Gonatocerus Nees ab Esenbeck, 1834
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3644.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DF42B735-9A47-48D5-B382-F6A980563914 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5099011 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/DC2687A4-E53A-FFA3-68CC-0CF0188C5C57 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Gonatocerus Nees ab Esenbeck, 1834 |
status |
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Genus Gonatocerus Nees ab Esenbeck, 1834 View in CoL View at ENA
Gonatocerus Nees View in CoL ab Esenbeck 1834: 192 –193.
Type species: Gonatocerus longicornis Nees View in CoL ab Esenbeck, by monotypy. Subsequent taxonomic references: Foerster 1847: 209 –210 (diagnosis); Foerster 1856: 116 –118 (key, discussion); Dalla Torre 1898: 429 –430 (catalog); Girault 1911: 273 –277 (North American species); Kryger 1934: 503 –505 (nomenclatural remarks); Nikol’skaya 1952: 538 (key); Bouček & Graham 1972: 125 –130 (genus and type species identity); Hellén 1974: 8 –9 (diagnosis, key to Finnish species); Sahad 1982c: 198 (key to Japanese species); Sahad & Hirashima 1984: 7 –8 (historical review), 11–13 (diagnosis and key to species of Japan and adjacent regions); Schauff 1984: 36 –37 (genus definition); Matthews 1986: 214, 216 (key to species groups and British species); Huber 1986: 220 –222 (historical review, host records, etc.); Huber 1988: 5 –7, 23–24, 29–30 (historical review, species groups and Nearctic species of two groups); Noyes & Valentine 1989: 34 –35 (diagnosis and remarks on New Zealand species); Yoshimoto 1990: 36 –42 (species groups and list of Western Hemisphere species); Zeya & Hayat 1995: 52 –59 (redescription, relationships, and key to species groups); Huber & Beardsley 2000: 51 –53 (species in the Hawaiian Islands); Triapitsyn & Huber 2000: 614 (key to species groups in the Palaearctic region); Baquero & Jordana 2003: 3 – 5 (diagnosis, key to species groups and species in Navarre, Spain); Viggiani 2005: 65 (comments on male genitalia); Donev 2005: 376 –377 (key to species groups in the Balkan Peninsula); Lin et al. 2007: 34 View Cited Treatment –37 (short diagnosis, list of Australian species); Huber et al. 2009: 272 (key), 278 (key), 288, 291 (brief diagnosis, comments); Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 10–13 (synonymy, diagnosis, summary on the former species groups, identification key to subgenera); Guo et al. 2011: 53 –54 (short overview); Triapitsyn & Proshchalykin 2012: 207 –208 (catalog).
Lymaenon Walker 1846: 49 –50 View in CoL .
Type species: Lymaenon acuminatus Walker , by subsequent designation by Gahan & Fagan 1923: 82. Synonymized under Gonatocerus by Foerster 1856: 118 and listed as its synonym by Bouček & Graham 1972: 126; treated as a subgenus of Gonatocerus by Herting 1972: 14 and Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 41–42, and as a valid genus by Kryger 1934: 503 –505, Debauche 1948: 78 –86 (references, diagnosis, historical review, discussion, species groups, and keys to Belgian species), Debauche 1949: 4 –5 (discussion on nomenclature), 25–30 (diagnosis, species groups, and key to the species in the Ethiopian region); Kryger 1950: 68 –71 (historical review); Ison 1958: 68 (diagnosis); Annecke & Doutt 1961: 4 (key), 13 (diagnosis, distribution, subgenera), and Viggiani 1969: 37 –38 (discussion). Other important taxonomic references: Mathot 1969: 9 –12 (key to Belgian species); Viggiani 1973: 279 (male genitalia); Trjapitzin 1978: 524 –527 (key to European species); Viggiani 1988: 560 (host associations, diagnosis); Viggiani & Jesu 1988: 1022 –1023 (host associations, records from Italy).
Rachistus Foerster 1847: 203 View in CoL .
Type species: Ooctonus litoralis Haliday , by subsequent designation by Gahan & Fagan 1923: 128. Synonymized under Gonatocerus by Foerster 1856: 119 (and listed as its synonym by Bouček & Graham 1972: 127), under Lymaenon by Debauche 1949: 25, and under G. ( Lymaenon ) by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 41.
