similar
to
subequal,
with
shallow,
frontal
concavity more though well developed,
malar space apex not thickened; without frontal as eye concavity height; as long 1.1-1.4 times rather elongate, fiiliform,
convex, clypeus as long times antennae
height
except puctures of Rohweria that
median as body,
moder which slender; 0.37-0.55 ridge; covered
and first scape as long as pedicel long, erect hair; dense, moderately or as long as the latter alone, the latter a third combined segment flagellar as long as second to a fourth segment; segments flagellar beyond again at subbasal interocular distance in length, without first subequal tubercle; head from the head above times 0.43-0.52 ocellus anterior width; quad
with
TRANS.
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
196
OF
REVIEW
AMISEGINAE
lower part and upper part of front flat and in same plane, rate, the vertex to upper of front abruptly and perpendicular declivous part. or shallow Thorax sparse, punctures moderately small, (fig. 22) with a deep with in profile the dorsum with ones; curved, though large, dense vestiture and and wing between venation pronotum impression scutum; as
in Rohweria; or less, 0.73
third
times
as
lateral
margin
terminating
surface of propodeum arched by a weak, carina, surfaces weak by a straight, similar to those of Indothrix.
Legs Abdomen
as
in Rohweria
but
shallow
the
median or
scutum of
lengths
posterior
in middle
postscutellum dorsal teeth; surface
its
as
long
as combined
long
convex,
strongly
a
with
pronotum as times
scutum,
subequal scutellum
on posterior groove to it, and 0.37-0.43 and postscutellum,
declivous and thickened abruptly in a pair of close, acute, subappressed from posterior rugose, short, separated the
latter
surface
separated
from
;
the
carina. dorsal
punctation
relatively
sparser.
Female.?Unknown.
Included
species:
1. alticola,
new
species;
$ ; Mindoro,
Philippines. 2. myrmecophilus 1922, new (Kieffer), in Cladobethylus) combination ; $ ;Butuan, (described and Zamboanga, Basilan Mindanao, Philippines. studied: listed those above. Species Colocar
new
alticola,
species
from Mindoro from the species is quite distinct which I believe to be myrmecophilus (Kieffer). The punctation of head and dorsum of thorax of the latter is The it is coarse and close in alticola. finer and distant, whereas antennae of alticola are longer, 1.4 times as long as body as com This species from Mindanao
space is also relatively longer, 0.55 pared to 1.1 times; the malar to 0.37; and the ratio times as long as eye height as compared to head width is ocellus at anterior distance of interocular as the and In alticola to 0.43. 0.52 pronotum compared greater, the pro in myrmecophilus in length, while scutum are equal as long as the scutum. The color notum is only three-fourths ation with
is also different: dark
bronze
white,
whereas
palest
parts
alticola
reflections
myrmecophilus of the legs are
has the head and thoracic dorsum and the palest parts of the legs are and the reflections lacks metallic light testaceous.
KARL
197
V. KROMBEIN
4500 ? ;Hong, Mt. Halc?n, Mindoro Type, Is., Philippines; ft. elev., in mossy 9, 1954 (M. and D. Townes) forest; May Museum, [U. S. National Type No. 63234]. 3.2
Male.?Length head
and
shining;
mm.,
forewing dorsum
thoracic
abdomen
and
; the
laterotergites narrow basal
clypeus,
testaceous?mandible following on scape, anterolateral tiny
annulus
hind margin of lateral pronotal dorsum, the white?inner surface of following femora
and
trochanters,
and
fore
tibia
surface fore
erect,
brown
light
segments. Punctures
on
head
0.55
times
body,
the
relative
0.52
Relative
1.5
times
large,
times the
scutum,
thorax,
subcontiguous; as 1.4 times with
as
scape
segments in a arranged
about
malar long as 20:4:22: 0.2
times
small
diameter interocular
equilateral of an ocellus, distance
at
width.
as and postscutellum scutellum pronotum, scutum, and as on vertex; with size of punctures density area with and median somewhat U-shaped postscutellar area of postscutellum median punctures; margined laterally area with transverse falciform and laterad ridges, with rather very mesopleuron large, quite shallow, fused metapleuron and lateral surface of propodeum
somewhat
this mostly
smooth;
punctures; separated smooth for a few wrinkles except posteriorly; or the rugulae center more toward rugulose, slightly arched, Abdomen above with minute, much
surface
posterior
oblique;
above
with
of
of
lengths
closer smaller, a narrow,
with
sides
hair;
sparser flagellum hair; of flagellar long as width
pronotum scutellum
9:9:5:7;
sides
tegula; coxae,
to lateral subequal the ocellocular;
head
and
pronotum mid and
Wings above
shallow, antennae
height;
except on
spot
above. narrowly Head and thorax
segments beginning the intermediate
moderately distance
the ocellocular triangle, the postocellar distance ocellus
of
lengths
as
large,
long
17:15:15:15:15:15:15:14:14:17, as wide as long; ocelli
by of
Black, the
hind
silvery similar
approximately
moderately as eye
as
space
hair
of
coxa,
except suberect.
setae hyaline, dark, moderately dense, with moderately suberect fairly dense, short, abdominal femora and tibiae with dorsum,
anterior
mm.
reflections;
femora and narrowly, tarsi, brown?flagellum, extreme base and latero tergites ; the following except light coxa outwardly, mid and hind extreme tibiae beneath, base of
brown?fore
with
3.5
bronzy tibiae above
dark following and abdomen
tip,
tegula
including with dark
surface
longitudinal, fine with
of propodeum those toward
those propodeum rugulae, and transverse. straight minute sternum second very scattered, punctures; closer fourth and fifth sterna punctures; third,
those
somewhat closer
of
dorsal less
below
punctures.
Female.?Unknown.
Paratype. The
coll.].
exactly TRANS.
$ ; same data as type, but May 11, 1954 [Townes is 3.5 mm. is almost long, and otherwise
paratype like the type.
AMER.
ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
198
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
new
INDOTHRIX,
genus
(Figures 9, 23) and Genotype: lougicornis, new species. Monotypic by present designation. This unique genus is known from only the male at present. It is quite distinct from known males of most other genera in the Australasian Series because of the extremely filiform long, the median of the apical margin of the antennae, emargination second sternite and the lack of a basal carina on hind coxa above. Indothrix
it resembles such Philippine genera as Cladobe Superficially, and in the Colocar but differs from thylus antennae, elongate them in the other two characters enumerated above, and also in having near the intermediate tuberculate flagellar segments It differs from Rohweria in the absence of an oblique of the mesopleural along anterior margin disk, the apical of clypeus not thickened, and the shorter dorsal area of margin the propodeum. It is like the Australian in Myrmecomimesis hind coxa and lack of an general body build, the ecarinate but differs oblique groove across the upper part of mesopleuron, in the total absence of the median groove, the some pronotal base.
groove
different what lengths proportional the thoracic dorsum, and the much on abdominal terga. as
Male.?Head coarse,
(fig.
figured
versely
punctures subcontiguous as mandible rugose;
margin
not
eye
height;
extremely dense, segment,
width frontal
except
the
1.1
sclerites composing and finer punctures
times
concavity
the
height, which is
with trans
in Rohweria; the convex, clypeus apical as long as 0.28 times space well developed, a weak median antennae with ridge; filiform, as long as body, covered times with moderately
malar thickened; frontal concavity
1.3 elongate, erect scape long hair; the latter subequal
flagellar the fifth
segments; to tenth
distance
at
ing evenly Thoracic
the
9),
of
sparser
flagellar each with
anterior
ocellus
into
perpendicular (fig. 23) with
the
as
as first long flagellar of the next two lengths the first in length, segments beyond subequal a small near base ; interocular beneath tubercle only to the
half
the
two-thirds
combined
head
width;
vertex
rather
flat,
round
front.
coarse similar punctures subcontiguous scutum with rather in profile except punctation shallow; as in Rohweria; the dorsum and wing venation vestiture curved; pronotum as long as to that and 0.45 times with median of scutum, equal length and postscutellum; combined scutellum of scutum, mesopleuron lengths to
those
dorsum
on
head
KARL
V.
199
KROMBEIN
almost surface of propodeum dorsal above; a short, posterolateral, obtuse and with laterally ex transverse which surface with rugulae propodeal
an oblique groove in middle, expanded
without absent
posterior onto lateral
angulation; tend partly
surfaces and posterior dorsal separated surfaces; on but a is those bit than surface, posterior stronger by so separated. not and posterior surfaces lateral hind femur and Femora with tibiae hairs; only short, subappressed a
carina
which
to
nearly
extending near base.
as
Abdomen
apex
in Rohweria
of
except
coxa
hind
abdomen; apical
of
margin
not
second
carinate
above emar
sternum
in middle. ginate Female.?Unknown.
1. longicornis, new Pulney Hills, South India. the genotype. Species examined: Included
species:
Indothrix
new
longicornis,
23.
9,
Figs.
species
$ ;Kodaikanal,
species,
South India, 6500 ft. $ ; Kodaikanal, Pulney Hills, 1953 (P. S. Nathan) elev.; April-May Museum, [U. S. National from author's collection]. Type No. 63235, by donation Type.
4.5 mm., and Black 4.2 mm. forewing including tegula Male.?Length coxae and trochanters into stramineous very pale yellow, shading shining; on femora hind pair; mandible, and all tibiae fore and mid except tegula, red ; scape, hind and thorax with tibia and tarsus brown. Head tarsi dark antennal with suberect, pale brown hair; dense, short, flagellum abdomen and legs with brown erect, darker hair; dense, decumbent, stain for small brown hair. except entirely pale Wings short, pale brown setae dark, moderately in marginal dense. cell; anteriorly as described as figured for genus Head ; proportions (fig. 9) and with a dozen moderately frontal with about large and close punctures; clypeus
moderately longer,
concavity rupted
very in middle in a
arranged margins
low
triangle, less than
depressed Thorax
in as
figured
described
for
genus;
podeum First sternum
and
front,
about
the
diameter
lateral
each
(fig. most
eight
longitudinal the posterior
23)
and
one with
of metapleuron
weak
transverse
ridge;
ocelli
inter
ridges
moderately large, from inner eye pair separated of an ocellus, the anterior ocellus on outer edge. and proportions sculpture and lateral surface of
depressed
as pro
smooth. two
with scattered terga the apical margin in middle. emargination
abdominal
similarly
obtusely angled Female.?Unknown.
TRANS.
a weak
by
a little
by
with
shallow,
punctate,
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
small with
punctures; a moderately
second broad,
200
REVIEW
The
OF
AMISEGINAE
African
Series
Of
the three genera included in this series, Alieniscus, Reidia and Obenbergerella, from both sexes, the is known only Reidia others from females alone. The females of the three African share the following which in combination characters, them from females of the foregoing American and separate Australasian set in italics are peculiar Series (those characters to the African groove; Series) :malar space without longitudinal a few extremely short setulae in Obenber eyes with except genera
carina present dorsally and later (denuded ?) ; occipital gerella groove; longitudinal ally; dorsum of pronotum without median scutum greatly expanded laterally so that vestiges of tegulae and wings, if present, are entirely concealed in dorsal view ;notaulices an disk margined and parapsidal furrows lacking; mesopleural a most of very groove; postscutellum large, covering teriorly by the hind part of thoracic dorsum ;posterolateral angles of thoracic of not dentate; surface abruptly propodeum posterior tarsal claws to thoracic and perpendicular declivous dorsum; as long as in Obenbergerella) ; hind basitarsus simple (unknown or a bit longer than second and third segments combined (un abdominal two with known in Obenbergerella) ; only first terga set off by delicate grooves. laterotergites to the similar externally is extremely of Reidia The male flat stouter and the mandible in having female, differing only dorsum
tened toward apex. in Series of genera is the most highly specialized The African are that several of its members the complex, and it is regrettable these The criteria distinguishing known from the females alone. to scutum the of are lateral the unusual entirely expansion genera con the almost complete of tegulae and wings, conceal vestiges and the simple and propodeum, of the postscutellum solidation are apparently of wings beneath There tarsal claws. vestiges the lateral lobes of the scutum, for something having the texture in the lateral view of the of a wing can be seen in that position as in shown thorax of Obenbergerella, Figure 20. There are no and propodeum. the postscutellum indicated is The extent of the postscutellum by the presence in the middle near the teeth of a pair of small, close, decumbent apex of the thoracic dorsum. furrows
or sutures
separating
KARL
Benoit
ALIENISCUS (Figures Alieniscus
1951.
Benoit,
Bull,
201
KROMBEIN
V.
10,
29)
19, 27,
et Ann.
Soc.
Ent.
87:
Belgique
91.
