Capitojoppa Claridge, Saeaeksjaervi & Kaunisto, 2023

Claridge, Brandon R., Kaunisto, Kari M. & Saeaeksjaervi, Ilari E., 2023, Capitojoppa, a new genus of Ichneumoninae (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae) from Peruvian Amazonia, ZooKeys 1178, pp. 69-76 : 69

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1178.108929

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8D54500C-9C9D-4D8B-8BC7-547CF1A70A68

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DCE30183-1262-42CE-A34C-6348D04AF9B3

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:DCE30183-1262-42CE-A34C-6348D04AF9B3

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Capitojoppa Claridge, Saeaeksjaervi & Kaunisto
status

gen. nov.

Capitojoppa Claridge, Saeaeksjaervi & Kaunisto gen. nov.

Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2

Type species.

Capitojoppa amazonica Claridge, Sääksjärvi & Kaunisto, sp. nov.

Diagnosis.

Capitojoppa belongs to the tribe Ichneumonini and is diagnosed by the following combination of characters: overall robust body with an enlarged head and a wide gena; large mandibles with widely spaced, subequal teeth; labrum exposed and visible in anterior view; supraclypeal area and clypeus without lateral ridge as in Joppa Fabricius and Projoppa Townes; occipital carina complete and meeting hypostomal carina at mandibular base; wing membrane clear; propodeum without distinct dorsal and posterior faces (anterior margin strongly sloping and propodeum gently sloping posteriorly); dorsomedial surface of hind coxa coarsely striate; hind coxa without scopa; T1 longitudinally striate; T2 longitudinally striate medially; gastrocoelus deeply impressed; thyridium well developed; and female metasomal apex oxypygous.

Overall, Capitojoppa is most similar to Joppa due to the following characters: mandibles large with subequal teeth; propodeum lacking distinct dorsal and posterior faces due to both the anterior and posterior margins sloping (variable in Joppa but usually as in Capitojoppa ); gastrocoelus deeply impressed; thyridium well developed; and T1-2 coarsely, longitudinally striate. Capitojoppa primarily differs from Joppa by the exposed labrum which is visible in anterior view (concealed by the elongated clypeus in Joppa ); the lack of distinct lateral ridges on the supraclypeal area and clypeus (a defining character in Joppa ); the coarse, longitudinal striation on the supra-antennal area (smooth and without striation or rugosity in Joppa ); complete occipital carina (obsolete ventrally in Joppa ); clear wings (yellow with black markings in Joppa ); and coarse striation on dorsomedial surface of the hind coxa (smooth and without striation or rugosity in Joppa ). Also, the habitus is considerably more robust than any Joppa species examined.

Description.

Head. Mandible large with subequal, widely separated teeth. Clypeus flat and with ventral margin straight. Epistomal suture subobsolete. Malar space ~0.7 × basal mandibular width. Clypeus and supraclypeal area simple, without sublateral ridges. Dorsal margin of median field with small medial tubercle. Supra-antennal area coarsely, longitudinally striate. Gena wide. Female flagellum bristle-shaped (flattened and widened past midpoint before acutely tapering apically); basal flagellomeres moderately slender (flagellomere 1 ~3.0 × as wide as long). Male flagellum with tyloids present and beginning on flagellomere 10 (endpoint of tyloids unknown); bristle ridges present beginning on flagellomere 11 (development of bristle ridges uncertain due to missing flagellum past flagellomere 15 on male paratype).

Mesosoma. Epomia present. Notaulus obsolete. Scutellum flat, not significantly elevated above postscutellum; not laterally carinate. Sternaulus obsolete. Posterior transverse carinae of the mesothoracic venter only present laterally. Juxtacoxal carina present. Propodeal carinae largely obsolete with only anterior transverse carina well developed medially and longitudinal carinae developed at extreme posterior (carinae more strongly developed in male specimen). Anterior margin of propodeum without medial tubercle. Legs stout. Fore and mid tibiae with well-developed, decumbent, conical spines (more strongly developed in female). Hind coxa without scopa and with dorsomedial surface coarsely striate. Tarsal claws simple, not pectinate.

Wings. Areolet pentagonal. Distal abscissa of 1/Cu present.

Metasoma. Metasoma rather stout, but linear and weakly tapering apically. T1 coarsely, longitudinally striate, median field indistinct. T2 longitudinally striate medially with striate area becoming narrower posteriorly. Thyridium well developed and wide (thyridium ~1.2 × interthyridial width). Gastrocoelus deeply impressed. Female metasomal apex oxypygous. Ovipositor not significantly projecting past metasomal apex. Male hypopygium simple, not medially elongated. Gonoforceps simple, not enlarged.

Etymology.

Derived from capito, meaning big-headed in medieval Latin, combined with the generic name, Joppa. In addition, Capito refers to the Neotropical bird genus Capito (barbets), including species of stocky birds with heavy bills. Gender feminine.

Comments.

Sexual dimorphism is minimal with only minor colour and surface sculpture differences between the female and male specimens.

The similarity to Joppa and other characters typical of the group (females with bristle-shaped antennae and males with bristle-ridges) suggests that Capitojoppa belongs to a clade of Neotropical genera that includes Carinodes Hancock, Joppa , Joppocryptus Viereck, Limonethe Townes, Lobaegis Townes, Lophojoppa Brèthes, Narthecura Townes, Notacma Townes, Oezdemirus Ozdikmen & Turgut, Ortezia Cresson, and Trogomorpha Ashmead ( Santos et al. 2021).