Rhopalosomatidae Ashmead, 1896

Lohrmann, Volker, Zhang, Qi, Michalik, Peter, Blaschke, Jeremy, Müller, Patrick & Jeanneau, Laurent, 2020, † Cretolixon - a remarkable new genus of rhopalosomatid wasps (Hymenoptera: Vespoidea: Rhopalosomatidae) from chemically tested, mid-Cretaceous Burmese (Kachin) amber supports the monophyly of Rhopalosomatinae, Fossil Record 23 (2), pp. 215-236 : 218-223

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5194/fr-23-215-2020

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3650519D-0470-42E2-97D7-A267658C0B4F

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E787A8-6A68-AD6A-FC8E-018006FBFAFD

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Rhopalosomatidae Ashmead, 1896
status

 

Family Rhopalosomatidae Ashmead, 1896 View in CoL View at ENA

Rhopalosomidae Ashmead 1896: 303. Type genus: Rhopalosoma Cresson, 1865 . (Ashmead preferred his form of the family name to Rhopalosomatidae (see footnote on page 303). In doing so, he used an incorrect spelling for the stem of his proposed new family name. Since the correct combining stem is “Rhopalosomat-”, the family name was consequently corrected to Rhopalosomatidae by Brues (1922)).

Rhopalosomatidae Ashmead View in CoL : Brues, 1922: 102 (and most subsequent authors).

V. Lohrmann et al.: † Cretolixon – a remarkable new genus of rhopalosomatid wasps 219

Diagnosis (modified from Krogmann et al., 2009)

Among aculeate Hymenoptera , Rhopalosomatidae can be easily identified by the following combination of characters: basal flagellomeres with distinct apical bristle(s) ( Figs. 3a, d View Figure 3 , 4d View Figure 4 , 5b View Figure 5 , 6c–e View Figure 6 ; very small or completely reduced in many Olixon ), mesosternum with posterad paired lobes covering the bases of the mesocoxae ( Figs. 3c View Figure 3 , 4c View Figure 4 ), male parameres upcurved ( Fig. 3e View Figure 3 ), female sting upcurved ( Fig. 3b View Figure 3 ), female tarsomeres laterally widened ( Fig. 5d View Figure 5 ), female pretarsus with arolium and cuticular plate greatly enlarged and claw sensor elongated.

Rhopalosomatid larvae are easily recognized by their habit as ectoparasitoids of true crickets ( Gryllidae ) ( Fig. 3f View Figure 3 ), unique within Hymenoptera .

With only eight enclosed fore wing cells (C, R, 1Cu, 1R1, 2R1, 1Rs, 1M, and 2Cu), the wing venation of fully winged rhopalosomatid species may superficially resemble those of some other aculeates, e.g., extinct Formiciinae, Sphecomyrminae, and some Myrmeciinae, whereas members of the genus Olixon are brachypterous or apterous. However, Rhopalosomatidae can be distinguished from them by the very narrow fore wing costal cell, the relatively large and oblique fore wing cell 1M, and the position and form of the hind wing veins Rs ∗ (short, straight, and reclivous but angled or curved in most Rhopalosoma ) and cu-a (basal or opposite of the branching of veins M and Cu).

Sexual dimorphism

Apart from the genital morphology, males and females can be differentiated by the following: the number of flagellomeres – females have 10, males have 11; the number of visible metasomal tergites – females have 6, males have 7; the form of the tarsomeres II–IV – cylindrical for males and dorsoventrally flattened for females; the absence or presence of tarsal plantulae – absent in females, present in males; and the form of the apex of the pretarsal claws – simple in females, bifid in males.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Rhopalosomatidae

Loc

Rhopalosomatidae Ashmead, 1896

Lohrmann, Volker, Zhang, Qi, Michalik, Peter, Blaschke, Jeremy, Müller, Patrick & Jeanneau, Laurent 2020
2020
Loc

Rhopalosomatidae

Brues, C. T. 1922: 102
1922
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