Arnoldi 1951. Monotypic Alieniscus and Benoit, designation. of the three genera appears to be the most primitive the African It most of the Austra Series. resembles comprising coarse sculpture, and also in that lasian genera in the relatively the propodeum has a definite dorsal surface along the midline. the sculpture In Reidia is in general much and Obenbergerella more delicate, and the postscutellum extends to the apex of the surface along the midline. dorsal thoracic Genotype:
by present Alieniscus
as figured (fig. as long one-fourth developed, a more or less well median defined Female.?Head
well
toward vertex, slightly times the interocular very
the
malar space coarsely 10), sculptured; as eye height; frontal with concavity inner eye margins carina; converging at lower ends of eyes distance interocular 1.25
at level of anterior antennal scape ocellus; as pedicel and first two flagellar combined ; segments individual subcircular the in cross segments elongate-fusiform, areas beneath; to tenth with vertex the fourth sensory flattened, as
elongate,
flagellum section,
distance
long
convex. feebly Thorax very coarsely erect black setae arising twice the about length
sparse, (fig. 19), with scattered, long, punctured from umbilicate with median ; pronotum punctures combined of scutum and and lengths scutellum, as postscutellum; a small, in middle at apex with scutellum
as
twice
long defined
a bisinuate scale with posterior margin; across upper groove third; posterior oblique not separated of thorax from dorsal surface by
poorly without podeum Hind
leg as figured and beneath
femora
(fig. 27) all tibiae
; hind above
coxa with
not
mesopleural of surface a carina. at base
carinate
above ; all extremely scattered, long, erect of abdomen; tarsi beneath apex
to almost extending close short, spines. Abdomen dorsoventral strongly flattened, (fig. 29) not as long as abdominal second three-fourths width tergum
setae; with
first
hind
groove, ale
of
with
tergum
feeble M
femur
rows
two
and
sides base
evenly with
rounded a short,
to
base,
longitudinal
top
of
line
at
at
that
declivity
base point; without
groove.
.?Unknown.
1. arnoldi species: Benoit, Southern Rhodesia. new 2. mutilloides,
Included
Umfolozi Species TRANS.
disk pro
examined: AMER. ENT.
Zululand.
River, the two SOC, LXXXII.
listed above.
1951; species;
9- ; Sawmills, 2 ; White
of
202 Alieniscus Alieniscus
Benoit
arnoldi Arnoldi
I have
Figs. 1952.
Benoit,
et Ann.
Bull,
Soc.
10,
19, 29.
Ent.
87:
Belgique
in National
Southern Rhodesia ; type
( 9 ; Sawmills, Southern
amiseginae
of
review
91
of
Museum
Rhodesia).
the
the unique of studying female opportunity of Dr. George Arnold. The species type through the courtesy new from its close relative, A. mutilloides, may be distinguished noted in the discussion of that species. species, by the differences for is quite detailed BenohVs adequate description original had
of the species.
recognition Alieniscus
new
mutilloides*,
Fig.
species
27.
"
..." men insect... like Promesitius This is the undescribed tioned by Reid (1941, p. 405, and footnote on 409). from only a single female, The present species, also known A. arnoldi from to arnoldi Benoit. differs is closely related characters: of combination the mutilloides lighter following by and first three flagellar red of thorax, seg legs, scape, pedicel, a which transverse with dozen frontal rugae ments; concavity to are coarser and more scutellum longitudinally separated; with fused ; metapleuron-propodeum rugosopunctate obliquely rugae on anterior half, irregularly punctate longitudinal parallel on posterior half ; and dorsum of first tergum to rugulosopunctate the and basal half of second tergum with very sparse punctures, carinae. intervals between punctures with close, longitudinal November Umfolozi 9 ;White 27, Zululand; River, Type. The Museum 1922 (R. H. Harris) (Natural History)]. [British data labels, one with the number specimen bears three additional " " Pr?s, by Z. "Ac. with second the 525," and the last 1270," M. B. 1936-260." Ent. Inst. Imp. Female.?Length mandibles
arnoldi;
5.1
mm.
to light all femora beneath, abdomen, sides the black erect setae,
beneath,
silvery pubescence. with Frontal concavity in arnoldi; than closer In allusion to Alieniscus
the Black, antennae
a
thorax
darker
red
than
in
and tibia fore femora beneath, and sides of head, thorax and Dorsum with above and all tibiae scattered, long, decumbent and of thorax short, legs with
except apices, dark brownish.
about elsewhere
to the superficial of certain mutillids
18
transverse the
rugae
proportions
resemblance build. slender
of
are
which and the
known
and
finer
sculpture
as
species
in of
KARL
and occiput the vertex arnoldi, more and malar finely punctate, scattered punctures. Dorsum tate,
of
the
thorax
and
coarsely
and
space
scutellum
except
scutellum
203
V. KROMBEIN
coarsely, longitudinally extreme base of propodeum
so;
transversely
closely punctate, head beneath with
the
temples more
small,
rugosopunc depressed
below the level of rest of disk, longitudinally costate, the disk in middle margin; confluent
a bisinuate scale narrow, small, barely perceptible having apical lateral surface of pronotum and mesopleural disk with coarse, a dozen fused metapleuron-propodeum with about punctures;
parallel Dorsum
longitudinal of first
with
a
which other
become less
by
extreme
aciculate; tered,
rugae, punctate only narrowly posteriorly. and second with tergum tergum, elongate are separated denser sides where toward they than the width of a puncture, the interspaces very
small
apex
round
of
and
second,
third
and
fourth
terga
punctures each from delicately scat with
punctures.
as in arnoldi. Legs Male.?Unknown. new
REIDIA*,
genus
(Figures 11, 15, 30) new
Reidia Genotype: turneri, present designation. Reidia and Obenbergerella
species.
and
Monotypic
by
are more related than is closely to Alieniscus. The noteworthy generic differences are as follows: frontal concavity with numerous arched carinae in Obenbergerella and with fewer, stronger trans verse rugae in Reidia; the antennal flagellum is dif apparently rather of Reidia short is whereas ferently shaped?that fusiform, is filiform; Bridwell the thoracic says that of Obenbergerella in Obenbergerella dorsum punctate ; and postscutellum compara either
of them them between
tively
shorter
in Reidia.
Female.?Proportions more much
scupture one-fourth
of
head
delicate
(fig.
except
as in Alieniscus, but malar space concavity; a median without concavity
11) much in frontal
as long as eye height; frontal inner eye margins ridge; converging longitudinal distance at lower the interocular ends of eyes at
distance
as pedicel and stouter ments
level and
of
than
subcircular
specialized
anterior
first
sensory
three
ocellus; flagellar
antennal
* For
J. A. Reid, to whom all hymenopterists of the of ful analysis the development apterous Hymenoptera. TRANS.
AMER.
ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
towards the
vertex, interocular
as long elongate, shorter flagellum the individual seg fusiform, to tenth fourth with flattened,
segments rather short
in Alieniscus, in cross the section, areas beneath; vertex
slightly 1.29 times scape
very
combined;
feebly are thorax
convex. indebted for his master in brachypterous and
204 Thorax and
to
and hind but long erect hairs absent, of abdomen. apex beyond as in Alieniscus, but with first tergum 30) shaped much a feeble, at top basal line across middle impressed half, a bit
extending Abdomen (fig.
sides
on
straight
a
and
declivity,
Male.?Externally the mandible
of Alieniscus,
those
femur
of
at
in middle
postscutellum similar Legs
rather
exactly and flattened
is stouter
1. turneri, new
species: Pondoland.
Reidia
new
St. John,
S ;Port
9
species;
in that
the genotype.
examined:
turneri*,
This
at base. groove longitudinal like the female, only differing toward apex.
elongate,
almost
Included Species
AMISEGINAE
the dorsum almost finely sculptured, entirely to combined length lengths pronotal subequal as as postscutellum; and about twice long a small, weak, bisinuate scale. apex with
15) delicately median lin?ate; and scutellum,
(fig.
closely scutum
of
OF
REVIEW
Figs.
species
15, 30.
11,
is the
series of undescribed from Pondoland specimens on footnote Reid p. 409). (1941, by South Africa ;December 9 ;Port St. John, Pondoland, Type. Museum 1923 (R. E. Turner) (Natural History)]. [British
mentioned
mm.
2.9
Female.?Length
pedicel dense,
with
legs with
very
short,
appressed
short, appressed scattered, and fourth terga. the proportions Head shining,
some
with
black
Head
thorax, legs and abdomen and first flagellar segment head hair; silvery appressed
reflections;
feeble
light reddish brown; testaceous. Temples and
elsewhere no
hair
but
setae
which
thorax
virtually
erect
setae; somewhat
long become
blue
dark
scape, mandible, with moderately bare; abdomen closer
on
third
as detailed in generic frontal description; area laterad of anterior rather rugose; transversely concavity irregularly, and contiguously ocellus top of head with moderately large, pitted; deeply in of a puncture less than the diameter shallow by separated punctures on vertex in a and more smaller the ocellar ; ocelli separated triangle, carina from occipital the posterior pair separated triangle, large equilateral distance. the times 1.5 postocellar by and
Proportions
pronotal
diagnosis; tures; tered
of
sculpture dorsum above
mesopleuron
thoracic
as
dorsum with
in addition
a
few,
rugulose,
longitudinally
smooth, propodeum than lineations tudinal Lateral short, * For
surface close Rowland
below
rugulose; metapleuron longitudinally more with surface the posterior small and with scattered dorsum
punctures;
of
of
indicated scattered
of
all
coxae
closely
lin?ate;
tarsi
Turner,
collector
of
the
type
generic
with
a
lateral
few
series.
punc scat
surface
separated,
punctures. wTith two beneath
spines. E.
in small
longi rows
KARL
205
KROMBEIN
V.
with of first arched lineations declivity tergum shining, close, and second to fourth of first tergum sparse punctures ; remainder terga are rather on first two terga, and closer which fine punctures with scattered on and half third of first and all of second with tergum fourth; apical Abdomen
and
here
vestiges of the
and
there
of
which
the
aciculations
data
as type,
characterize
rest
the
series.
type
$ ; same
Allotype.
but
January
29-February
5, 1924 [BM]. as in type except mandible and sculpture 3.3 mm. Color Male.?Length stouter and flattened and first and second toward rather apex, terga dull, half of first and all of second and aciculate. apical closely longitudinally
1 $ ; 1 9 ; same data as type but January 1924. Paratypes. are 3.3 and 2.8 mm. same data as type [USNM]. The paratypes of the long respectively. They agree with the above description as in the is but the abdominal sculpture allotype. type Strand
OBENBERGERELLA (Figures 12, 20) Alienus
1919.
Bridwell,
Proc.
Hawaii.
4:
Soc.
Ent.
117.
by
Preoccupied
1906.
Handlirsch,
Alienus aenigmaticus Genotype: and by present designation. Strand,
Obenbergerella
1929.
Acta
1919.
Bridwell,
20:
Latviensis
Univ.
Monotypic
25.
New
name.
in frontal delicate Female.?Head very except sculpture (fig. 12) with as long as eye height; frontal malar space one-fourth concavity concavity; a low median inner and arched with eye margins ridge; carinae, close, at lower ends the interocular towards distance vertex, strongly converging at level of anterior distance interocular the ocellus; to reaches states almost that but Bridwell scape missing, as pedicel and first three is as long anterior segments flagellar ocellus, a vertex is filiform; with and that the flagellum eyes bare; combined, in middle. shallow concavity
of
eyes antennae
1.53
times
now
Thorax
(fig. 20) delicately small scattered quite when lobe of scutum lateral
and
a bit length as 1.3 times marked with
by a pair
TRANS.
sculptured, punctures; thorax
combined than longer long as postscutellum; a weak at apex carina of very
AMER.
ENT.
weak,
decumbent
SOC, LXXXII.
the
dorsum
with
of
wings
vestiges is viewed lengths
of
from scutum
fine visible
shagreening beneath
side; median pronotal and and scutellum,
with its posterior margin postscutellum surface of thorax, the carina of dorsal in middle. teeth
206
REVIEW
now missing except Legs to those similar apparently and tibia. femora Abdomen verse
shaped
groove longitudinal Male.?Unknown.
are
as
much across
line
impressed
for
OF
AMISEGINAE
fore
of Reidia,
femur
in Alieniscus middle
and
i.e., without
at
top
tibia long
; first tergum of declivity,
on
one
scattered
with and
but side, on setae
a feeble with
trans a
short
at base.
