Triclistus inti, Alvarado, Mabel & Rodriguez-Berrio, Alexander, 2013

Alvarado, Mabel & Rodriguez-Berrio, Alexander, 2013, Ten new species of Triclistus Förster, 1869 (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae) from Peru, with a key to Neotropical species, Zootaxa 3702 (5), pp. 401-423 : 408-409

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3702.5.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3E871CA9-31C6-45E9-A894-54457951DD98

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6161337

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BB4F12-F513-5C13-FF25-FBB0F1348481

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Triclistus inti
status

sp. nov.

Triclistus inti sp. n.

Figs 5 View FIGURE 5 , 23 View FIGURES 23 – 28

Holotype. F, PERU: CU, Qosňipata valley, San Pedro, 13o03’23”S / 71o32’55”W, 1520 m, 12.xii.2007. Malaise 11. C. Castillo Leg. ( MUSM).

Paratype. M, PERU: CU, Qosňipata valley, San Pedro, 13o03’22.5”S / 71o32’55.2”W, 1520 m, vii.2007 - i.2008, Malaise trap C. Castillo Leg. ( MUSM).

Diagnosis. Triclistus inti resembles T. megantoni sp. n. in having a complete posterior transverse carina and lacking a lateromedian longitudinal carina, as well as being predominantly black, but differs in having a smaller areolet and a predominantly cream colored metafemur.

Description. F: Fore wing length 4.5 mm. Antenna with 25 flagellomeres, second flagellomere 2.3–2.5x as long as centrally broad, subapical flagellomeres elongate 2.3x as long as centrally broad; face ca. 1.3x as long as wide, convex, slightly protuberant on clypeus area, granulose with sparse punctures; mandibles not twisted, tapered, with upper tooth broader and longer than lower tooth; labrum not exposed when mandibles closed; clypeal margin straight; malar space ca. 0.9x as long as basal mandibular width; lateral ocellus separated from compound eye by 1.1x ocellar diameter; head in dorsal view with genae evenly narrowed behind compound eyes, slightly round; gena on lateral view 1.0x as long as eye; frons smooth, punctate; crest between antennal toruli sharp; gena and vertex smooth and finely punctate. Mesosoma generally smooth, polished and finely punctate; mesoscutum convex, notauli extending to center, weak; scuto-scutellar groove deep and smooth; scutellum convex with lateral carinae reaching to 0.3x its length; pronotum polished with a band of hair along upper margin; epicnemium punctate; metapleuron polished and bare; submetapleural carina carinate, anteriorly expanded into a conspicuous triangular lobe; pleural carina curved in anterior half then declivitous. Propodeum quite short and evenly declivitous; without lateromedian longitudinal carinae thus with all areas confluent, smooth but punctate on lateral margins; posterior transverse carina present; area spiracularis + area lateralis confluents coarsely punctate; spiracle almost round. Fore wing with 3rs-m present, petiolate above, abscissa of 2rs-m between Rs+2r and 3rs-m 0.5x abscissa of 2rs-m between 3rs-m and 1m-cu. Metasoma with tergite I 1.6x as long as posteriorly broad, lateral longitudinal carinae complete, lateromedian carinae absent, smooth and with isolated punctures; tergite II with setae on lateral margin, 0.9x as long as posteriorly broad; tergites III–V similarly sculptured, tergites VI–VII similarly sculptured but with a row of setae on posterior margin.

Head extensively black except palpi yellowish cream and scape and pedicel brownish. Mesosoma black except for tegula cream colored; legs yellowish except hind coxa, trochantellus, base of femur, apex of tibia and tarsomeres brownish. Metasoma black.

Male. Similar to female except as follows: tergite I ca. 1.5x, tergite II ca. 0.8x as long as posteriorly broad.

Etymology. The specific epithet inti is the Quechua name for the sun; according to Inca mythology, Inti is the sun god, the main deity and also known as the Giver of Life.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hymenoptera

Family

Ichneumonidae

Genus

Triclistus

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