Liadoxyelini Rasnitsyn, 1966
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.733.1229 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:043C9407-7E8A-4E8F-9441-6FC43E5A596E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4562198 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BB29F53B-4D5A-EC0F-636B-F51BFDC87D80 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Liadoxyelini Rasnitsyn, 1966 |
status |
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Tribe Liadoxyelini Rasnitsyn, 1966
Type genus
Remarks
This tribe was proposed for four genera ( Liadoxyela Martynov, 1937 , Kirghizoxyela Rasnitsyn, 1966 , Anomoxyela Rasnitsyn, 1966 , and Lydoxyela Rasnitsyn, 1966 ) and five species from Jurassic and Early Cretaceous of Siberia and Central Asia, based on a set of diagnostic characters including short 1m-cu (about half as long as 3-Cu) as distinguishing it from Xyelini Newman, 1834 , the only other tribe in subfamily Xyelinae ( Rasnitsyn 1966) . The next revision of Xyelidae and Symphyta in general ( Rasnitsyn 1969) added another diagnostic feature, 1-Rs not longer than 1-M. One more genus ( Orthoxyela Rasnitsyn, 1983 ) and two species from the Jurassic of Siberia have been added to the tribe since ( Rasnitsyn 1983). Much later three further genera ( Platyxyela Wang et al., 2012 , Cathayxyela Wang et al., 2014 , Aequixyela Wang et al., 2014 ), each with one species from the Middle Jurassic of China, have been added to the tribe, even though not without confusion ( Wang et al. 2012, 2014). The first genus was described in Macroxyelinae Ashmead, 1898 but later listed under Liadoxyelini Rasnitsyn, 1966 ( Wang et al. 2014: table 1). Judging from their descriptions and the table 1, Cathayxyela and Aequixyela were equally described as members of Liadoxyelini , but this was under the title Xyelini which we consider a lapsus calami. We agree with the interpretation of Platyxyela and Cathayxyela as members of Liadoxyelini . However, Aequixyela differs from other Liadoxyelini considerably in having 1-Rs scarcely longer than 1-M, 1m-cu distinctly longer than half 3-Cu, pterostigma distinctly inflated (often in Xyelini but never in Liadoxyelini ), and unlike all Xyelidae , ovipositor very short and narrow. Unusual is also the very short antennal flagellum, only comparable with that in living Macroxyelini Ashmead, 1898 . The position of the latter genus needs special consideration: for the moment we consider it as Xyelinae incertae tribus.
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