or ambiguities in the misinterpretations or which correction clarification. original description require " The legs are stated to be not at all spinose." These are now as mean but I interpret this statement almost entirely missing, There
several
ing that a fore tarsal comb is absent, that the femora and tibiae lack the long, scattered setae found in Alieniscus, but that the rows of minute on are not beneath the tarsi spines necessarily are stated to be "two The hind trochanters lacking. jointed." I feel most certain that this is a misinterpretation, and that the short, slender basal portion of the hind femur was taken to be is borne the second segment of the trochanter?my explanation out by the appearance of this part of the leg in other genera. I believe that The tibial calcar?a are stated to be "feeble, 1,2,1." shorter spur on the hind tibia which there is probably a vestigial was
due to its minute overlooked size, and that the formula The con should be 1-2-2 as in all other Amiseginae. actually an or inner tooth, with dition of the tarsal claws, i.e., simple is not stated, but I would expect the claws to be simple as in the other African Amiseginae. 1. aenigmaticus Included species: ; 1919; 9 Mow (Bridwell), bray Golf Links, Cape Town, South Africa. Species
examined:
the genotype. Adelphinae
contains only two neotropical genera, Adelphe subfamily n. g. It has been placed systematically and Nesogyne, Mocs?ry it is obviously and Cleptinae, the Amiseginae between though and Ducke Both Mocs?ry much closer to the former subfamily. latter a author the but as discrete it treated only subfamily, This
of all three subfamilies. with representatives acquainted the on of the basis Ashmead alone, original descriptions (1902), and that should be placed in the Cleptinae, thought that Adelphe was
KARL
V.
207
KROMBEIN
now recognized as a synonym of Adelphe, Peseudepyris Ducke, be should in the Allocoeliinae. placed The Adelphinae characters with the preceding agree in most of the Amiseginae, but there are several diagnosis important differences which appear to be of subfamilial the lateral surface of pronotum in Adelphinae
value has
as follows: a marginal
is lacking in Amiseginae groove above, which ; the posterolateral lobes touch the tegulae in the former but are separated pronotal from the tegulae in the latter group ; the mid coxae are narrowly in Adelphinae, in Amiseginae; in the separated contiguous of Adelphinae the tarsal segments beneath have moder in the Amiseginae while suberect dense, bristles, ately they have in the males of Adelphe two rows of tiny spines; (those of a is mandible the unknown) Nesogyne relatively huge, flat one or two acute teeth structure small foliaceous with tened, at tip, while in the Amiseginae the mandible is much less de on one veloped though it is more robust, broader and flattened females
or two
sides
as contrasted
with
the
slender,
subulate
mandible
of females. The Adelphinae
are much more closely related to the American than to either of the other main groups Series of the Amiseginae derived of Amiseginae, and are probably a sidewise specialization in line not the main of descent and from the American stock,
and African Series of the Amiseginae. They the lower of the American Series in having carina well developed the occipital at least a armed with dorsum and the strong postero propodeal dorsally, lateral tooth, spur or angulation. of is known as to the host relationships nothing Unfortunately that eventually It seems rather probable the Adelphinae. they as are the Amiseginae, rather will be found to be egg parasites as are the Cleptinae. than larval parasites have been found only in the New Members of the Adelphinae World where they are known from eastern Peru, Brazil, Panama, of the Australasian differ from genera part of front flat,
Costa
Rica, Mexico,
TRANS.
AMER.
ENT.
Florida SOC, LXXXII.
and Hispaniola.
208
OF
AMISEGINAE
ADELPHE
Mocs?ry
REVIEW
(Figures 3, 25, 35) Adelphe
1890.
Mocs?ry,
Genotype: Adelphe nation of Ashmead,
of Bodenstein, 1906. Schulz,
designation Adelpha
Mocs?ry.
Adelphe
Kieffer, 1879.
Parachrysis Gribodo,
Spolia
Dipt.
Hym.
Hym.,
Ducke, p.
153.
by H?bner, Preoccupied France 1910. Ann. Soc. Ent. metallica
Parachrysis
Genotype: present
Ztschr. paradoxa 1939.
Pseudepyris
Genotype:
46.
1890.
Mocs?ry,
and
Monotypic
by
desig
1902. 1902.
Ducke,
Pseudepyris
mexicana
13:
Fuzetek
Termesz.
Kieffer,
2:
204.
1902.
1910.
287.
by
Preoccupied and
Monotypic
by for
unnecessarily
Proposed 1819. 78:
and
Monotypic
by
designation.
Ducke
as given above. In synonymy his he published the genotype of Adelphe, studying was a synonym. He that Pseudepyris recognized
is responsible
1911, after conclusions further at
for the
the genotype of that time that metallica Kieffer, a species which was identical with flavipes (Ducke), Parachrysis, he considered to be conspecific with paradoxa. from America The genus has not been recorded previously and it is of interest to note here that a specimen north of Mexico, collection was taken at in the U. S. National Museum of Adelphe as State known Collier-Seminole Palm Hammock (now Royal Florida. Collier County, though appar Unfortunately, it is in undescribable condition. species, ently an undescribed It is a teratological specimen, the left side of the head deformed, The speci from an injury during the pupal state. presumably of a toad, Bufo men was recovered from the stomach species, on a card point with and consists of various fragments mounted Park),
a It is unquestionably and wings lacking. legs, antennae of Adelphe. specimen from Nesogyne is distinguished by a number of char Adelphe of that genus. acters as listed in the discussion the
Female width
and subequal
male.?Head to pro thoracic times
well
0.4-0.5
and
moderately
developed, with dense, beneath cealed slender,
more
the to coarsely sculptured, (fig. 3) moderately malar the tegulae; width space just before as long as eye height; eyes bulging strongly long,
erect
margin apical clypeus, or less circular in cross
setae;
con
labrum
rounded; and section,
rudimentary, mandible of tapering
to
female an
acute
KARL
a
of male
tip, two
relatively teeth
acute
small
209
V. KR0MBE1N
huge,
foliaceous
flattened,
or
one
with
structure
at
narrow, tip; clypeus transverse, apical margin and rounded; thickened in female antennal short fusiform very flagellum the segments first broader than flat (fig. 3a), beyond long and strongly tened and as long as pedicel and first scape beneath, relatively elongate as first flagellar as long three half segments, pedicel segment; flagellar more in male the segments first from 1.5 to 2 flagellum beyond elongate, times
than
longer
to
moderately
from
hypostomal flat beneath
head
Thorax
(fig.
as
twice
long
(1.1-1.2)
1.0-1.5
present,
or
a bit
shallow
meeting
TRANS.
by behind
across
rather surface
groove;
it. narrow, more
laterally, slightly and parapsidal
about or
less
longer furrows
and
postscutellum combined; in Amisega; mesopleuron median of upper third; length to posterior to ridge) subequal and
lateral
posterior
surfaces
by
posterolateral ridges; a blunt angula te or with
but on
with
inner
rather
margin,
abundant, the carina
; hind one-segmented the shorter spur of 1-2-2, tarsi with rather dense comb;
; trochanters spurs
without
of
angles tooth.