Rhachistus Dalla Torre 1898: 429 View in CoL (catalog). Unjustified emendation of Rachistus Foerster.
Cosmocomoidea Howard 1908: 68 View in CoL .
Type species: Cosmocomoidea morrilli Howard , by monotypy. Treated as a synonym of Ooctonus Haliday by Girault 1929: 20, as a subgenus under Lymaenon by Ogloblin 1959: 50 –56 and Annecke & Doutt 1961: 4, and synonymized under Gonatocerus by Bouček & Graham 1972: 127; recognized as a subgenus of Gonatocerus by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 94–95.
Oophilus Enock 1909: 458 View in CoL .
Type species: Oophilus longicauda Enock , by monotypy. Synonymized under Gonatocerus by Girault 1911: 276 –277 (and listed as its synonym by Bouček & Graham 1972: 127), under Lymaenon by Debauche 1949: 25, and under G. ( Lymaenon ) by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 41. Treated as a separate genus by Kryger 1950: 79 –81.
Agonatocerus Girault 1913a: 276 View in CoL .
Type species: Agonatocerus humboldti Girault , by original designation. Synonymized under Gonatocerus by Girault 1915: 156 (and listed as its synonym by Bouček & Graham 1972: 127), under Lymaenon by Debauche 1949: 25, and under G. ( Lymaenon ) by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 41.
Gonatoceroides Girault 1913b: 255 (as subgenus of Gonatocerus View in CoL ).
Type species: Gonatocerus (Gonatoceroides) australicus Girault [as australica], by original designation. Synonymized under Gonatocerus by Girault 1915: 156 (and listed as its synonym by Bouček & Graham 1972: 127), under Lymaenon by Debauche 1949: 25, and under G. ( Lymaenon ) by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 41.
Gastrogonatocerus Ogloblin 1935: 65 View in CoL (as subgenus of Gonatocerus View in CoL ).
Type species: Gonatocerus (Gastrogonatocerus) membraciphagus Ogloblin , by original designation. Treated as a subgenus of Lymaenon by Ogloblin 1938: 93 –106 (in part) and Annecke & Doutt 1961: 4, and synonymized under Lymaenon by Debauche 1949: 25 and under Gonatocerus View in CoL by Bouček & Graham 1972: 127; formally reinstated as a subgenus of Gonatocerus View in CoL by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 11, 57.
Gahanopsis Ogloblin 1946: 286 View in CoL , 288 (as subgenus of Lymaenon ).
Type species: Lymaenon (Gahanopsis) deficiens Ogloblin , by original designation. Treated as a valid genus by Annecke & Doutt 1961: 4, 13, Huber 1986: 220, and Luft Albarracin et al. 2009: 8, 13; as deficiens species group (without a formal synonymy under Gonatocerus ) by Huber 1988: 23 –24 and Yoshimoto 1990: 37, 41; synonymized under Gonatocerus and treated as its subgenus by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 11, 80.
Decarthrius Debauche 1949: 21 –22 View in CoL .
Type species: Decarthrius straeleni Debauche , by original designation. Synonymy under Gahanopsis by Annecke & Doutt 1961: 13; synonymized under Gonatocerus and G. ( Lymaenon ) by Triapitsyn et al. 2010: 11, 41.
Diagnosis. See Triapitsyn et al. (2010). The following combination of features will separate all Palaearctic Gonatocerus from Ooctonus , the only other genus in the region with 5-segmented tarsi whose female also has antenna with 8 funicle segments. Both sexes: face with subantennal sulci ( Figs 50 View FIGURES 50 – 52 , 116 View FIGURES 116 – 118 , 180 View FIGURES 180, 181 , 318 View FIGURES 317 – 319 ); marginal vein with two macrochaetae and the hypochaeta about midway between them. Female: gastral segment 1 similar in length to segment 2. Male: genitalia not encapsulated in a tubular capsule or phallobase; instead, aedeagus attached directly to the apical sternum, with two long apodemes united distally (V-shaped) and a long median apodeme.