of
tiny
spines
absent;
tarsal
claws
hind setae; long erect into a small expanded femur narrowed abruptly hind
tibia
suberect
with
an
small; quite setae beneath, erect inner tooth.
the venter above, in male; first and second of the entire about four-fifths very length; large, constituting a well sternum with distinct with ; first terga laterotergites on basal keel median rounded retracted apical segments half;
with
segments four first developed, in female
groove
occipital beneath
width;
separated a foveate
than
propodeum well tegulae and basal
tibial
rows
two
Abdomen
and
and
separated, interocular
obtusely as figured venation developed; (fig. 35), veins in female, the of forewing interstitial vein vein of basal in male; radial hind origin beyond clothed anal with moderately dense, lobe; wing membrane
at base
base; tarsus
convex,
broader
of
surface
as in Amisega, Legs coxa carinate above
the
scutellum
little
of
without wing setae. suberect
fore
than
longer a transverse,
Fully winged, transverse median
lamella
scutum
and anteriorly with notaulices
(measured propodeum than shorter scutellum; dorsal, from each other separated
propodeum of dorsal
near
furrow
times
surface
former
a
convex
front
as head
complete above anteriorly
concave carina, than finely sculptured front, the dorsal pronotum large,
25) more as broad;
postscutellum an oblique, with
as great
developed,
carina, margined in front of occipital
margined by than scutum;
quadrate,
dorsal
strongly
times
of
part
size, moderately inner eye margins;
from
separated 0.35-0.55
segment; flagellar or with some coarse
rugose
upper rows; in normal
as first
long
first
long
transversely
as
scape
beneath, as
as
third
; ocelli
groove
the posterior pair narrowly at anterior distance ocellus carina
flattened
transverse
in
arranged a median
not
a pedicel of front
segments, flagellar lower half or two-thirds
punctures without
and
broad
two
short, four
relatively broad, visible segments
extremely AMER. ENT.
elongate,
each
SOC, LXXXII.
moderately in female,
telescoped
flattened
five
within
the
preceding.
210
REVIEW
OF
AMISEGINAE
1. flavipes 1903 species: (Ducke), Belem and Itaituba S ; (Kieffer), 1910); Brazil. Teff? in Amazonas,
Included
{=metallica in Para, and
2. mexicana
1890; S ;Orizaba, Mocs?ry, Cruz, Mexico. 3. paradoxa 1902; 9 $ ;Ama (Ducke), Ocean to eastern Peru. zonia from the Atlantic
Vera
examined: Species undescribed) species and Florida.
four unidentified from Brazil,
Peru,
new
NESOGYNE,
(and apparently mostly Panama and Costa Rica,
genus
(Figure 33) and by Nesogyne taino, new species. Monotypic Genotype: present designation. from its only close relative, Adelphe is quite distinct Nesogyne as follows: a almost entirely number in of characters Mocs?ry, of head and thorax; very broad, low ocellar smooth integument disk carina present pronotal only dorsally; occipital triangle; a not postero furrow; brachypterous; margined by anteriorly into a slender digitate process ; lateral propodeal angle prolonged and third and fourth abdominal segments 0.8 times as long as The male
first and second. sumed
that superficially in having fully Adelphe with
Female.?Head
pro thoracic as in Adelphe
times
the
clypeus long as antennal as first
It is pre is unknown. of Nesogyne of it may be rather similar to males
developed
wings.
almost
smooth, entirely integument width mandible, just before tegulae; about malar space elongate, females;
1.1
the width
and
labrum
as
two-thirds
erect and with short setae; eyes protuberant strongly as long as three-fourths but in female pedicel Adelphe, flagellum ex a shallow median front with lower groove segment; flagellar front of to anterior a third of the distance upper part ocellus; eye
height;
tending and vertex
in a broad flat a veiy ocelli few minute with tiny, punctures; at that level, distance the interocular line 0.6 times the postocellar triangle, twice the inner eye margins from ocelli the posterior by about separated half ocellus at anterior the distance interocular of an ocellus; diameter head
width;
dorsally. Thorax very
few
occipital with minute
carina
integument punctures;
weak almost
as
entirely
pronotum
to Adelphe,
compared
smooth, the
large,
the dorsum
only
present dorsum more
with or
a less
KARL
anteriorly quadrate, the extreme margins the lateral surface; the lateral furrow,
median ridge) lateral
above
with
times
as
furrows
the
furrow as
long present
which
weaker
becomes latter
the
scutum; and 1.3
as
times
with as
long
as in Adelphe; combined; postscutellum postscutellum to posterior surface of dorsal of (measured propodeum length as in Adelphe; a bit than dorsal, mesopleuron longer scutellum; each other by from and posterior surfaces of propodeum separated the
separating
much surfaces posterior dorsal surface of propodeum
and
dorsal of
angle
posterolateral
as
narrow, wings forewing dorsal surface of propodeum, with of propodeal dorsum; forewing as
in Adelphe, but coxa not lamellate as
Abdomen as
as first
long vestiture
stronger a with
process.
digitate
slender,
Legs of hind
which gutter lower margin of an anterior without
continuous and
otherwise a
Brachypterous, a bit beyond end
the
notum
and
that ridges, than others; long,
part of the of pronotum
disk
surface
1.4 pronotum and parapsidal
anteriorly; notaulices scutellum
the
to
declivous
abruptly anterior
211
KROMBEIN
V.
in
Adelphe
and
second,
with
the
figured hind wing a few, only
erect
setae
extending to almost
33),
(fig.
extending scattered, and
sparser
erect
setae.
dorsal
carina
at base. but
third
latero
tergites
and
fourth on
present
0.8
segments first three
times and
terga
sparser.
Male.?Unknown.
Included
1.
species:
taino,
new
$ ; Dominican
species;
Republic. Species
new
taino*,
Nesogyne
the genotype.
examined:
Fig.
species
33.
Dominican S. E. Constanza, Valle Nuevo, Type. 1938 (P. J. Darlington) about 7000 ft. elev.; August of Comparative Zoology].