Classification. Gonatocerus is a relatively easily recognized genus, so any generic key to the Mymaridae may be used for its recognition in the Palaearctic region: Annecke & Doutt (1961) for the world genera, Schauff (1984) for the Holarctic genera, and Triapitsyn & Huber (2000) for the Palaearctic genera.
Triapitsyn et al. (2010) commented on the place of Gonatocerus within the higher classification of Mymaridae and its relationships with other genera and rediagnosed the genus and its subgenera and species groups of G. ( Cosmocomoidea ). The latter subgenus as well as G. ( Lymaenon Walker ) and G. ( Gonatocerus Nees ab Esenbeck) occur in the Palaearctic region whereas G. ( Gahanopsis Ogloblin ) and G. ( Gastrogonatocerus Ogloblin ) are native to the New World and occur mainly in the Neotropics. The latter two subgenera seem to be derived offshoots of G. ( Lymaenon ) and G. ( Gonatocerus ), respectively, that parasitize mainly eggs of Membracidae (Hemiptera) .
Distribution. Cosmopolitan.
Hosts. See Sahad & Hirashima (1984), Huber (1986, 1988), Zeya & Hayat (1995), and Triapitsyn et al. (2010) for lists by genus or under each species treated by them. In the Palaearctic region, reliable host records of Gonatocerus spp. are from eggs of Cicadellidae and Membracidae ( Hemiptera : Membracoidea). Miridae (Hemiptera) is a new host family record presented here (see under G. fuscicornis ). Other, non-membracoid, host records need confirmation.
Key to subgenera of Gonatocerus View in CoL in the Palaearctic region (both sexes)
1 Pronotum with lateral lobes widely separated by lightly sclerotized median area (as in Figs 53 View FIGURES 53, 54 , 146 View FIGURES 144 – 147 ); dorsellum strap-shaped (as in Figs 52 View FIGURES 50 – 52 , 147 View FIGURES 144 – 147 )................................................................... G. ( Lymaenon Walker )
– Pronotum with lateral lobes abutting medially (as in Figs 14 View FIGURES 12 – 15 , 23 View FIGURES 21 – 24 , 266 View FIGURES 264 – 267 , 319 View FIGURES 317 – 319 ); dorsellum rhomboidal or triangular (as in Figs 13 View FIGURES 12 – 15 , 22 View FIGURES 21 – 24 , 44 View FIGURES 43 – 46 , 219 View FIGURES 217 – 219 , 228 View FIGURES 227 – 229 , 255 View FIGURES 254 – 256 , 259 View FIGURES 257 – 259 , 320 View FIGURES 320, 321 ).......................................................................... 2
2(1) Fore wing without a large bare area (more or less evenly setose) behind marginal vein (as in Figs 6 View FIGURES 5 – 7 , 24 View FIGURES 21 – 24 , 30 View FIGURES 28 – 31 , 35 View FIGURES 32 – 35 ).................................................................................... G. ( Gonatocerus Nees View in CoL ab Esenbeck)
– Fore wing with a large bare area behind marginal vein: setae either absent, or just a few present, behind entire length of marginal vein (as in Figs 220 View FIGURE 220 , 260 View FIGURE 260 , 296 View FIGURE 296 ) or at least mostly absent behind base of marginal vein ( Fig. 321 View FIGURES 320, 321 )................................................................................................ G. ( Cosmocomoidea Howard )
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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Family |
Gonatocerus Nees ab Esenbeck, 1834
Triapitsyn, Serguei V. 2013 |
Decarthrius
Debauche 1949: 21 |
Gahanopsis
Ogloblin 1946: 286 |
Gastrogonatocerus
Ogloblin 1935: 65 |
Agonatocerus
Girault 1913: 276 |
Gonatoceroides
Girault 1913: 255 |
Oophilus
Enock 1909: 458 |
Cosmocomoidea
Howard 1908: 68 |
Rhachistus
Dalla 1898: 429 |
Rachistus
Foerster 1847: 203 |
Lymaenon
Walker 1846: 49 |
Gonatocerus
Esenbeck 1834: 192 |