Republic; [Museum
0.9 mm. 3.1 mm., Shining, tegula forewing including Female.?Length and propodeum black almost of thorax brown ; pronotum ; head and middle two and first and abdomen scape, pedicel lighter; castaneous; legs much dark brown. rest of antenna Vestiture very testaceous, segments flagellar sparse, Head first
rather erect, as detailed
three
moderately Wings long, brown. ratio in the generic diagnosis; as 27:8:10:4:4; erect segments
flagellar as almost very sparse, as described Thorax on
those anterior side
head;
setae
scape, on
pedicel. long as antennal erect setae for genus; very sparse with in size; mesopleuron normal tegula a low median dorsum with propodeal
margin; is a narrowly of which
separated,
weaker
* An Indian tribe inhabiting Hispaniola TRANS.
infumated. of
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
ridge
in 1492.
on
and
pedicel of
top
as
a groove on ridge basal
half;
and head
long
as
along either ridge
212
OF
REVIEW
AMISEGINAE
surface dorsal and posterior at midline propodeal sharp, higher as long as first flagellar half process posterolateral digitate sides; surface with five weak of antenna; narrow, propodeal segment posterior one from abdominal the broad radiating upward insertion, along ridges an one which on each one and intermediate is closer to side, midline, between than
on
to median
than
lateral
and Legs Abdomen those setae, located more
and ridge, insertion.
abdominal
above
distance
arcuate
and
a
ridge
as described for genus. wings as in generic very sparse, terga with diagnosis; on third those of first and second terga scattered,
posterolaterally .?Unknown.
Male
a weak
also
short
erect long, and fourth
posteriorly.
References Ashmead,
1951.
with
and
T.
C.
A. Bull.
Insects. Cameron,
Alienidae
L. Melander, Mus. Comp.
and
1932. Zool.
des
oeufs
6 figs. pp. 173-175, Ein wenig 1902. A., Ztschr. Dipt. Hym. -,
1902.
-,
1903.
Neue
E.
O., R. M., from
Ghesqui?re,
bekanntes 2:
Proc.
Bridwell.
Ent.
Hawaii.
in Classification
of
501.
488,
Families
Hymenoptera,
chryside: Jubilaire
1:
Ins., Hym.
Centr.-Amer.,
Duckeia E.
genus
Chrysididen
of
Superfamily
on Hymenoptera
Notes
25, in
Livre
phasmide.
the
pro Alienidae
Species.
cyanea,
L.
Bouvier, Cam.
Amisega
141-144.
von Para. Goldwespen and Pseudepyrinae cit. 3: 129-133. Op.
cit. Op. in Neue
Amiseginae
Chrysididen. -, 1911. Amisega dello dei Crisididi 41:
de
or
Alienidae 73:
[1883-1900]. Amisega to Chrysididae. Biol. 457-458, pi. 20, figs. 2, 2 a. un nouveau 1936. Sur A. da, Lima,
Ducke,
Fouts,
novum
1888 P., Tenthredinidae
parasite
Essig,
Genera
of New
Descriptions 4: 117-119.
Soc.
nomen
87: 90-92. Belg. in Miscellaneous
Ent.
Soc.
1919.
J. C,
Bridwell,
Ent.
Alieniscidae
et Ann.
Bull,
Costa
Canad.
Vespoidea. P. L. G.,
in Classification
Chrysididae XXXI, and Parasitic Wasps, 34: 221-231.
Family Predaceous
H., the Fossorial,
Benoit,
Brues,
1902.
W.
2:
204-207.
s?damerikanische
and Adelphe in Terzo supplemento stato del Para. Bull. brasiliano
ail Soc.
revisione Ent.
Ital.
93-94. 1942. 1925. the
Alienidae Rohweria
in College p. 650. Entomology, in Descriptions of Three New Hymenoptera 2 figs. Islands. Phil. Jour. Sei. 26: 515-517,
Philippine 1951. Synonymies Bull. Ann. bergerellidae. J.,
nouvelles Soc.
Ent.
la
pour Belg.
87:
famille 238-241.
des
Oben
KARL
Grandi,
Morfologia XVIII.
specializzato. Cleptidi. K.,
G?nther,
213
ed etologia comp?rate La morfologia addominae R. Accad. Sei. Inst. Bologna Mem. die 1953. taxonomische ?ber Gliederung
1943.
G.,
KROMBEIN
V.
di
a
insetti
dei
Crisididi 10:
(9)
regime e dei
2 pis. 49-58, die geogra
und
der Phasmatodea. Beitr. der Insektenordnung Verbreitung 3: 541-563, 4 figs. in Description de nouveaux J. J., 1905. Promesitius proctotrypides 29: 123-124. Ann. Soc. Sei. Bruxelles exotiques.
phische z. Ent. Kieffer,
Ent.
Museum 51:
Ztschr.
de nouveau in Description microhym?nop France 78: 287-288. Ent.
1910.
-,
Parachrysis du Br?sil. Ann.
t?res -,
1914.
-f
1922.
Soc.
Das Tierreich, Bethylidae. in Philippine Cladobethylus Jour. Sei. 20: 67-71.
Phil. H.
Milliron,
neuer im Naturhistorischen in Beschreibung zu London Berlin. aufbewahrter Proctotrypiden. 290-292.
Promesitius
1907.
-,
British
1950.
E.,
The
Stick, Walking 52: 47. Soc. Wash.
Mocsary,
1889.
A., pp.
34-35.
-,
1890.
Adelphinae orbis
Chrysididarum 45-46. Reid, Riek,
Diapheromera
in Additamentum terrarum
universi.
205
pp.,
figs.
(Proctotrupidae). Parasite
Egg
jemorata
in Chrysididarum
Amiseginae
595
41,
Serphidae a Cleptid
of
Identity
Common
Lief.
terrarum
orbis
the
of
Proc.
Say.
Ent.
universi,
ad monographium primum Termesz. Fiizetek
and Short-winged J. A., 1941. The Thorax of the Wingless Hymenop tera. 91: 367-446, Ent. 81 figs. Trans. Soc. London Roy. E. 1955. Australian Parasites of Cresmododea. F., Egg Cleptid Austral. Jour. Zool. 3: 118-130, 7 figs. 1906.
Schulz,
W.
Strand,
1929. E., Nomenclatorial
Walker,
TRANS.
A.,
Adelpha
in Spolia in
Obenbergerella Notes. Acta
Characters of F., 1866. Trans. Ent. Soc. London
AMER. ENT.
SOC, LXXXII.
Univ.
a New (3)
Hymenopterologica, and Zoological Latviensis
Genus 2:
441.
and
p.
153.
Palaeontological 20: 25.
Species
of Chalcidites.
13:
214
OF
REVIEW
AMISEGINAE
of Figures
Explanation illustrations
(All
Arthur
by Plate
Fig.
Fig.
2.?Duckeia
3.?Adelphe 3
Fig.
Fig.
6.?Exopapua Frontal
view
11.?Reidia
cooperi, view of of
14.?Duckeia
Fig.
thorax, cyanea
of
15.?Reidia
thorax, turneri, Dorsal
Africa). Fig.
16.?Myrmecomimesis view of thorax. 17.?Exova view
X
41.)
Frontal
(Australia).
Guinea).
(New
paratype
Male
Kieffer.
new
Male
species. new
Frontal
(Mindanao).
Frontal
(Mindanao).
paratype Male
species.
(X
(South
type
India).
19.)
Benoit.
of head.
turneri, Frontal
13.?Amisega Lateral
view Fig.
Female
(Both
(X 12.)
12.?Obenbergerella South Africa).
view Fig.
Mandible.
(Minnesota). Mandible.
18.)
Female
(Southern
type
10 a.?Idem.
Fig.
new
Head
Female species. of head. (X
view
Rhodesia).
in profile.
(Both
of
tetraspina thorax.
type
new
wings Costa
Female
omitted.
Lima.
Female
nigricans (X
type
(Capetown^
26.)
(X
(Walker).
(Costa allotype 13 a.?Idem.
Fig. X
Rica). Dorsal
12.)
paratype
(Brazil).
Dorsal
16.) type
(Pondoland,
South
23.) Female
(Australia).
Dorsal
15.)
Riek. (X
(Both
Female species. of thorax. (X
view
(X
Female
wings omitted. omitted.
wings new
South
XX
species.
thorax,
(Pondoland,
23.)
(Bridwell). aenigmatica Frontal view of head. Plate
Fig.
head.
15.)
Africa). Fig.
of
flagellum.
(X 20.)
arnoldi
Frontal
X
(X
longicornis, view of head.
10.?Alieniscus
view
Antennal
Rica).
Female
species.
cruciger azurea,
Frontal
Fig.
Frontal
Rica).
(Costa
(X 15.)
7.?Cladobethylus
9.?Indothrix
Frontal
(Brazil).
paratype
(Walker).
new nupela, view of head.
view of head.
Fig.
Female
(Costa
nigricans
view of head.
Fig.
Lima.
16.) Female
view of head.
8.?Rohweria
Rica).
15.)
5.?Myrmecomimesis
Fig.
(Costa
allotype
12.)
kahlii Ashmead. Female 4.?Mesitiopterus 4 a.?Idem. Male (Minnesota). Fig.
Fig.
Fig.
(X
Male
species. a.?Idem.
(Both X Fig.
(X
Cushman)
Female
species.
Costa
cyanea of head.
view Fig.
new cooperi, view of head.
1.?Amisega Frontal
D.
XIX
20.)
Female
paratype
(Australia).
Dorsal
KARL
new nupela, of thorax, view
18.?Exopapua Lateral
Fig.
(Both X
of
(Both X
of
Female
thorax.
thorax.
X
(Both
of
of
new
longicornis, of thorax, view
species.
27.?Alieniscus
new
Africa).
Tarsal
claws
of
hind
abdomen.
cooperi, Fig.
Forewing.
taino,
Fig.35.?Adelphe
TRANS.
Tarsal
claws
new
40.) Female
type
18.)
(X
Fig.
(Zululand, 27 a.?Idem.
Guinea).
(New
paratype
Female
species. (X
Rhodesia).
(Southern
type
15.)
species. abdomen.
of
Female
(X
South
(Pondoland,
type 23.)
Female
allotype
(Costa
Rica).
12.) XXII
new
Female Rica). (Costa allotype species. Hind 22.) 32 a.?Idem. (Both X wing. new species. Female (Dominican Republic). type
(X 78.)
Forewing.
lineata,
Fig.34.?Atopogyne
wing.
Guinea).
(New
paratype 26 a.?Idem.
Fig.
Female (X
new cooperi, of abdomen.
33.?Nesogyne
thorax,
18.)
(X
Benoit.
arnoldi
turneri, Dorsum
(X
species.
Plate
Fig.
Female
species. view. lateral
leg.
of
Fig.32.?Amisega
of
view
Dorsal
new
Fig.29.?Alieniscus Dorsum
Fig.31.?Amisega Dorsum
Dorsal
(Borneo).
type
11.)
Rica).
21.)
(X
leg,
new nupela, of abdomen.
Africa).
India).
(South
type 19.)
(X
(X 47.)
Fig.28.?Exopapua Dorsum
30.?Reidia
(X
species.
view.
mutilloides, Hind
South
Dorsal
(X 15.)
nupela, lateral
of hind leg.
15.)
(X
(Mindanao).
Male
Female
(Costa
(Australia).
paratype omitted.
30).
(X species. omitted.
species. omitted.
wings Male
thorax,
leg,
wings
new
lineata, of
wings omitted. Fig.26.?Exopapua Hind
omitted.
wings
thorax,
Fig.25.?Adelphe
Fig.
Male (Riek). and wings Male (Kieffer).
myrmecophilus
Fig.24.?Atopogyne view
Fig.
XXI
pronotum
thorax,
type (Capetown, Dorsal a.?Idem.
20
Fig.
26.)
rubrijemur
Fig.21.?Myrmecomimesis Dorsal view
Fig.23.?Indothrix Dorsal
Dorsal
Female
(Bridwell). aenigmatica view of thorax. Lateral
Plate
Fig.22.?Colocar view
(Southern Rhodesia). view of thorax.
type 19 a.?Idem.
Fig.
15.)
Fig.20.?Obenbergerella South Africa). view
(New Guinea). view of thorax.
paratype Dorsal
18 a.?Idem.
Fig.
Benoit.
arnoldi view
Lateral
Female
species.
18.)
19.?Alieniscus
Fig.
215
KROMBEIN
V.
new
species.
Female
type
Fore
(Borneo).
(X 16.) species.
AMER. ENT.
Male
SOC, LXXXH.
(Costa
Rica).
Forewing.
(X
23.)
Trans.
Amer.
Ent.
Soc,
Vol.
Plate XIX.
LXXXII.
KROMBEIN:
REVIEW
OF AMISEGINAE
Trans.
Amer.
Ent.
Soc,
Vol.
LXXXII.
Plate
All 14
15
16 16a
20a
KROMBEIN:
REVIEW
OF AMISEGINAE
XX.
Trans.
Amer.
Ent.
Soc,
Vol.
Plate XXI.
LXXXII.
KROMBEIN:
REVIEW
OF AMISEGINAE
Trans.
Amer.
Ent.
Soc,
Vol.
LXXXII.
Plate
32
35
^b??.-?-.?..
KROMBEIN:
REVIEW
OF AMISEGINAE
XXII.